65
1900 ca 1900
1901 December
1904
1905 Jan/Jun
1907
ca 1910/1911
1914 November
ca 1914/1915
1914-1919
11 Dec 1919
Claims to have volunteered for service in Peking [Boxer troubles]
Mesny visited Nan-chang in Kiangsi where he met Hsiung Shih-fu, a young reformer
Interviewed Viceroy Liu K'un-yı în Nanking.
Published Mesny's Chinese and English Almannac
Publication of his final volume of his Chinese Miscellany
Most Excellent High Priest in the Keystone Royal Arch Chapter, in Shanghai
His wife, Han, obtained a legal separation in Shanghai
Mesny moved to Hankow
Claims to have passed a medical and then offered his services to the Crown [World War 1]
Employed by Messrs. Reiss and Co. in Hankow
Died in rue de Paris in Hankow
Appendix C
The Chinese Imperial Forces
Mesny's Involvment in the Suppression of the Miao Revolt
The First Campaign by Imperial Troops
in Kueichou Province
1868-1871
and
Order of Battle of the Szechuan Force
Chinese Imperial Forces, with the aid of a number of foreigners and foreign arms, had by 1864 succeeded in suppressing the Taiping rebellion against the dynasty. They then turned to liquidating the other rebellions seething in various parts of China which included the Nien movement in northern China, the Moslem minority revolt in Yunnan province, another major Moslem uprising in the North-west, and finally the Miao aboriginal tribes which had revolted in Kueichou province.
The Miao, or Miao-tzu as Mesny refers to them, rose against the Ch'ing dynasty Manchu rulers of China in 1854 after discontent reached boiling point due not only to Chinese settlers colonising the best lands in the low lying areas of the province of Kueichou, but also to the exploitation of the Miao by Chinese officials and merchants. According to Mesny the passionate and untamed Miao gradually took back almost the whole province apart from the capital, Kuei-yang Fu, and the city
65
1900 ca 1900
1901 December
1904
1905 Jan/Jun
1907
ca 1910/1911
1914 November
ca 1914/1915
1914-1919
11 Dec 1919
Claims to have volunteered for service in Peking [Boxer troubles] Mesny visited Nan-chang in Kiangsi where he met Hsiung Shih-fu, a young reformer
Interviewed Viceroy Liu K'un-yı în Nanking.
Published Mesny's Chinese and English Almannac
Publication of his final volume of his Chinese Miscellany Most Excellent High Priest in the Keystone Royal Arch Chapter, in Shanghai
His wife, Han, obtained a legal separation in Shanghai
Mesny moved to Hankow
Claims to have passed a medical and then offered his services to the Crown [World War 1]
Employed by Messrs. Reiss and Co. in Hankow
Died in rue de Paris in Hankow
Appendix C
The Chinese Imperial Forces
Mesny's Involvment in the Suppression of the Miao Revolt
The First Campaign by Imperial Troops
in Kueichou Province
1868-1871
and
Order of Battle of the Szechuan Force
Chinese Imperial Forces, with the aid of a number of foreigners and foreign arms, had by 1864 succeeded in suppressing the Taiping rebellion against the dynasty. They then turned to liquidating the other rebellions seething in various parts of China which included the Nien movement in northern China, the Moslem minority revolt in Yunnan province, another major Moslem uprising in the North-west, and finallly the Miao aboriginal tribes which had revolted in Kueichou province.
The Miao, or Miao-tzu as Mesny refers to them, rose against the Ch'ing dynasty Manchu rulers of China in 1854 after discontent reached boiling point due not only to Chinese settlers colonising the best lands in the low lying areas of the province of Kueichou, but also to the exploitation of the Miao by Chinese officials and merchants, According to Mesny the passionate and untamed Miao gradually took back almost the whole province apart from the capital, Kuei-yang Fu, and the city
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