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The Land of the Boxers; or, China under the Allies cover

The Land of the Boxers; or, China under the Allies

Chapter 18: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

The author recounts military operations and travel during the international intervention in northern China, tracing movements from coastal anchorages through Tientsin to the approach and occupation of the capital. Chapters combine campaign narrative, eyewitness descriptions of foreign concessions, Chinese city quarters, and the siege of diplomatic legations, with portraits of the various national contingents—German, French, Russian, Japanese, American, Italian, Dutch, and Indian—assessing their organisation, conduct, and interactions. Complementary material describes Beijing’s imperial sites, the layout of the city, logistical challenges, soldier life in garrison and in action, and anecdotes gathered from officers present.

FOOTNOTES:

1 Pronounced “Way high way.”

2 i.e. Government.

3 Lord Curzon, in his interesting book, Problems of the Far East, refers to this building as “The Temple of Heaven” and calls what I have described as “The Centre of the Universe” “The Altar of Heaven.” He is more likely to be correct than the officers of the armies of occupation, but I give the names which they used.

4 These dimensions were given me by Lieutenant Pearson, R.E., who had to tunnel the wall to allow the passage of a railway line.

5 They had only forty rifles all told.

6 Japan.