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Marco Polo Bridge incident

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The Battle is well known among Chinese as Incident of July 7 (七七事變) or July 7 Lugouqiao (七七蘆溝&#27211). (note: All Chinese and Japanese personal names here are preceded by family names.)

Overview
On July 7 1937, Japanese Imperial Army attacked the bridge. Despite determined resistance by KMT forces, Japanese army managed to take the bridge and eventually Beijing which is abandoned by KMT.

Historical significance

The battle officially marked Japanese large scale invasion of China. With the Japanese victory the Imperial Army can move on to the plain of Northern China (north of Huang he) without much resistance since the tanks are pretty formidable against the low-tech Chinese army.

Prelude to Battle

After the Incident of September 18 in 1931, Japan had occupied Manchuria and had created an nominally independent state of Manchukuo with Ai-xin-jue-luo Pu-yi (the last emperor of China) as its sovereign. That state is widely regarded to have been a puppet government with real power concentrated in the hands of the Japanese, which constituted the only significant military forces in Manchuria. Although the Kuomintang and the international community refused to recognize the legality of the Japanese occupation, a truce had been negotiated in 1931.

At the end of 1932, Japanese Guandong Army invaded Chahaer Province. KMT's XXIX Corps, lead by General Song Zhe Yuan and armed only with spears and obsolete rifles, resisted the aggression, resulting in the War of Resistance at the Great Wall. The province fell to the Japanese after the predictable victory therefore areas to the west of Beijing fell to the Japanese.

In 1933, Japan annexed Rehe Province using the security of Manzhouguo as a pretext. Consequently all areas north of the Great wall and hence north of Beijing fell to Japan. In 1935, Japan annexed eastern portion of Hebei Province, established yet another puppet government, Eastern Ji Anticommunist Automated Government (冀東防共自治政府 abrreviated as Eastern Ji Automated Government 冀東自治政府). Later that year, Ho Ying Qin (何應欽) and Umemura mi?rou (梅村美治/自郎) signed an agreement, known as the Ho-Umemura Agreement by which Japanese could deploy and pratise troops around Beijing at will. As a result at the start of 1937, Beijing was surrounded at north, west and east by areas occupied by Japanese.

Installations of various puppet governments were deliberate attempts by the Japanese to annex whole country of China by nibbling. Nanjing puppet government with Wang Jingwei as head was another obvious example.

Geography around the bridge and Beijing

Lugou Bridge ( 蘆溝橋 lugouqiao) locates in Fengtai (豐台 feng1 tai2), a suburb area south of Beijing. It is also known as the Marco Polo Bridge because the bridge was believed to be described in the works of Marco Polo.

4 strategic posts secured Beijing from outside the city.

East of the city: Tongzhou Town (通州鎮)
Northwest: Nankou Town (南口鎮) at Changping Prefecture (昌平縣xian)
South: Fengtai Town (豐台鎮)
Southwest: Lugou Bridge at Wanping Prefecture (宛平縣) where Wanping Town(宛平鎮) was located. The bridge guraded the only passage leading Beijing to outside and KMT-controlled area from the south. Nanwan Town (南宛鎮) located north of Wanping town.

Pinghan Railway (Beijing-Wuhan Railway), the only rail linking up the city to south of Huang he, passed the bridge, then entered Wanping Town, Nanwan Town and finally to the terminal station inBeijing.

Before the start of the battle, all the first 3 posts were under Japanese control except the southwest. The west end of the bridge was controlled by the Japanese as the east byKMT. If the bridge fell, the city will be completely cut off from KMT who thus defended it at all costs.

Troops information and Notable Figures from both sides

Figures

The XXIX Corps, composed mostly of Feng yu xiang's forces and infantry, secured the cities of Beijing and Tianjin and the Hebei Province.

KMT forces
Personal Names [abbreviations hereafter] Military Post(s) Non-Military Post(s)
General Song Zhe Yuan [Song] commander of XXIX Corps Charmain of the Hebei Legislative Committee (same as a provincial parliamnet), Head of the Beijing Securities (similar to police)
General Qin De Chun (秦德淳 qin2 de2 chun2) [Qin] vice-commander of XXIX Corps Mayor of Beijing
General Liu Ru Ming (劉汝明 liu2 ru3 ming2) [Liu] commander of 143th Division Chairman of Chahaer Province
General Feng Zhi An (馮治安 feng2 zhi4 an1) [Feng] commander of 37th Division Chairman of Hebei Province
General Zhao Deng Ru (趙登汝 zhao4 deng1 ru3) [Zhao] commander of 132th Division N/A
General Zhang Zi Zhong (張自忠 zhang1 zi4 zhong1) [Zhang] commander of 38th Division Mayor of Tianjin
Colonel Ji Xing Wen (吉星文 ji2 xing1 wen2) [Ji] commander of 219th regiment, under 110th brigade of 37th Division N/A

The Japanese Guandong Army at the region was a combination of infantry, tanks, mechanized forces, artilleries and cavalries.

Japanese Forces
Personal Names [abbreviations hereafter] Military Post(s) Composition of the corresponding units
Matsui Taisa = Colonel Matsui (松(matsu) 井(i) 大(tai) 佐(sa)) [Matsui] commander of 117th? Battalion of Guandong Army and troops around Beijing and Tianjin Infantry
? Taii = Captain ? [?] commander of 221th? Mechanized Squadron some tanks and mostly armoured vehicles
? Taii [?] commander of 3(7?)th Battery Artillery with few infantries
? Taii [?] commander of 6(8?)th Squadron Cavalry

Depolyment

Phase I

KMT forces
Units Locations of headquaters Strength in number of soldiers Depoyments or Duties
XXIX Corps Beijing around 50000 Hebei Province
143th Division Beijing just below 10000 Beijing
37th Division Beijing just below 10000 south of Beijing
132th Division Beijing several thousands between Beijing and Tianjin
38th Division Tianjin several thousands Tianjin
219th regiment, under 110th brigade of 37th Division Wanping Town around 2000 of the 10000 deployed right in front of the Japanese for security of the bridge
Japanese Forces
Units Locations of headquaters Strength in number of soldiers Depoyments or Duties
117th? Battalion ? around 400 west of Lugou bridge
221th? Mechanized Squadron same as 117th around 200 west of Lugou bridge
3(7?)th Battery Nankou Town around 200 Nankou Town
6(8?)th Squadron Tongzhou Town around 400 Tongzhou Town

Phase II

KMT forces same as Phase I except 132th was moved to garrison Nanwan Town which is between Wanping Town and Beijing.

Japanese Forces 3(2?)th Division of Guandong Army from Chahaer Province and 15(9?)th Division from Korea. Strength of Japanese Army sharply increased from around 1000 to around 15000. XXXIV Corps of Guandong army was on its way from Manchuria.

Course of the Battle

Phase I

Beginning late June 1937, the Japanese army (several hundreds) deployed at the west end of the bridge was practising while Kuomintang forces, garrisoned in Wanping Town, watched closely. At dawn of July 7, the Japanese army telegraphed the KMT forces saying that a soldier was missing and believed to be hiding inside the town. The Japanese demanded that its army should enter the town to search for the missing soldier, who was later found unharmed. There are some disputes among historians over the incident with some historians believing that this was an unintentional accident while others believing that the entire incident was fabricated by the Kwantung Army in order to provide a pretext for the invasion of central China.

Colonel Ji denied the request backed by his superior, General Song. In the evening of July 7, Matsui gave Ji an ultimatum that KMT troops must let japanese troops enter the town within the next hour or the twon will be fired. Nevertheless Japanese artillery has already aimed at the town when the ultimatum was sent. At midnight July 8, Japanese artillery units started bombarding the town while the infantry with tanks matched across the bridge at dawn. With order from Song, Ji led the KMT forces of about 2000 to defend at all cost. The Japanese army partially overran the bridge in the afternoon but KMG force, outnumbered the Japanese, retook it completely next day. Japanese army then halted the attack and offered negotiation, making the end of Phase I. Nevertheless Japanese army still concentrated at the west end of the bridge.

Phase II

july 12, meeting of all important personnel of XXIX corp at beijing. general qin prefer defend

whereas zhang argue the incident can still be settled by negotiation. japan head of all force in hua north (cha, yeh, ping, and jin) bridge ben told zhang that japan hope incidence of luguo bridge can be settled peacefully. The negiotiation (obvious time buyer) took place at tianjin. as it goes on, japan concentrated armies from Manchuria and Korea around Beijing. Song send qin and general zhao ding yu (zhao escalate water woman) head of 132th division to guard nan yuan. On the diplomatic front, General Song, who was also the chairman of the province, sent a negotiator, Zhang self faith Japanese headquarters while the fight was still taking place.

negotiation:

japan want (if KMG agrees all terms, japan promised not to invade beijing and tienjing):

clear anti-japan organaization, anti-japan activities. (KMG=OK) held KMG resposible for july 7 incident (KMG: fired the yin head) wants song's apology and relieve himself. (Zhang: cannot decide on behalf of song, retruned to beijing.) As soon as zhang's leave, japan lauched full scale attack on Beijing. (july 28?)

nan yuan loss to japan (aug 3?, zhao's sacrifice), zhang arrival in beijing aug3. song relieved himself as committee leader, head of beijing police. appoint zhang as beijing mayor, police head and committe leader. and left beijing (aug 5),

The negotiation stalled as the Japanese insisted KMT forces must stop the resistance unconditionally and retreat from the town. Song's stance of not giving up an inch of land was also a factor. Evetually the Japanese promised Zhang that no more similar sort of incidence would take place in the future. Then Song ordered Ji's retreat to Beijing, marking the end of the battle. However, the Japanese broke the promise a month later and invaded the city which fell on October 15 (?) 1937.

Aftermath

aug fell to japan aug 15?., tienjin on aug 17?

2 views:

Zhang and Song set-up: zhang was appointed of all the above post while song and qin took the main force of corp XXIX out of beijing, keep shili (fact strength).

japan cheated zhang that even KMG accepted all demands but japan still invade beijing, tienjin.

Media (like Shanghai Daily) scolded Zhang as traitor of the country.

Zhang was not treated as traitor (or being forgiven) since he sacrified himself while fighting in Anhui.

With the loss of the bridge and, consequently, Beijing and Tianjin, the plain of Northern China was helpless against Japanese machanized divisions who occupied it by the end of the year. Chinese armies (KMT and CCP) were on constant retreat until the hard fought Chinese victory at Tai er zhuang.

<---- See also: Chinese history -- Republic of China -- Military history -- List of battles -- World War II -- KMT -- Manchuria --History of Japan -- Manchukuo -- Ai-xin-jue-luo Pu-yi -- 1937 -- July 7