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(p.229) Index
(p.229) Index
Akabane Tomoharu, 20–21
Arita Hachirō, 98
Asia Bureau (Foreign Ministry), 61, 72, 120, 126, 131, 135;
1929 plan for consular police reform, 97–98;
response to the 1932 bombings in Shanghai and Tokyo, 114–115
Chinese Communist Party (CCP), 99, 110, 112, 120, 185nn.21, 22;
as mentioned in the 1932 Foreign Ministry report on problems in Manchuria, 116–117;
Chōsen oyobi Manshū (periodical), 75
chūzaijo (police substation), 24
comfort women, 198n.106
corruption:
of consular police officers, 137–138
Enomoto Takeaki, 17
Feuerwerker, Albert, 63
futei Senjin (rebellious Koreans), 70
Garon, Sheldon, 6
Greater East Asia Ministry (Dai Tō-A shō), 144
Hagiwara Morikazu, 46–47
Hanabusa Nagamichi, 61–62
Hanabusa Yoshimoto, 15
Hasegawa Teru, 139
hashutsujo (police boxes), 24
Hayashi Kyūjirō, 98
Hayashi Tadasu, 47
Hirohito, Emperor, 148–149
hogo torishimari, 22
Home Ministry (Naimushō), 98, 112, 138, 150, 197n.89;
response to the 1932 bombings in Shanghai and Tokyo, 114–115
Horiuchi Tateki, 133
Hsu Shushi, 59
Ichikawa Shōichi, 111
Ilchinhoe:
connections to the Manshū hominkai, 79–81
Imo Mutiny (1882), 15
Inoue Kaoru, 15
Inukai Tsuyoshi, 86
Itō Takeo, 127
Japanese Communist Party (JCP):
Jiandao:
Qing government policy concerning resident Koreans, 50–51
Jiandao Uprising (May 30, 1930), 99–100
Kameyama Riheita, 31
Kaneko Fumiko, 72
Kanghwa Treaty, 14
Katayama Sen, 71
Katō Takaaki, 50
Kawashima Naniwa, 59
kenpeitai (military police), 80, 129, 159n.32;
jurisdictional disputes with consular police in occupied China, 142–143;
in Korea, 34–35
Kim Ku, 113–114
Kim Ok-kyun, 15
Kobashi Ichita, 71
Komagome Takeshi, 150
Kondō Eizō, 71
Kondō Masaki, 14
Konoe Fumimaro, 149
Koo, V. K. Wellington, 59
Korea Government-General (Chōsen
(p.231)
sōtokufu), 73, 90;
and the Jiandao uprising of 1930, 100–102;
and the Mitsuya Agreement of 1925, 87–88;
and the protests at Maoershan, 94–96
Kuroshima Denji, 109
kusho mondai (jurisdictional disputes), 142
Kwantung Army, 3–4, 88, 93, 97, 111, 115, 118, 148, 159n.32, 172n.42, 187n.49;
relations with the consular police during the Manchurian Incident, 103–108;
League of Nations, 58–60
Lu Xun, 122
Lytton Commission, 59–60
Makino Nobuaki, 49–50
Manshū hominkai (MHK, Manchuria People’s Protection Society), 78–85
Maoershan:
Chinese protests at, 95–96
March 15 Incident of 1928, 110
Matsuda Genji, 100
May 30 Incident of 1925 (Shanghai), 85
Metropolitan Police Bureau (Keishichō), 77
Mitamura Shirō, 111
Mitsuya Agreement (Mitsuya kyōtei), 102, 113, 182n.44;
establishment of, 87–90;
results of and problems with, 92–97;
abrogation of, 108
Nabeyama Sadachika, 111
Naitō Konan, 51
Nakagawa Yū, 144
Nakamura Satoru, 48
Nihon jinmin hansen dōmei (Japanese People’s Anti-war League), 139
Nikolaevsk Incident, 75
Nozaka Sanzō, 197n.94
Okabe Saburō, 46
Ōsugi Sakae, 71
Pak Yŏl, 72
Peking Gazette (periodical), 56
Peking-Tientsin Times (periodical), 56
Phan Bội Châu, 70
Relations of Japan with Manchuria and Mongolia, 116–118
Robinson, Ronald:
“excentric theory” of imperialism, 8
Satō Naotake, 9
Satsuma-Chōshū, 22
Seoul-Pusan railway:
consular police expansion associated with, 28–29
Shandong Expedition, 112
Shigemitsu Mamoru, 114
Shihozawa Kita, 61
Shina kenkyū (periodical), 58
Shina rōnin (China adventurers), 124
Shinobu Junpei, 58–59
Shirakawa Yoshinori, 114
Sin Ch’aeho, 51
Tairiku (periodical):
editorials in, 55–56
Taiwan Government-General (sōtokufu):
jurisdiction over Taiwanese subjects in China, 43–45
Tipton, Elise K., 22
Uchida Yasuya, 73
Uchiyama Kanzō, 121
Watanabe Masanosuke, 111
Yamagata Isaburō, 84
Yamakawa Hiroshi, 71
Young, C. Walter, 57
Yu Cheng, 87
Yuan Shikai, 57
Yun Pong-gil, 114
Zhang Xueliang, 101