Hankou Incident

Hubei, the province in which Hankou (now part of the city of Wuhan) was located

The Hankou Incident (also rendered as Hankow Incident; Chinese and Japanese: 漢口事件 (Hankō Jiken or Kankō Jiken)) was an incident that occurred on 3 April 1927 in which rioters and a few military units entered the Japanese concession in the Chinese city of Hankou, engaged in vandalism and looting, and attacked Japanese residents and consular staff. A number of servicemen of the Imperial Japanese Navy were injured, 150 homes were damaged and the total cost of the destruction was estimated at 920,000 yen.[1] Dozens of Chinese civilians were also killed when Japanese marines fired machine guns at protestors.[2] Although some reports suggest that the incident occurred at the instigation of the Chinese Communist Party,[3] the riots were sparked by an altercation between Japanese marines and Chinese workers.

  1. ^ 『満州事件と重光駐華公使報告書』 Edited by Ryuji Hattori
  2. ^ Yuan-tsung Chen Return to the Middle Kingdom: One Family, Three Revolutionaries, and the Birth of Modern China, Union Square Press, New York pp241-242
  3. ^ 「漢口事件解決に関する文書」『日本外交年表並主要文書 下』

© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search