The Anglo-Japanese Alliance 1902-1952
J.D. Hargreaves reviews the delicate truce that existed between Britain and Japan in the early years of the twentieth century.
J.D. Hargreaves reviews the delicate truce that existed between Britain and Japan in the early years of the twentieth century.
David Woodward recounts how, after a voyage from the Baltic of 11,000 miles, the Russian Second Pacific Fleet was dramatically destroyed off the coast of Korea by the Japanese.
Roger Hudson expands on an image of Russian ships destroyed by the Japanese at Port Arthur, 1904.
Japan flexed its muscles and launched a full-scale invasion of China following an incident on July 7th, 1937.
For over two centuries from 1641, Nagasaki – and the island of Dejima – was the only place in Japan open to foreigners. How were Europeans received there?
The historical roots of the dispute between China and Japan over control of the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands reveal a great deal about the two countries’ current global standing, says Joyman Lee.
The American soldiers who fought their way through the islands of the Pacific during the Second World War encountered fierce Japanese resistance but few local people. That all changed with the invasion of the Mariana Islands, says Matthew Hughes.
A history of the country’s love affair with the cherry blossom.
The head of Japan's Second World War government was executed on Dec 23rd, 1948
Mark Bryant looks at the cartoons published in imperial Japan during the Second World War.