📌 Snapshot
- East Asian states — China, Japan, Taiwan and Korea — took divergent paths to modernisation from the early nineteenth century to the present.
- It contrasts Japan's elite-driven, capitalist modernisation under the Meiji Restoration (1868) with China's revolutionary, Communist-led transformation (1949) culminating in Deng Xiaoping's 1978 market reforms.
- It also tracks Taiwan's land-reform-driven growth and South Korea's export-oriented industrialisation under Park Chung-hee, ending in democratisation through the June Movement (1987).
- CUET tests this chapter for dates, slogans, terms (Zaibatsu, Diet, San min chui, Four Modernisations), and cause-effect reasoning between modernisation and nationalism.
📖 Detailed Notes
2.1 Core concepts
- East Asia in the early 19th century was dominated by China under the Qing dynasty (1644–1911) while Japan, a small island country, appeared isolated; yet within decades Japan modernised and defeated China (1894) and Russia (1905), while China was thrown into turmoil (NCERT Introduction, p. 153).
- Historiography of the region is rich: Sima Qian (145–90 BCE) is considered the greatest historian of early China; the Meiji government in 1869 set up a bureau to write a victor's version of the Restoration; scholars like Naito Konan, Joseph Needham and George Sansom shaped modern English scholarship (NCERT pp. 153–154).
- Geography: China is a vast continental country with three river systems (Huang He, Yangtse/Chang Jiang, Pearl); the dominant ethnic group is Han, the major language Putonghua. Japan is a string of islands — Honshu, Kyushu, Shikoku, Hokkaido — over 50% mountainous, with Ainu and Korean minorities (NCERT Introduction, pp. 155–156).
- Japan's political system before Meiji: emperor ruled from Kyoto but lost power to shoguns by the 12th century; from 1603 to 1867 the Tokugawa family held the shogunate, with the country divided into over 250 domains under daimyo; the samurai were the ruling warrior class who alone could carry swords (NCERT "The Political System", p. 156).
- Late-16th-century changes laid the base for modernisation: peasants were disarmed; daimyo were ordered to live in domain capitals; land surveys identified taxpayers and graded productivity. Edo became the world's most populated city, with Osaka and Kyoto also large, fostering a commercial economy and a merchant culture (NCERT p. 156).
- The Meiji Restoration (1868): Commodore Matthew Perry's arrival in 1853 forced Japan to sign a treaty (1854) opening trade; in 1868 a movement removed the shogun, the Emperor was brought to Edo (renamed Tokyo — "eastern capital"), and the slogan "fukoku kyohei" (rich country, strong army) was adopted (NCERT "The Meiji Restoration", pp. 157–158).
- The Meiji state built an "emperor system", issued the Imperial Rescript on Education (1890), made schooling compulsory (near universal by 1910), imposed military service on men over 20, and enacted the Meiji Constitution in 1889 creating the Diet (parliament, German term) with restricted franchise (NCERT pp. 158–161).
- Modernising the economy: Japan's first railway between Tokyo and Yokohama was built in 1870–72; modern banking launched in 1872; Mitsubishi and Sumitomo grew via subsidies; large family-controlled business houses called Zaibatsu dominated the economy till after WW II (NCERT "Modernising the Economy", p. 160).
- Industrial workers: manufacturing workers grew from 700,000 (1870) to 4 million (1913); over half of modern-factory workers were women, who organised Japan's first modern strike in 1886; Tanaka Shozo led the first anti-pollution agitation against the Ashio Mine in 1897 (NCERT pp. 160–161).
- Aggressive nationalism: between 1918 and 1931 popularly elected PMs formed cabinets; from 1899 only serving generals/admirals could be ministers; militarism, colonial expansion (Taiwan 1895, Korea 1910) and fear of the West led to wars and ultimately defeat by 1945 (NCERT "Aggressive Nationalism", p. 161).
- Westernisation vs Tradition: Fukuzawa Yukichi urged Japan to "expel Asia"; Miyake Setsurei argued each nation must develop its special talents; Ueki Emori led the Popular Rights Movement demanding constitutional government (NCERT pp. 162).
- Post-1945 Japan: US-led Occupation (1945–47) demilitarised Japan and introduced Article 9 ("no war clause"); Zaibatsu were dismantled, women voted in 1946; the 1964 Tokyo Olympics and Shinkansen bullet trains symbolised re-emergence (NCERT pp. 164–165).
- China's modern path: marked by three groups — early reformers (Kang Youwei, Liang Qichao), republican revolutionaries (Sun Yat-sen), and the Communist Party (CCP) — striving for sovereignty and equality (NCERT p. 165).
- The Opium War (1839–42): Britain used force to expand opium trade; the East India Company sold Indian opium in China to balance the Britain–India–China triangular trade in silver, tea, silk and porcelain (NCERT pp. 165–166).
- The Chinese examination system, requiring an eight-legged essay (pa-ku wen) in classical Chinese, was abolished in 1905 for being irrelevant to the modern world (NCERT box, p. 167).
- Republic of China: The Manchu empire was overthrown in 1911; Sun Yat-sen founded the Guomindang and gave the Three Principles (San min chui) — nationalism, democracy, socialism (regulating capital, equalising landholdings) (NCERT pp. 167–168).
- The May Fourth Movement (4 May 1919) protested the post-war peace conference; it called for saving China through modern science, democracy and nationalism, and led to demands like abolishing foot-binding (NCERT p. 168).
- Chiang Kai-shek led the Guomindang after Sun's death, advocating secular Confucianism and militarisation; he prescribed "four virtues" for women — chastity, appearance, speech and work (NCERT p. 168).
- Rise of CCP: Founded in 1921; Mao Zedong based revolution on the peasantry, unlike traditional Marxism; the Jiangxi soviet (1928–34), the Long March (1934–35) of 6,000 miles to Yanan, and a new marriage law followed (NCERT "Rise of CCP", pp. 171–172).
- New Democracy (1949–65): PRC established 1949; Great Leap Forward (1958) with backyard steel furnaces and people's communes; by 1958, 26,000 communes covered 98% of farm population (NCERT pp. 172–173).
- Cultural Revolution (1965): Mao launched the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution; the Red Guards attacked old culture, customs and habits; ideology trumped expertise; it severely disrupted the economy and education (NCERT "Conflicting Visions", p. 173).
- Reforms from 1978: Deng Xiaoping declared the Four Modernisations — science, industry, agriculture, defence; the 1978 wall-poster "The Fifth Modernisation" demanded democracy; Tiananmen Square protests (1989) were suppressed (NCERT "Reforms from 1978", pp. 173–174).
- Taiwan: Chiang Kai-shek fled there in 1949 with US$300 million in gold; the Cairo Declaration (1943) restored sovereignty to China; land reforms modernised the economy so that by 1973 Taiwan's GNP was second only to Japan in Asia; martial law was lifted in 1987 (NCERT "Story of Taiwan", pp. 174–175).
- Korea: the Joseon Dynasty (1392–1910) ended when Japan annexed Korea in 1910; liberation in August 1945 was followed by division along the 38th parallel; the Korean War (1950–53) ended in armistice; Park Chung-hee's state-led, export-oriented model (from 1963) and the Saemaul (New Village) Movement (1970) drove rapid growth; the June Democracy Movement of 1987 secured direct elections; Korea joined OECD in 1996 and overcame the 1997 IMF crisis via the Gold Collection Movement (NCERT "Story of Korea", pp. 175–179).
2.2 Definitions to memorise
| Term | Definition | Page |
|---|---|---|
| Daimyo | Domainal lords who ruled over 250 domains under the shogun | 156 |
| Samurai | Warrior class; ruling elite who served the shoguns and daimyo | 156 |
| Fukoku kyohei | Meiji slogan — "rich country, strong army" | 158 |
| Zaibatsu | Large business organisations controlled by individual families, dominating the Japanese economy till after WW II | 160 |
| Diet | Japanese parliament, established under the Meiji Constitution (1889); the word is German | 161 |
| Moga | "Modern girl" — symbol of gender equality and cosmopolitan culture in 1920s Japan | 163 |
| San min chui | Sun Yat-sen's "Three Principles" — nationalism, democracy, socialism | 167–168 |
| Pa-ku wen | The "eight-legged essay" in classical Chinese required in the imperial exam, abolished in 1905 | 167 |
| New Democracy | 1949 PRC programme — alliance of all social classes, distinct from "dictatorship of the proletariat" | 172 |
| Four Modernisations | 1978 CCP goals — science, industry, agriculture, defence | 173 |
| Saemaul Movement | Korean New Village Movement (1970) to modernise rural sector | 177 |
| Yusin Constitution | 1972 Korean constitution under Park Chung-hee giving president absolute authority | 177 |
| Shogun | Military ruler of Japan (1192–1867); the Tokugawa held the office 1603–1867 | 156 |
| Meiji | "Enlightened rule"; the emperor's reign-name from 1868; the era that modernised Japan | 157 |
| Edo / Tokyo | Old shogunal capital renamed "eastern capital" in 1868 | 158 |
| Sun Yat-sen | Founder of the Republic of China; gave the Three Principles (San min chui) | 167–168 |
| Mao Zedong | Communist leader; led the Long March; founded PRC in 1949 | 171–172 |
| Deng Xiaoping | CCP leader who launched the Four Modernisations in 1978 | 173 |
| Chiang Kai-shek | Guomindang leader who fled to Taiwan in 1949 | 168 |
| Long March | 6,000-mile CCP retreat from Jiangxi to Yanan (1934–35) | 172 |
| Tiananmen Square | Beijing square where 1989 pro-democracy protest was suppressed | 174 |
| Great Leap Forward | 1958 Mao programme of backyard furnaces and people's communes | 172 |
| Cultural Revolution | 1965 Mao-led mass campaign of Red Guards against "old culture" | 173 |
| Park Chung-hee | Korean military strongman (1963–79); state-led export industrialisation | 177 |
| 38th parallel | Line dividing North and South Korea after 1945 | 175 |
| Korean War | 1950–53 war between North (Soviet/Chinese-backed) and South (US-backed) Korea | 175 |
| Opium War | 1839–42 war between Britain and Qing China over British opium trade | 165–166 |
| Imperial Rescript on Education | 1890 Meiji decree on loyalty and education | 161 |
| Article 9 | "No war clause" of post-1945 Japanese Constitution | 164 |
| Sima Qian | (145–90 BCE) greatest historian of early China | 153 |
2.3 Diagrams / processes to remember
- Map 1: East Asia — locates China, Japan, Korea and Taiwan; useful for placing the three Chinese river systems and the four main Japanese islands (NCERT p. 155).
- Triangular trade diagram (Opium Trade) — Britain ↔ India ↔ China flow of opium, silver, tea/silk/porcelain (NCERT p. 166).
- Map 2: The Long March — 6,000-mile route from Jiangxi to Shanxi (Yanan), 1934–35 (NCERT p. 172).
- Timeline (pp. 170) — parallel Japan/China dates: 1603 Tokugawa, 1854 Treaty, 1868 Meiji, 1889 Meiji Constitution, 1894–95 Sino-Japanese War, 1904–05 Russo-Japanese War, 1910 Korea annexed, 1911 end of Qing, 1919 May Fourth, 1921 CCP founded, 1934 Long March, 1949 PRC, 1966 Cultural Revolution.
- Writing Japanese — Kanji (Chinese characters), Katakana, Hiragana (the last considered feminine, used by Heian women writers) (NCERT p. 159).
- Process — Meiji modernisation cycle: (1) 1853 Perry's "Black Ships" force opening; (2) 1854 Treaty signed; (3) 1868 Meiji Restoration, shogun removed, emperor moved to Tokyo; (4) compulsory education + military service introduced; (5) 1870–72 first railway Tokyo–Yokohama; (6) 1872 modern banking; (7) Mitsubishi & Sumitomo subsidised into Zaibatsu; (8) 1889 Meiji Constitution + Diet; (9) 1890 Imperial Rescript on Education; (10) 1894–95 Sino-Japanese War, 1904–05 Russo-Japanese War, 1910 Korea annexed.
- Process — CCP rise to power: (1) 1921 founded; (2) 1927 break with Guomindang; (3) 1928–34 Jiangxi Soviet experiment; (4) 1934–35 Long March to Yanan; (5) 1937–45 united front against Japan; (6) 1949 founding of PRC; (7) 1958 Great Leap Forward; (8) 1965 Cultural Revolution; (9) 1978 Four Modernisations; (10) 1989 Tiananmen.
- Process — Park Chung-hee growth model in Korea: (1) 1961 coup; (2) 1962 first Five-Year Plan; (3) state directs banks and big business (chaebol); (4) export-led industrialisation in textiles, steel, ships, chemicals; (5) 1970 Saemaul rural movement; (6) 1972 Yusin Constitution centralises power; (7) 1979 Park assassinated; (8) 1987 June Democracy Movement.
2.5 Timeline / Key events
| Year / Period | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1392–1910 | Joseon Dynasty in Korea | Long-lived East Asian polity (NCERT p. 175) |
| 1603 | Tokugawa shogunate begins | Beginning of the Edo period (NCERT p. 156) |
| 1644–1911 | Qing dynasty rules China | Last imperial dynasty (NCERT p. 153) |
| 1839–42 | First Opium War | Britain forces Qing China into unequal treaties (NCERT pp. 165–166) |
| 1853 | Commodore Perry's "Black Ships" arrive in Japan | Forced opening of Japan (NCERT p. 157) |
| 1854 | Treaty opens Japan to trade | End of seclusion (NCERT p. 157) |
| 1868 | Meiji Restoration; shogun removed; emperor moves to Tokyo | Beginning of Japanese modernisation (NCERT p. 158) |
| 1870–72 | First railway Tokyo–Yokohama | Modern infrastructure (NCERT p. 160) |
| 1872 | Modern banking introduced in Japan | (NCERT p. 160) |
| 1886 | First modern strike in Japan by women workers | (NCERT p. 161) |
| 1889 | Meiji Constitution; Diet established | Constitutional government (NCERT p. 161) |
| 1890 | Imperial Rescript on Education | (NCERT p. 161) |
| 1894–95 | Sino-Japanese War; Japan acquires Taiwan | (NCERT p. 174) |
| 1897 | Tanaka Shozo leads anti-pollution movement against Ashio Mine | (NCERT p. 161) |
| 1904–05 | Russo-Japanese War; Japan defeats a European power | (NCERT p. 153) |
| 1905 | Chinese imperial examination system abolished | End of pa-ku wen (NCERT p. 167) |
| 1910 | Japan annexes Korea | (NCERT p. 175) |
| 1911 | Manchu (Qing) empire overthrown | Republic of China founded (NCERT p. 167) |
| 1919 (4 May) | May Fourth Movement in Beijing | Birth of modern Chinese nationalism (NCERT p. 168) |
| 1921 | CCP founded | (NCERT p. 171) |
| 1934–35 | Long March (Jiangxi to Yanan, 6,000 mi) | CCP regroups (NCERT p. 172) |
| 1943 | Cairo Declaration restores Taiwan sovereignty to China | (NCERT p. 174) |
| 1945 (Aug) | Japan surrenders; Korea liberated; US Occupation of Japan begins | (NCERT p. 164) |
| 1949 | PRC founded; Chiang flees to Taiwan | (NCERT pp. 172, 174) |
| 1950–53 | Korean War | Korea divided at 38th parallel (NCERT p. 175) |
| 1958 | Great Leap Forward; 26,000 people's communes | (NCERT p. 172) |
| 1964 | Tokyo Olympics; Shinkansen bullet train | Japan's post-war re-emergence (NCERT p. 165) |
| 1965 | Cultural Revolution launched | (NCERT p. 173) |
| 1970 | Saemaul (New Village) Movement in Korea | (NCERT p. 177) |
| 1972 | Yusin Constitution in Korea | (NCERT p. 177) |
| 1978 | Deng's Four Modernisations | China's market reform begins (NCERT p. 173) |
| 1987 | Korean June Democracy Movement; martial law lifted in Taiwan | (NCERT pp. 174, 178) |
| 1989 | Tiananmen Square protests suppressed | (NCERT p. 174) |
| 1996 | South Korea joins OECD | (NCERT p. 178) |
| 1997 | Asian financial crisis; Korea's Gold Collection Movement | (NCERT p. 179) |
2.4 Common confusions / NTA trap points
- Three Principles attribution: Sun Yat-sen (not Mao, not Chiang) gave the San min chui — nationalism, democracy, socialism (NOT communism).
- Four Modernisations vs Three Principles: Four Modernisations (Deng, 1978: science, industry, agriculture, defence) are often confused with Sun Yat-sen's Three Principles or with the "Fifth Modernisation" (Democracy) demanded in the wall-poster.
- Meiji Constitution date: enacted in 1889, not 1868 (which is the Restoration year) or 1890 (which is the Imperial Rescript on Education).
- First railway in Japan: Tokyo–Yokohama, 1870–72 (frequently confused with later lines or with the Shinkansen of 1964).
- Zaibatsu vs Diet: Zaibatsu = business houses; Diet = parliament. NTA likes swapping these.
- Long March direction: From Jiangxi (south) to Shanxi/Yanan (north) — NOT the reverse.
- Korean division: Along the 38th parallel (not the 49th, which is North America's border), with Soviets in the North and the UN/US in the South.
- Article 9 ("no war clause") is part of the post-1945 Japanese Constitution under US Occupation, NOT the Meiji Constitution.
- The Diet is the Japanese parliament (from German Reichstag), NOT to be confused with the Indian "diet" — NCERT explicitly notes the German origin.
- Saemaul Movement (1970, Korea) ≠ Great Leap Forward (1958, China) ≠ Four Modernisations (1978, China) — distinct rural-modernisation campaigns.
- Sino-Japanese War 1894–95 vs Russo-Japanese War 1904–05 — both Japanese victories but different decades.
🎯 Practice MCQs
First 3 questions free · create a free account to unlock the rest — answers & explanations included, no payment needed
Q1. The Meiji slogan "fukoku kyohei" translates as:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
The text explicitly defines fukoku kyohei as "rich country, strong army", reflecting the twin Meiji goals of economic development and military strength. Option (A) paraphrases Fukuzawa Yukichi's later "expel Asia" idea, which is unrelated.
Q2. Which of the following statements about the Zaibatsu is correct?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
The NCERT defines Zaibatsu as "large business organisations controlled by individual families" that dominated the economy until after WW II. The 1886 strike was organised by women workers, not Zaibatsu.
Q3. Match List I with List II: | List I (Term/Event) | List II (Description) | |---|---| | (a) San min chui | (i) Eight-legged essay | | (b) Pa-ku wen | (ii) Sun Yat-sen's Three Principles | | (c) Long March | (iii) Tokyo Bullet Train | | (d) Shinkansen | (iv) 6,000-mile CCP retreat to Yanan |
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: A
San min chui = Sun Yat-sen's Three Principles (NCERT p. 167–168); pa-ku wen = eight-legged essay (p. 167); the Long March (1934–35) covered 6,000 miles to Shanxi/Yanan (p. 172); Shinkansen are the bullet trains started in 1964 (p. 165).
🔒 9 more practice MCQs
Create a free account to unlock every MCQ in this chapter — answers and explanations included. No payment needed.
Already registered? Just log in and they'll all appear here.
Q4. Consider the following statements about the May Fourth Movement of 1919: 1. It was a protest in Beijing against the decisions of the post-war peace conference that denied China the return of territories seized from it. 2. It called for saving China through modern science, democracy and nationalism. 3. It was led by Chiang Kai-shek to consolidate Guomindang power. Which of the statements given above are correct?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: A
Statements 1 and 2 are taken directly — the protest opposed the peace-conference decisions and galvanised a generation around science, democracy and nationalism. Statement 3 is wrong: Chiang Kai-shek emerged as Guomindang leader only after Sun Yat-sen's death and did not lead the May Fourth Movement.
Q5. **Assertion (A):** The Chinese imperial examination system was abolished in 1905. **Reason (R):** It was based on skills in classical Chinese learning that were felt to have no relevance for the modern world.
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: A
Both statements are accurate and the Reason directly explains the Assertion — the NCERT states the system was abolished precisely because its classical-essay focus (the pa-ku wen) was felt to be irrelevant to a modernising China.
Q6. The "Four Modernisations" declared by the Communist Party of China in 1978 referred to the development of:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
The Four Modernisations were science, industry, agriculture and defence. Option (C) describes elements of the earlier Maoist programme, not Deng's 1978 reform agenda.
Q7. Arrange the following in correct chronological order: 1. Meiji Restoration 2. Long March 3. May Fourth Movement 4. Deng's Four Modernisations
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: A
1868 → 1919 → 1934–35 → 1978.
Q8. Read the following extract: "In 1853 the American Commodore Matthew Perry arrived with a fleet of ships in Edo Bay and forced Japan to sign a treaty (1854) opening trade." This episode is the immediate trigger for:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
Q9. Match the leader with the slogan/concept: | List I (Leader) | List II (Concept) | |---|---| | (a) Sun Yat-sen | (i) Four Modernisations | | (b) Mao Zedong | (ii) Three Principles (San min chui) | | (c) Deng Xiaoping | (iii) Great Leap Forward | | (d) Fukuzawa Yukichi | (iv) "Expel Asia" |
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: A
Q10. Which of the following statements about Taiwan's modernisation is correct?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: A
Chiang brought US$300 million in gold, land reforms were carried out, and martial law was lifted in 1987 — only option A is correct.
Q11. Assertion (A): Mao Zedong's strategy of revolution differed from traditional Marxism. Reason (R): Mao based the revolution on the peasantry rather than on the urban industrial proletariat.
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: A
Q12. Korea's "Gold Collection Movement" (1997) was the country's response to the:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: C
📊 Previous-Year Questions
Practise with real CUET History previous-year papers — every question solved, with the correct answer and a step-by-step explanation.
View solved CUET PYQ papers →Ready to drill History?
Unlock all MCQs, chapter tests, mocks & PYQs for ₹199/year.
Get UniDrill Pro