| Albert Shaw - American literature - 1912 - 974 pages
...boiling caldron, and the people are plunged in misery. Yuan Shih-kai was therefore commanded to dispatch commissioners in order to confer with the Republicans...of millions for the glory of one family? Therefore, the Dowager-Empress and the Emperor hereby vest the sovereignty of the Chinese Empire in the people.... | |
| Frank Fox - Competition, International - 1912 - 324 pages
...settlement being reached. It is now evident that the majority of the people favour a Republic, and, from the preference of the people's hearts, the will...of millions for the glory of one family? Therefore, the Dowager Empress and the Emperor hereby vest the sovereignty in the people. Let Yuan Shih-kai organise... | |
| Howard Benjamin Grose - Baptists - 1912 - 1112 pages
...any settlement being reached. It is now evident that the majority of the people favor a republic, and from the preference of the people's hearts the will...of millions for the glory of one family? Therefore the Dowager Empress and the Emperor hereby vest the sovereignity in the people. Let Yuan Shih Kai organize... | |
| Frank Fox - Eastern question (Far East) - 1928 - 298 pages
...settlement being reached. It is now evident that the majority of the people favour a Republic, and, from the preference of the people's hearts, the will...millions for the glory of one family ? Therefore, the Dowager Empress and the Emperor hereby vest the sovereignty in the people. Let Yuan Shih-kai organize... | |
| George Edward Plumbe, James Langland, Claude Othello Pike - Almanacs, American - 1913 - 700 pages
...the people were plunged Into misery. Yuan Shih-kal was therefore commanded to dispatch commissioners to confer with the republicans with a view to the...of the people are in favor of a republic. From the preferences of the people's hearts the will of heaven is discernible. How could we oppose the desires... | |
| Kit-ching Chan Lau - History - 1978 - 192 pages
...Jordan and Ijuin a telegram he was about to send to T'ang Shao-i at Shanghai, approving T'ang's proposal of a national assembly to decide on the future form of government. Jordan considered the proposal a 'fair one' which, if rejected, would make the revolutionaries morally... | |
| Universities and colleges - 1912 - 472 pages
...edict proclaimed the abdication of the Chinese throne by the Manchu dynasty. A part of the edict reads: "The majority of the people are in favor of a republic....of millions for the glory of one family? Therefore the Dowager Empress and the Emperor hereby vest the sovereignty of the Chinese Empire in the people."... | |
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