Turtledove
Advertisement
For the small Mexican town, see China, Nuevo León.
People's Republic of China
Chinamap
PRCflag
Country
Continent: Asia
Capital: Beijing
National Language: Mandarin
Government: Socialist Single Party State
Status in OTL: Active

China is a large country in Asia, with the highest population on the planet. It is one of the oldest continuous civilizations on the planet, having in its history given a number of important inventions and technological advancements to humanity, as well as influential cultural practices and institutions.

Since 1949, the government in control of the Chinese mainland has been the People's Republic of China (PRC). The head of state of the PRC is the President and the head of government is the Premier of the State Council. Both officials serve five-year terms. Officially, the President is chosen by the National People's Congress (the world's largest legislative chamber, with nearly three thousand seats), and the Premier is appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Congress. In practice, both offices are invariably awarded to candidates chosen informally by the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party.

The PRC is essentially a one-party state, though a minority of seats in Congress are set aside for approved smaller parties provided those parties go into coalition with the Communists and both accept and support Communist leadership. High-ranking government officials are usually high-ranking Party members as well. This has created a unique intermingling between party and government: Party members serving in government are obliged to carry out party policies, but as party leaders they have considerable influence on the shaping of those policies. This system is different from that seen in other Communist countries such as the Soviet Union, where the party's dominance of the government was one-sided.

China

The flag of the Republic of China, which ruled the nation from 1912 to 1949. Many of Harry Turtledove's stories and especially novels involving China take place during the Republican period.

The PRC's sovereignty is disputed by the Republic of China (RC). The RC was founded on 1 January 1912 after the 1911 Xinhai Revolution overthrew the ruling Qing Dynasty and ended well over two millennia of imperial rule in China. At the time, China was in a semi-colonized state, with half a dozen foreign powers claiming spheres of influence centered around the country's most economically vital regions. The RC never did effectively control all the territory over which it claimed sovereignty: foreign imperialists, Chinese warlords, a Japanese invasion, and the Communist Party all controlled significant portions of Chinese territory at some point during the period when the RC was in power.

The Chinese Civil War began in the 1930s when the ROC's ruling Kuomintang Party expelled the Communists from their governing coalition and violently purged Communist officers of the armed forces. The civil war was interrupted during the Second Sino-Japanese War, with both sides (more or less) cooperating, along with the Allied Forces, to expel the Japanese invasion. Following the end of World War II, the civil war quickly resumed, and in 1949, ended with a near-complete Communist victory. The RC managed to hold the island of Taiwan and several smaller islands in its vicinity, and reestablished its government in Taipei. The RC continued to claim to be the rightful government of China, and the PRC claimed sovereignty over Taiwan and the other RC holdings. This situation has persisted to the time of this writing (2015), though a military conflict has yet to arise over the dispute.

During the first half of the Cold War, most anti-Communist countries supported the ROC's claim. However, as the PRC consolidated power on the mainland, this was seen as increasingly unrealistic. In 1971, the United Nations expelled the RC and seated the PRC in its place, granting the PRC China's permanent seat on the Security Council. The following year, the United States began a policy of detente with PRC which gradually led to full diplomatic recognition in 1979. Since these two events, momentum has steadily built internationally to acceptance of the PRC as China's rightful government. However, at the time of this writing, 22 states continue to recognize the RC, and numerous others openly maintain unofficial back-channels.

Literary comment

In most of the works of Harry Turtledove, the Point of Divergence arrives when China is still in its republic phase, and still embroiled in the Civil War and the Second Sino-Japanese War. A few have PODs set in imperial China, and one or two are set in the PRC. In the Southern Victory series, it is unclear whether the empire was ever deposed.

China in Agent of Byzantium

By the early 14th Century, China was one of the three great powers in the known world. The others were the Byzantine Empire and the Persian Empire.

China in Atlantis

Chinese people immigrated to the United States of Atlantis in the 19th century. Hanover had a sizable Chinatown.[1]

On the Atlantean Senate floor in 1852, Consul Leland Newton reminded Jeremiah Stafford that the achievements of 13th-century Cathay dwarfed those of Europe, thereby deflating Stafford's claim that European people had always been leaders of the world.[2]

China in "Before the Beginning"

China was one of the first countries to convert to Judaism en masse after it was revealed that the Jews were indeed God's chosen people.

China in Crosstime Traffic

Crosstime Traffic was aware of an alternate in which China had discovered and completely settled North America. In another alternate, China was responsible for starting a devastating nuclear war. In another, the descendants of Alexander the Great ruled half a dozen empires that stretched from Spain to the borders of China. Footage taken in this alternate was shown to Jeremy Solters and his fellow students in US history class.

In another alternate, where Jeremy Solters' friend Michael Fujikawa went with his parents, China was dominated by Japanese warlords - which gave the Fujikawa family, with their Japanese background, a better chance to blend in. In the messages which Michael sent to Jeremy, he made little mention of the history or technological level of the China in whose North he lived, mainly complaining of having to get up very early for long and boring religious ceremonies, as part of keeping the Fujikawas' cover in that alternate.

China in Curious Notions

In the alternate designated as 3477, China, like the rest of the world, was politically dominated by Germany after it emerged victorious from the brief war of 1914. Its tremendous size and huge population, however, made it nearly impossible to rule to the same extent that Germany ruled other countries.

Although China had overthrown and abolished its monarchy in 1911, Germany restored it, and continued to rule China through the emperor well into the 21st century. China's population, though, made it easy for resistance movements to rise up against German rule and disappear without a trace in advance of crackdowns. By the 2090s, the Triads were working all over the world, including in the United States, to replace the German hegemony with Chinese hegemony.

Given China's "wild" status, Crosstimer Lawrence Gomes' claim that Curious Notions purchased its far too advanced merchandise from China was readily accepted by German authorities.

China in The Disunited States of America

China had dissolved into various autonomous provinces in the 20th Century. Two or three of these were considered great powers of the world in the late 21st Century.

China in The Gladiator

After the Soviet Union won the Cold War, the People's Republic of China was the only viable rival for the USSR. The PRC had carved out a substantial sphere of influence in the world, most importantly in East Asia, but it was not unheard of for China to meddle in Russia's immediate sphere. Most famously, Albanian leader Enver Hoxha had broken with the USSR and turned to China in the late 20th Century. Though at some later time the Soviet Union re-imposed an Albanian regime friendly to itself, there were still pro-Chinese guerrillas fighting the pro-Soviet government in the closing days of the 21st Century.

China in Gunpowder Empire

China was the easternmost in a string of empires stretching all along the Eurasian land mass, which also included the Roman Empire, Lietuva, Persia and the two empires sharing the Indian subcontinent, all of which - though having varied historical and cultural backgrounds - possessed gunpowder and artillery and had considerable stability. There was some trade between the Chinese and Romans, but it was not very important to either empire. Scholars noted that these two empires had a similar problem of their shores being the target of pirates, from Japan and Scandinavia respectively.

There was a popular fable, circulating in the Roman Empire, which told about the encounter between the Emperor Agrippa and a beautiful Queen of China. It was not historically accurate, as Agrippa never went anywhere near China during his lifetime, but was regarded as a good story nonetheless.

China in In High Places

China was the richest and most powerful country of an alternate where four in five Europeans were killed in the Great Black Deaths. It was conquered by the Manchus, who continued to rule into the 21st Century. However, despite the accomplishments of Admiral Zheng He, China never filled the void of exploration and technological development that the crippled Europe left, much to the puzzlement of Crosstimers.[3]

China in Days of Infamy

China was the scene of hard and difficult fighting for the Japanese military prior to World War II. Many of the Japanese soldiers who occupied Hawaii were veterans of fighting in China. These veterans found occupying Hawaii to be much easier.

China in A Different Flesh

Fossils of creatures very much like sims were found in China at the caves near Pekin. This suggested that sims had crossed from Asia to North America during one of the Ice Ages, when a land bridge connected the two continents.[4]

China in "Drang von Osten"

In the 2040s, the People's Republic of China launched an invasion of Russia that moved quickly towards Europe. In response, a coalition led by Germany moved into the east in 2041, and were able to establish lines well into European Russia. However, by 2043, those lines were collapsing in the face of the sheer numbers of soldiers fielded by the People's Liberation Army, which had pushed into Ukraine.[5]

China in "Getting Real"

By 2117, China was the sole superpower overtaking the United States during the previous century. In addition to its military and economic power, China led the world in technological research and development. Prior to 2117, the U.S. ceded Catalina Island and the rest of the California Channel Islands to China when the United States found it couldn't pay outstanding debts.

In 2117, the U.S. refused to recognize this change in circumstance leading to trade disputes and eventually the Sino-American War of 2117, which accelerated the U.S.'s decline and would cause Long Beach and San Pedro to be ceded to China along with Los Angeles being put under temporary military occupation.

China in The Guns of the South

Some of the AK-47s delivered to the Army of Northern Virginia by Andries Rhoodie and America Will Break, carried marks proclaiming themselves to have been made in the People's Republic of China. The Army's staff officers pored over maps and atlases of China as they could. However, they were unable to find any section of the country known as the "People's Republic."

Literary comment

The specific AK-47 variant from China is the Type 56 assault rifle, first produced in 1956.

China in The Hot War

The Chinese Communist Party had taken control of mainland China in 1949, establishing the People's Republic of China under the rule of Mao Tse-Tung. The United States and much of the West did not recognize Mao's PRC, instead declaring the exiled government of Chiang Kai-Shek, which controlled only Formosa, as the "true" China.[6] The Soviet Union, on the other hand, did recognize the PRC.

In October of 1950, the PRC intervened in the Korean War by dispatching troops to aid North Korea after UN troops crossed the 38th Parallel. The Chinese intervention completely surprised the UN forces. The Chinese troops succeeded in cutting off three divisions of U.S. troops between the Chosin Reservoir and Hungnam, and throughout November 1950, those U.S. troops were destroyed.[7]

In response, U.S. President Harry Truman authorized General Douglas MacArthur to use atomic weapons in China if they were the only way to improve the situation.[8] That decision was made on January 23, 1951, and the U.S. bombed several strategic positions in Manchuria.[9] In response, China convinced the Soviet Union to launch atomic attacks on U.S. allies in Europe.[10]

While the Soviets and the Americans began a series of tit for tat bombings that finally escalated into World War III, the Chinese government kept its focus limited to the fighting in Korea, insuring a steady flow of arms to the North Koreans.[11] To insure the flow remained steady, Mao pushed for rapid repairs to the places the U.S. had atom bombed. By April 1951, the rail line through Harbin was functional again.[12]

China in In the Presence of Mine Enemies

China was an occupied territory of the Empire of Japan in 2010. It was partitioned by the Japanese with a separate puppet state existing in Manchukuo under an emperor. The Japanese made a systematic use of it as a pool of virtually unlimited cheap manpower.

China in Joe Steele

China was in the throes of a civil war between the government of Chiang Kai-Shek and the Reds of Mao-Tse-Tung before, during and after World War II, including the period when Japan had invaded China.[13] In August 1945, the Soviet Union pushed Japan out of China. However, Soviet Premier Leon Trotsky ensured that Manchuria went to Mao.[14] Throughout the remainder of the 1940s, Mao gained on Chiang's forces,[15] until, in October 1949, just two months after the end of the Japanese War, Mao and his Reds pushed Chiang's forces off of the Chinese mainland.[16]

The U.S. had backed Chiang, and refused to recognize Mao. For a time, U.S. President Joe Steele had considered using atomic bombs to support Chiang, as they'd effectively ended the Japanese War. However, the Soviet ambassador to the U.S., Andrei Gromyko, suggested that any U.S. atomic attack in China might be met with a Soviet atomic attack in Europe. Steele let go of the idea of using atomics.[17]

China in "The Last Article"

By 1947, Japan had total domination over all of China, and was busy negotiating a trade deal with Germany.

China in "Les Mortes d'Arthur"

By the 22nd Century, China had overthrown Communism and restored its status as an empire. It was wealthy enough to send a large team to Mimas, a moon of Saturn, for the Sixty-sixth Winter Games but not so wealthy as to have them sent early to train in the low-g environment.

China in "Occupation Duty"

Inhabitants of the Middle Kingdom had a fundamental difference with the Turks of Babylonia over interpretation of the teachings of Buddha. The Middle Kingdom people like their neighbours in Eastern Asia held to the traditional view that Buddhism is a pacific religion, while the Turks - more recent converts - supported the "Sword Buddha" who authorised and indeed encouraged violence and killing.[18] Still, the different kinds of Buddhists shared various elements of the religion, such as the mantra "Om Mani Padme Hum".[19]

China in "The Phantom Tolbukhin"

China remained under Japan's thumb in 1947. Mao Tse-Tung's Reds led a resistance movement against the invaders.[20]

China in Southern Victory

China's history throughout the 20th century was marked by instability, weakness, and relative isolation on the world stage.

China did not participate in the Great War.[21] Nonetheless, after the Great War ended, China was one of several countries that saw chaos and upheaval.[22] Japan also gained substantial influence in Chinese affairs during this period,[23] and at times even resorted to aerial bombings of Chinese cities.[24] Throughout the 1920s, China's economy grew so dismal that the worldwide stock market crash of 1929 did not effect it; it had no wealth to lose.[25]

During the Second Great War, Japan intensified its war greatly although China stayed out of the main part of the war and remained neutral.[26]

Chinese citizens immigrated to North America throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, with heavy concentrations in the United States, with the largest concentration in San Francisco, California.[27]

Literary comment

It is unclear what kind of government China has in the series.

China in State of Jefferson

When China invaded Tibet in 1959, many yeti were forced into exile.[28]

China and the U.S. began to develop better ties during the Nixon Administration, and continued to maintain those ties throughout the 1970s. Thus, when the Yeti Lama made a trip to the U.S. state of Jefferson in 1979 to meet briefly with the state governor, Bill Williamson, it was indifferently covered by the American press, and irrelevant to the State Department.[29]

China in The Two Georges

China was a British protectorate.[30] Having secured complete control over the Chinese economy and shut out rival colonial powers which sought to carve out Chinese enclaves to themselves was a major source of the British Empire's continuing as a major world power to the end of the 20th Century and beyond.[31]

Literary comment

This version of China seems to have swallowed up Nepal and Bhutan in addition to Tibet.[32]

China in "Vilcabamba"

Some time after the Krolp arrived and subjugated Earth, China joined Russia and the United States in a massive organized uprising. That uprising failed.

China in The War That Came Early

China had been fighting a war in earnest against invading Japanese forces for a year when the Second World War broke out in Europe in October 1938.

China itself was also in the throes of a civil war, as Communists battled the Kuomintang.

In December 1939, with Japanese forces now engaged in a conflict with the Soviet Union, Communists launched a series of terrorist bombing raids on various Japanese positions in all of China's major cities.

Despite the Japanese occupation, the United States, officially a neutral, maintained military garrisons in China to protect its national interests.

China in Worldwar

During the first half of the 20th century, China had been torn apart by civil war between various factions. The most predominate were the Kuomintang led by Chiang Kai-Shek, and the Communists led by Mao Tse-Tung. During the 1930s, China was even further ravaged by war, when the Japanese invaded, starting the Second Sino-Japanese War.

When the Race landed at the start of June 1942, the Chinese, unaware of the Race's true intentions, assisted them by revolting against the Japanese, and within the first three months of the invasion, had reduced them to isolated pockets of resistance, forcing them north back into Manchukuo. After driving the Japanese from China, the two major Chinese factions had realised their error and turned their attention on the Race, even joining forces with the Japanese to fight them. Within Chinese territory, the Race first made the acquaintance of ginger, a powerfully addictive drug to their own biology which all major human powers would eventually exploit.

Throughout the rest of the war, the Chinese continued to fight the Race, being the most resistive of all the occupied territories on Earth. When the Race asked for a cease-fire in 1944, the Chinese were not invited to the proceedings as they had already been conquered. Another factor was that both the major Chinese factions demanded that they alone were the true rulers of China. After the Peace of Cairo was signed, China was recognised as a Race colony. The Chinese refused to accept this and continued on in their struggle against the Race, being the most rebellious of all the colonies on Earth. These efforts were assisted indiscreetly by the Soviet Union as well as the United States.

When the Race's Colonization Fleet arrived in 1962, many Race males, from common infantry males to Fleetlord Atvar, often felt frustrated with China, as it was too densely populated to be settled by colonists, but at the same time had to be kept garrisoned to keep up a strong image to other Tosevite powers. Chinese resistance took a heavy toll on Race forces, and it was these casualties that eventually forced Fleetlord Reffet to seriously consider letting Atvar recruit colonists to be soldiers. In spite of the difficulties in holding China, the Race refused to relinquish any of it when Japan acquired nuclear weapons in 1965 and demanded the return of large stretches of their former empire in China.

In 1964 the Race was temporarily expelled from many of China's major cities including Beijing by a coalition of Chinese factions. However, this rebellion was eventually put down. After Germany's defeat in the Race-German War of 1965, the Germans shipped what was left of their equipment over to the Chinese rather than surrendering it to the Race. This sparked a second mainly Communist rebellion, which employed German anti-tank and anti-air missiles to drive the Lizards from Peking and other cities in 1966 and hold them for a longer period of time. Though the Race eventually retook the rebel controlled-territory, they realized that it would probably be necessary to negotiate with the various factions.

The Chinese flag flew in the palace of the 37th Emperor Risson in Preffilo on Home, among the other flags of conquered Tosevite empires and not-empires and the banners of all the once-independent empires of Rabotev 2, Halless 1, and ancient Home.

Literary comment

China is only addressed in the beginning of Homeward Bound, stating that it is still in rebellion in 1972. Its status in 2031 is never said.

References

  1. Atlantis and Other Places, p. 380.
  2. Liberating Atlantis, p. 115.
  3. In High Places, pgs. 32-33, pb.
  4. A Different Flesh, p. 1.
  5. See, e.g., We Install and Other Stories, loc. 417-820.
  6. Bombs Away, pg. 373 e-book.
  7. Ibid., pgs. 3-7.
  8. Ibid., pg. 41.
  9. Ibid., pg. 61.
  10. Ibid., pg. 67.
  11. Ibid., pg. 204-205.
  12. Ibid., pgs. 323.
  13. Joe Steele, pg. 325.
  14. Ibid.
  15. Ibid., pg. 358.
  16. Ibid., pg. 376.
  17. Ibid, pg. 376-377.
  18. See e.g.: Atlantis and Other Places, pg. 251, HC.
  19. Ibid., pg. 252.
  20. Alternate Generals, p. 125, Counting Up, Counting Down, p. 116.
  21. The Great War, generally, which contains no references to Chinese entry into the war.
  22. Blood and Iron, pg. 209, mmp.
  23. The Victorious Opposition, pg. 500, mmp.
  24. The Center Cannot Hold, pg. 114, HC.
  25. Ibid., pg. 230.
  26. Return Engagement, pg. 392, HC.
  27. See, e.g., How Few Remain, pg. 427, mmp.
  28. Thirty Days Later: Steaming Forward: 30 Adventures in Time, loc. 450.
  29. Ibid., 450-487.
  30. The Two Georges, pg. 142, MPB.
  31. Ibid., p. 430 PB, 281 HC.
  32. Ibid., Frontispiece map.
Advertisement