Chinese Battleship vs Japanese Cruiser
Yalu River 1894
Benjamin Lai author Alan Gilliland illustrator Mr Paul Wright illustrator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:21st Feb '19
Should be back in stock very soon
In the summer of 1894, Japan and China went to war over control of Korea and northern China. This absorbing study assesses both sides’ warships and the officers and sailors who crewed them at the Yalu River, a decisive battle of the First Sino-Japanese War.
The 1894–95 war between China and Japan, known in the West as the First Sino-Japanese War, lasted only nine months, but its impact resonates today.
The Chinese Beiyang (Northern) Fleet was led by her flagship, Dingyuan, and her sister ship, Zhenyuan, which were the biggest in Asia; German-built armoured turret ships, they were armed with four 12in guns and two 6in guns, plus six smaller guns and three torpedo tubes. For their part the Japanese fleet, including the Matsushima and her sister ships Itsukushima and Hashidate, were each armed with a single 12.6in Canet gun and 11 or 12 4.7in guns, plus smaller guns and four torpedo tubes. The scene was set for a bloody confrontation that would stun the world and transform the relationship between China and Japan.
Fully illustrated with stunning artwork, this is the engrossing story of the Yalu River campaign, where Chinese and Japanese ironclads fought for control of Korea.
ISBN: 9781472828408
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 262g
80 pages