Sino-Japanese War

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The Battle of the Yalu River (“Naval Battle of the Yellow Sea”) was the largest naval engagement of the Qing-Japan War, and took place on 17 September 1894, the day after the Japanese victory at the land Battle of Pyongyang. It involved ships from the Imperial Japanese Navy and the Qing Beiyang Fleet. The battle is also known by a variety of names: Battle of Haiyang Island, Battle of Dadonggou, Battle of the Yellow Sea and Battle of Yalu, after the geographic location of the battle, which was in the Yellow Sea off the mouth of the Yalu River and not in the river itself. In the second half of the nineteenth century in Asia, both Qing and Japan put major resources into creating modern navies of armored steamships with guns firing explosive shells. Their battle at the Yalu River in 1894 ended with the defeat of Qing Empire Beiyang Fleet.

Turning to Germany for training and equipment of their army
and to Great Britain for ships and naval instructors, the Japanese soon knew
themselves to be the leading oriental military power and began to stretch their
muscles. The first to feel their strength were the Chinese. Although the
humiliating defeats leading up to the enforced treaties with the western powers
had opened their eyes to the need to acquire western military and commercial
skills and a `self-strengthening movement’ was set on foot under the guiding
hand of the all-powerful minister Li Hung-chang, the Chinese people and their
Manchu rulers lacked the martial ardour and the sense of purpose that raised
the Japanese so rapidly to modern military and industrial power. Arsenals were
founded at Shanghai, at Foochow and Nanking where small ships were built and
guns manufactured. Chinese students were sent abroad, a naval academy founded
at Tientsin and a steam navy, built abroad, was commissioned, or rather four
separate navies – at Canton, at Foochow, in the Yangtse River and (in the
north) the Peiyang fleet. Only the last of these was under the direct control
of the Peking government.

Such an arrangement was an inadequate basis for sea power
and when, in 1874, a Japanese expedition was sent to Formosa to exact
retribution for the murder of some Ryu-kyu sailors by Formosan aborigines, the
Chinese were unable to take any effective steps to protect this overseas
outpost of their Empire. Actually the whole basis for the Japanese action was
in Chinese eyes false. For the Ryu-kyu Islands had been a regular tributary of
China since 1372. But the Japanese Lord of Satsuma had, unknown to the Chinese,
subjugated them in 1609, since when the island king had been also a
tribute-paying vassal of Satsuma.

Negotiations, in which the British minister to China, Thomas
Wade, acted as mediator, led to a settlement by which China paid an indemnity
of half a million dollars and agreed not to condemn the Japanese action. This
latter concession tacitly implied Chinese acceptance of Japanese sovereignty
over the Ryu-kyus and five years later this was confirmed by Japanese formal
annexation.

Korea and Japan

In 1875 it was the Koreans’ turn to clash with the newly awakened
aggressive power. Though Christian missionaries had, in spite of periodic
persecution, spread their faith widely in the kingdom since the second half of
the eighteenth century, the Koreans had successfully resisted all Western efforts
to promote trade or establish diplomatic relations. In 1866, following a
sweeping massacre of Christian priests, the French had sent a punitive
expedition of seven ships and six hundred men which captured Kangwha near
Seoul, but after suffering more than thirty casualties in a skirmish outside
the city, withdrew. An American merchant ship seeking trade was destroyed and
the crew killed in the same year. An American squadron sent to investigate the
matter in 1871 steamed into the Han River, on which Seoul lies; on being fired
on by shore batteries, the ships bombarded the city of Kangwha on two
successive days but then withdrew, their mission unfulfilled.

To the Japanese, Korea represented either a natural stepping
stone to their penetration of the mainland or a pistol pointing at the heart of
their country. They soon determined it should be the former. An expedition to
force diplomatic and trade relations was planned; a surveying team with gunboat
escort began charting the approaches to the Korean capital in 1875, and when
this was fired on, the gunboats retaliated, destroying the Korean forts. A
squadron of six Japanese warships appeared. The Chinese government was at that
time in no state to interfere on behalf of its tributary state. The Korean Regent
was instructed to negotiate and the Treaty of Kangwha, 24 February 1876, was
the result. Not only was Korea thereby opened to diplomatic and commercial
relations with Japan, but she was recognized as an independent state on an
equal footing with Japan and, in the absence of any protest by China, was thus
freed of her ancient vassalage.

When the United States concluded a similar treaty in 1882,
the Koreans took the opportunity, in a separate statement, voluntarily to
acknowledge Chinese suzerainty ; and it was under the auspices of the Chinese
government that the treaty and those with Britain, France and Germany which
followed it were concluded. Nevertheless Japan soon became influential in
Seoul, operating in support of Queen Min, to reform the government and
modernize the army, and against the reactionary Regent, Taewongon. In 1882 the
latter provoked a rising during which the Japanese legation was burned, seven
Japanese officers were killed and the minister forced to flee to Japan.

Both Chinese and Japanese warships arrived to enforce a
pacification. The Chinese envoy arrested the Regent and deported him to China.
A settlement with Japan was patched up, the most significant feature of which
was the establishment of the Japanese right to station troops for the
protection of the legation. The Chinese government, however, now took steps to
re-assert suzerainty. Extra-territoriality for their nationals was one of the
terms of a commercial treaty ; six Chinese battalions were stationed in Korea
and a young Chinese officer, Yuan Shih-k’ai, who was in the years ahead to play
a leading role in the history of China, was appointed to train the Korean army.

Pro-Chinese and pro-Japanese factions now grew up and in
December 1884 the latter, encouraged by the Japanese minister and aided by the
Japanese legation troops, staged a revolt in which the royal palace was broken
into and the king captured. Yuan Shih-k’ai’s troops gained the upper hand,
however; the Japanese, facing annihilation, set fire to their legation and,
formed into a square with their wounded and womenfolk in the centre, fought
their way through the winter night to the coast.

With a technique that was to become only too familiar, the
Japanese made the incident an excuse for sending an expedition to enforce
payment of compensation while at the same time a Sino-Japanese Convention was
concluded at Tientsin. By its terms both Chinese and Japanese troops were to be
withdrawn; but, deeply significant for the future was the mutual agreement that
either China or Japan might send troops into Korea for the restoration of order
provided they gave each other prior notice. For the time being, however,
Chinese influence was supreme with Yiian Shih-k’ai virtually Governor of Korea.

French Aggression

But the Japanese, growing ever stronger on land and sea,
were biding their time, while China, for lack of adequate sea power suffered a
humiliating defeat when she attempted to oppose French aggression in Vietnam.
Annam, as Vietnam was then called, was an ancient tributary state of China.
Tribute missions had been sent to Peking even after the French had annexed the
three southern provinces (Cochin-China) following the despatch of a punitive
expedition to Saigon in 1859 on account of attacks on missionaries. She established
a virtual protectorate over the remainder by another treaty in 1874. French
troops were stationed in North Vietnam and fortresses built along the Red
River. They were opposed by an irregular Chinese `Black Flag’ army, a remnant
of the rebel Taiping army which from 1850-64 had controlled much of China and
came near to unseating the Ch’ing dynasty. Regular Chinese troops were also
surreptitiously sent to Tonking.

The fighting on land that followed was sporadic and indecisive.
But when on 23 August 1884 the French Rear Admiral Courbet, with a squadron
consisting of three powerful armoured cruisers and nine smaller ships attacked
the Chinese Foochow squadron of one iron vessel, six wooden sloops, two armed
transports, two gunboats and a number of war junks, the huge French superiority
of force made the encounter into little more than a military execution. It took
a mere forty-five minutes, following which the French guns were turned
destructively on the arsenal and the defensive forts. The French fleet went on
to occupy Keelung in Formosa and the Pescadores.

Meanwhile a blockade of the Yangtse River estuary and
stoppage of the tribute grain from South China to the capital had been
undermining the warlike resolution of the Empress Dowager ; when a serious
defeat of the French army in Tonking offered a face-saving opportunity, a peace
treaty was negotiated in June 1885, which recognized France’s position in
Annam.

Yet another ancient tributary was lost to China in the
following year when Burma became a British protectorate. Japanese hunger for a
share in the apparent break-up of China strengthened their determination to
possess themselves of Korea when the moment was ripe.

In 1894 an uprising by a Korean religious sect known as the
Tongkaks, assisted by agents of the Japanese secret society, Genyosha, caused
the Korean government to appeal to Yuan Shih-k’ai for help. A force of about
2,500 Chinese infantry was landed at Asan on the Korean west coast. This was
the moment the Japanese had been waiting for: a balanced army eight thousand
strong was immediately transported to Chemulpo.

Li Hung-chang turned to the western powers for mediation.
Proposals by the British and Americans were rejected by the Japanese and, with
war imminent, the Chinese chartered three British steamers to carry
reinforcements to Asan. Two of these, escorted by the small protected cruiser,
Tsi-Tuen, and the sloop, Kwang-Yi, reached Asan safely ; but as the two
warships put to sea again on 25 July 1894 to return to Taku, they were intercepted
by the Japanese Flying Squadron of three fast light cruisers, Yoshino, Naniwa
and Akitsushima, under the command of Rear Admiral Tsuboi who had orders to
stop the transport of troops to Korea, if necessary by force, and to deal with
any Chinese warships met, though war had not yet been declared.

Convoy Battle

In the unequal fight that developed the Chinese were overwhelmed,
the Tsi-Yuen being heavily damaged, though she was unaccountably allowed to
limp away to the Chinese naval base of Wei-hai-wei ; the little sloop was
forced to beach herself, where she was quickly destroyed. While the Yoshino was
chasing the Tsi-Yuen off the scene, there came in sight two more ships. These
were the chartered Jardine and Matheson steamer, Kowshing, carrying 1,200
Chinese troops, twelve guns and two Chinese generals, and her escort the
572-ton sloop Tsao-kiang. The sloop was quickly induced to surrender to the
Akitsushima. The Naniwa, commanded by Captain Heihachiro Togo (who eleven years
later was to be the hero-admiral, victor at the Battle of Tsu-shima), meanwhile
signalled the Kowshing to stop and, having ascertained that she was carrying
troops, ordered her to follow the cruiser. When the British master signalled
that the Chinese would not allow him to comply and requested Togo to take off
the Europeans on board, the Japanese captain declined on the grounds that his
boat might be attacked. Four hours of unproductive signalling was brought to an
end when the Naniwa opened fire at point blank range and sank the Kowshing. The
British officers were picked up by the Naniwa’s boats; some 512 Chinese managed
to swim ashore or cling to wreckage, but loss of life was heavy.

War between China and Japan was formally declared on 1
August. As with all wars, this one would inevitably be concluded by the victory
of one of the opposing armies; but the decision would have already been secured
at sea, on the local control of which depended the support and supply of both.
For although Korea was connected to China at its landward frontier, road
communications were so primitive as to be of little use for the despatch of
reinforcements or supplies.

That only by battle with the opposing fleet could such an
essential control be secured was not understood by Fi Hungchang, who forbade
Admiral Ting Ju-ch’ang, commanding the Peiyang fleet, to proceed to the east of
a line drawn from his base at Wei-hai-wei to the mouth of the Yalu River. The
Japanese fleet arrived off Wei-hai-wei on 10 August and bombarded its forts,
but the challenge was not accepted; the Chinese ships remained in harbour. Thus
Admiral Ito, the Japanese Commander-in-Chief, was left undisturbed to convoy
his land forces to Korea where such a Japanese superiority was quickly built up
that the Chinese army was defeated and driven north.

Sino Japanese War

Battle of Yalu

Admiral Ting was now ordered to escort a troop convoy to the
Yalu from Port Arthur. This was successfully achieved ; but it was off the
mouth of the Yalu that Admiral Ito arrived on 17 September 1894, placing
himself between Ting and his bases and forcing the Chinese admiral to accept
the battle he had professed to desire. Ting at once put to sea and cleared for
action.

The two fleets were, on paper, evenly matched. Indeed, to
the school that believed that the heavily armoured battleship mounting four 12-inch
guns was the arbiter of naval battles, the Chinese was the more powerful. For
Ting had two of these, the Ting Yuen, his flagship, and the Chen Yuen as well
as eight cruisers mounting guns varying in calibre from 10.2-inch to 5.9-inch.
None of these guns was of the quick-firing type which had been invented seven
years earlier.

The Japanese fleet under Admiral Ito was divided into a Main
Squadron under his personal command and a fast Flying Squadron under Rear
Admiral Tsuboi. The biggest ships of the Japanese Main Squadron were three
unarmoured cruisers, Matsushima (Ito’s flagship), Itsukushima and Hashidate,
which mounted but one 12.6-inch gun each. The remainder of the squadron
consisted of two cruisers Fuso and Hiyei, ancient veterans built seventeen years
before, carrying a few antiquated guns, and one, the Choyoda, armed with
nothing bigger than 4.7-inch guns, but of the quick-firing type.

Rear Admiral Tsuboi’s flag flew in the cruiser Toshino, a
fine modern ship of 4,150 tons with 6-inch and 4.7-inch quick firers. With him
were three other fast cruisers; Takachiho and Naniwa, mounting two 10.2-inch
guns and six 6-inch each, and the Akitsushima which, like the Toshino, carried
only quick-firing guns of 6-inch and 4.7-inch calibre. None of these ships was
armoured, but even the slowest could make nearly nineteen knots, a good speed
at that time.

So far it might seem that the Japanese fleet was much too
weak to think of facing the heavy guns of the Chinese. On the other hand all
the Japanese ships except Takachiho, Naniwa, Fuso and Hiyei carried between ten
and twelve quick-firing guns, either 6-inch or 4.7-inch. A meeting between the
two fleets might show which of the rival theories was right – that of the
believers in the massive blow of a few big guns, or the contrary theory that
many quick-firers would smother the slow-firing, big-gun ships before they
could score many hits.

When the time came, however, the test was not to be so
clear-cut. There were several reasons for this. The Japanese fleet was a highly
trained and skillful force, whereas the Chinese, who a few years previously had
achieved a high state of efficiency under the guidance of Captain W. M. Lang of
the British Navy, had reverted on his departure to the condition of
glossed-over incompetence usual in the armed forces of the Empire. The ships
were kept outwardly smart and well-painted, but behind this facade there were
half-empty magazines and unpractised gunners. Troubles in the shell factories
had led to indifferent bursting charges, or even cement and coal dust inserted
in their place.

Furthermore, Admiral Ting had a faulty conception of naval
fighting tactics based on the outcome of the Battle of Lissa, fought
twenty-eight years earlier, in which the Austrian victory had been won by a
frontal, line abreast attack on the Italian line, and an eventual recourse to
the ram. The fact that the big guns of his two battleships could all fire ahead
increased Ting’s faith in such a method. He had completely overlooked the fact
that guns had greatly increased in range and effectiveness since Lissa, so that
a fleet which awaited such an onslaught in line ahead would have a considerable
gun advantage for a long period during the approach. The ram had consequently
ceased to be a practical proposition.

Such were the two fleets that now steered for an encounter;
the Japanese at about ten knots, which was the best that Fuso and Hiyei could
achieve, the Chinese at a knot or two faster. Ito’s fleet was in line ahead
with the Flying Squadron in the van. Besides the major units there were present
two ships of little or no fighting value, the gunboat Akagi and an armed
merchant steamer Saikio Adaru, which were to prove an embarrassment to Ito. It
is not clear why the Japanese admiral did not send such vulnerable ships away
to the southward, where they would have been clear of the battle. Instead he
stationed them on the port side of his Main Squadron, the side away from the
enemy.

Meanwhile Ting’s squadron was approaching on a south-westerly
course in a formation somewhat similar to Tegetthoff’s at Lissa, with the two
big ships in the centre. But owing to tardiness in getting under way, the two
starboard wing ships were lagging, while on the other wing one of the Chinese
cruisers, the Tsi-Tuen, was well behind and unable to get up into station. In
fact, viewed from the Japanese ships, the Chinese squadron seemed to be in
considerable disorder.

The tactics of the two admirals were soon evident. At the
long range for those days of six thousand yards, the Chinese opened fire with
their big guns. With calm confidence the Japanese held their fire, and indeed
they could well afford to do so; for with the rapidly changing range making
shooting difficult, the unpractised Chinese gunners failed to score a single
hit during the approach.

The Japanese line drew steadily across the Chinese front until the Flying Squadron was able to pass round the starboard wing, and at a range of three thousand yards open a withering fire from their quick-firers on the wing ships of the Chinese formation. Their Main Squadron now came into action, passing close ahead of Ting’s flagship and the Chen Tuen, which bore down as though to ram, both battleships being heavily shot up in the process. The whole of Ito’s squadron except the Hiyei, the rear ship, passed safely round the northern flank of Ting’s line, and Ito then led round to star¬ board, circling the now completely disorganized Chinese fleet and keeping up a punishing fire to which only a feeble reply was made.

Indeed the Chinese had more than the enemy’s fire with which
to reckon. Dense funnel smoke, increased by that from a hundred guns, enveloped
the whole scene. The laggard Tsi-Tuen, coming up at last, plunged into the
smother and ran amok, colliding with two ships of her own side, sinking one and
so damaging another that it steamed away blazing to be beached. The Tsi-Tuen
herself then withdrew to Port Arthur, where her captain subsequently paid for
his actions with his head.

Meanwhile the Hiyei, unable to follow the Japanese Main
Squadron round the Chinese flank, boldly turned to pass through the Chinese.
Avoiding two torpedoes fired at her and which strangely enough hit nothing in
spite of the milling throng of ships, the Hiyei won through, though suffering
considerably in the process.

The two weak Japanese ships, Akagi and Saikio Maru, also cut
off, kept on across the Chinese front, the former being badly battered. Seeing
this, Rear Admiral Tsuboi led the Flying Squadron round to port to come back
and cover them. This brought a temporary relief to the Chinese ships, but by
the time Tsuboi had completed his turn the Chinese found themselves between two
fires, Ito to the eastward and the Flying Squadron to the north-westward.

By now Ting’s squadron was in desperate straits. Apart from
the victims of the Tsi-Tuen’s wild career, two other cruisers, smothered by the
rapid fire of Tsuboi’s 6-inch and 4.7-inch guns, had gone down. Yet another had
struggled away burning furiously, ultimately to be run aground near Port
Arthur. Ting was thus left with only four of his original ten ships, all of
which had suffered severely and had shot away nearly all their ammunition.

Complete annihilation of the Chinese squadron was in Ito’s
grasp. The Japanese had not achieved this without damage to themselves, however;
in particular Ito’s flagship Matsushima had been hit twice by 12-inch shells,
once by a 10.2-inch, suffering more than a hundred casualties, and had been set
on fire. By the time Ito had transferred his flag to the Hashidate and
despatched the Matsushima, Hiyei, Akagi and Saikio to base for repairs, the sun
was sinking low; and as dusk fell, the two fleets disengaged and formed up on
parallel courses in line ahead.

A renewal of the fight might now have wiped out the Chinese
force, but a new element had entered the situation. The two torpedo-boats of
Ting’s squadron had joined him from the Yalu. This caused Ito to decide to
await the dawn before completing the enemy’s annihilation, and in the night
Ting slipped away with his surviving ships, which included his two battleships.
Nevertheless the Japanese had won a considerable victory, and had secured
control of the disputed sea area, making certain of victory on land. There the
Japanese were able to occupy Dairen and to capture the fortified base of Port
Arthur by attacking the forts from the rear. They went on to capture
Wei-hai-wei in February 1895, turning the guns of the forts on the damaged
remnants of the Peiyang fleet. Admiral Ting committed suicide; the fleet
surrendered.

Li Hung-chang, the inspirer of the Self-strengthening Movement
by which China had hoped to withstand further foreign aggression, but which had
failed primarily because the Chinese public service was so riddled with
corruption and incompetence, was disgraced and dismissed. He was reinstated,
however, at Japanese insistence upon an envoy of sufficient stature being sent
to negotiate a peace settlement. The Treaty of Shimonoseki which was finally
signed on 17 April 1895 provided for recognition of Korean independence and
termination of tribute to China ; a large indemnity ; the opening of four more
Chinese ports ; Japanese right to open factories and engage in industry in
China ; finally, and most ominously, the cession to Japan of Formosa, the
Pescadores and the Liaotung Peninsula on which Port Arthur and Dairen were
situated.

For the moment Japan had in spectacular fashion burst out of
her backwardness and obscurity to claim an equal status with the western
powers. Great Britain had already offered a treaty revision to abolish her
extra-territorial rights and during the next few years her example was followed
by other powers. But Japan was now to suffer a humiliating set-back on her road
to great power status, one which was to colour her attitude ever afterwards.

By MSW
Forschungsmitarbeiter Mitch Williamson is a technical writer with an interest in military and naval affairs. He has published articles in Cross & Cockade International and Wartime magazines. He was research associate for the Bio-history Cross in the Sky, a book about Charles ‘Moth’ Eaton’s career, in collaboration with the flier’s son, Dr Charles S. Eaton. He also assisted in picture research for John Burton’s Fortnight of Infamy. Mitch is now publishing on the WWW various specialist websites combined with custom website design work. He enjoys working and supporting his local C3 Church. “Curate and Compile“
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