Tsars, Mandarins, and Commissars: A History of Chinese-Russian RelationsTraces present difficulties back through old rivalries and animosities, and makes a guess at future trends. |
Contents
Preface | 7 |
The Road to Nerchinsk | 24 |
From Kyakhta to St Petersburg | 37 |
Copyright | |
1 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
agreed agreement Aigun alliance ally American Amur Amur River army attack August began bitter border Central Asia century Chiang Kai-shek Chinese Communist party Chinese government Chinese leaders Chinese Peoples Republic Communism Communist China Communist movement comrades declared demand diplomatic dispute earlier early East economic effort Emperor envoy fighting forces foreign ideological imperialism imperialist Japan Japanese Korea Kuldja Kuomintang Kyakhta later Lenin letter major Manchu Manchuria Mao Tse-tung Marxism Marxism-Leninism ment merchants military Mongols Moscow munist Muraviev Nationalist negotiations Nerchinsk nese nuclear weapons official Outer Mongolia peace Peking Peking's Petersburg political Port Arthur position possible Premier Khrushchev Press regime relations revolution revolutionary River rubles Russia and China Russian Russian-Chinese Siberia Sinkiang Sino-Soviet socialist countries Soviet Communist party Soviet government Soviet leaders Soviet Union Soviet-Chinese Stalin statement struggle territory tion trade treaty Treaty of Nerchinsk Tsar Tsarist United Urga victory Western Yakub Beg