Port Arthur massacre | |
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Part of the First Sino-Japanese War | |
Location | Port Arthur (present-day Lüshunkou District of Dalian), Qing China |
Date | November 21, 1894 |
Target | Soldiers and civilians |
Attack type | Massacre |
Deaths | 2,600 civilians massacred within the city, no reliable count in the suburban hills. Maximum 20,000 killed in total, including soldiers.[1] |
Perpetrators | 1st Division, Japanese Imperial Army |
The Port Arthur massacre (Chinese: 旅順大屠殺) took place during the First Sino-Japanese War from 21 November 1894 for three days, in the Chinese coastal city of Port Arthur (now Lüshunkou District of Dalian, Liaoning),[1] when advance elements of the First Division of the Japanese Second Army under the command of General Yamaji Motoharu (1841–1897) killed somewhere between 2,600 civilians and 20,000 people including Chinese soldiers, although one eyewitness reporter estimated a total death toll of 60,000, including civilians, soldiers, and residents of the outlying rural district.
Reports of a massacre were first published by the Canadian journalist James Creelman of the New York World, whose account was widely circulated within the United States. In 1894, the State Department ordered its ambassador to Japan, Edwin Dun, to conduct an independent investigation of Creelman's reports.
可见,经过落实,旅顺市街被杀人数为2600至2700人。请注意:这个数字仅是指旅顺市街的被杀人数而言,并不包括逃离市街以及旅顺郊区和山区被杀的人数,同时也不包括在炮台阵地或北撤过程中阵亡的清军官兵。