The Six-Day War of 1899
Hong Kong in the Age of Imperialism
(1899年的六天戰爭:帝國主義時代的香港)
ISBN : 978-962-209-899-2
April 2008
304 pages, 6″ x 9″, 17 b&w illus. & 6 maps
Ebooks
In 1899, a year after the Convention of Peking leased the New Territories to Britain, the British moved to establish control. This triggered resistance by some of the population of the New Territories. There ensued six days of fighting with heavy Chinese casualties. This truly forgotten war has been thoroughly researched for the first time and recounted in lively style by Patrick Hase, an expert on the people and history of the New Territories.
After brief discussion of British Imperialism in the 1890s and British military theory of that period on small wars, the heart of the book is a day-by-day account of the fighting and of the differences of opinion between the Governor of Hong Kong (Blake) and the Colonial Secretary (Lockhart) as to how the war should be fought. Dr Hase uses his deep knowledge of the people and the area to give a full picture of the leaders and of the rank-and-file of the village fighters. New estimates of the casualties are provided, as are the implications of the way these casualties are down-played in most British accounts.
As a small war of Imperial Expansion, fought at precisely the high point of Imperial thinking within the British Empire, The Six-Day War of 1899 is of interest, not only to historians of Hong Kong and China, but also to historians of the British Empire and the British Army, and to general readers interested in military, imperial and Hong Kong history.
“The Six-Day War of 1899 is an important book for scholars who are interested in colonialism – and not just the Hong Kong variety. Hase explores the ‘hidden’ history of Britain’s occupation and subsequent pacification of a rural Chinese district. This is a riveting account of a colonial encounter.” —James L. Watson, Fairbank Professor of Chinese Society, Harvard University
“An 1899 newspaper headline called the war ‘The Ferment in the Hinterland’, but it went flat very quickly. Well researched and written with exemplary clarity, this carefully crafted account has restored the fizz, challenging received notions of the characters of the main actors as well as of the severity of the bloodshed.” —Hugh Baker, Emeritus Professor of Chinese, SOAS, University of London
“Thorough, judicious and meticulously researched, Patrick Hase’s book is, and will remain, the definitive account of a hitherto well-concealed act of imperial turpitude, Britain’s acquisition of Hong Kong’s New Territories.” —Nigel Collett, author of The Butcher of Amritsar