Middle Kingdom Lost: From the Invention of Gunpowder to the Nanjing Massacre

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Management number 233355278 Release Date 2026/06/27 List Price US$90.00 Model Number 233355278
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Middle Kingdom Lost: From the Invention of Gunpowder to the Nanjing Massacre examines one of the great paradoxes in world history: if China invented gunpowder, firearms, the compass, and many other technologies centuries before the West, how did foreign powers later defeat China using those same innovations? Through the development of gunpowder weapons, this book traces the institutional divergence that gradually separated China, Europe, and Japan from the ninth century to the Second World War.The story begins in Tang and Song China, where gunpowder emerged from Daoist alchemical experiments and evolved into fire-arrows, bombs, fire-lances, and early cannon. Song China possessed one of the world’s most advanced economies and technological cultures, yet its political system emphasized civilian governance over military institutions. Although firearms technology originated in China, continuous military adaptation slowed under the centralized imperial order.The Mongol conquests transformed Eurasia by reopening the Silk Road and connecting China, the Islamic world, and Europe through the Pax Mongolica. Along these trade routes traveled not only goods and technologies such as gunpowder, printing, and the magnetic compass, but also the plague that devastated Europe in the fourteenth century. The Black Death weakened feudal structures, undermined the authority of the Church, and contributed to the Renaissance and Scientific Revolution. Combined with intense interstate warfare, Europe’s growing emphasis on direct observation, experimentation, and empirical reasoning accelerated advances in artillery, navigation, metallurgy, fortification, and shipbuilding. Europe’s fragmented political landscape rewarded military innovation and sustained technological competition.Meanwhile, Ming and Qing China followed a different path. Although Chinese arsenals remained formidable and firearms widely deployed, the imperial system increasingly prioritized internal stability over military competition. Europe’s maritime expansion and industrial development gradually widened the technological gap. By the nineteenth century, Western gunboats and modern artillery exposed the weakness of Qing military institutions during the Opium Wars.Japan responded differently to the arrival of the West. During the Sengoku period, constant warfare encouraged rapid adoption and mass production of firearms. After the Meiji Restoration, Japan aggressively modernized its military, industry, and political institutions while preserving national cohesion. China’s reform efforts, by contrast, remained fragmented amid rebellions, corruption, and political instability.The divergence became unmistakable in the First Sino-Japanese War of 1894–95, when Japan decisively defeated Qing China. Within decades, Japan emerged as a modern imperial power while China descended into foreign encroachment, civil conflict, and military weakness. The tragedy culminated in the Nanjing Massacre of 1937, when Japanese forces carried out mass atrocities against Chinese civilians.This book argues that China’s decline was not the result of cultural inferiority or the intrinsic decay of Chinese civilization. Rather, it reflected centuries of institutional divergence. Europe’s competitive state system and scientific transformation fostered continuous military innovation, while Japan successfully assimilated those advances through rapid modernization. China, despite its early technological leadership, evolved within a centralized imperial system that favored administrative stability over sustained military adaptation. Read more

ASIN B0H42H5B9G
XRay Not Enabled
ISBN13 979-8995063230
Language English
File size 9.8 MB
Page Flip Enabled
Word Wise Enabled
Print length 307 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Screen Reader Supported
Publication date June 4, 2026
Enhanced typesetting Enabled

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