The Heavenly Shangean Empire (Shangean: 大天晓东帝国; Dà Tiān Xiǎodōng Dìguó, literally "Great Celestial Shangean Empire") was a historical Shangean nation state that existed from the overthrow of the Toki dynasty in the Restoration War from 1857-1864 to the Treaty of Keisi in 1935 when it was replaced by the Republic of Shangea.
The Heavenly Shangean Empire came into existence after the general decline of the Toki dynasty, a situation exacerbated by a devastating famine in 1855 and the success of Gaullica, Etruria, Werania and Estmere in the xxx which saw Shangea subjected to numerous unequal treaties and forced to cede several port cities to Euclean powers. A resurgence of fervent ultranationalism led to the Six Province Alliance under the command of warlord Yao Qinghong who launched the Restoration War in February 1858 after the signing of the Tienwei Island Treaty after the Six Province Alliance captured the city of Baiqiao and promulgated the Edict of Sovereignty which saw the declaration of the creation of the Heavenly Shangean Empire with the Yao being conferred as the Xiyong Emperor. The Toki dynasty were absorbed into Shangea in May 1864 when Toki forces were forced to sign the Edict of Surrender, ending the Restoration War.
Under the rule of the Xiyong Emperor Shangea sought to economically, politically and culturally entrench its status as a sovereign state. Shangea also moved from a feudal into a semi-industrial state with tepid industrialisation pursued by industrial conglomerates known as Caihong's. The aristocracy were undermined by the Zhengfeng, or Great Cultural Rectification Movement that aimed to modernise Shangea. During the national renaissance Shangean culture reached its apex and by the turn of the century Shangea had established itself as a sovereign state intent on modernisation, whilst developing authoritarian, xenophobic and social Darwinist traits.
During the 1860's-1880's Shangea established a empire consisting of annexed territories, satellite states and colonies. A series of vassal states such as Tinza, Lainan, x and x were created whilst parts of other countries such as Sakata in Senria were annexed into the empire. The creation of the empire was fuelled in part by the belief of the need to create a "Greater Shangean Order".
Following the death of the Xiyong Emperor his successor, the Qingzhuo Emperor, initiated political reform in the form of the creation of formal constitution and an elected legislature, an act known as the "Constitutional Revolution". Economic development was pursued as was a close alliance with Gaullica, whose economic and social system Shangea emulated highly.
In 1920 rising far-right sentiments due to the economic effects of the Great Collapse led to the Jiayun Uprising by a group of lower ranking officers led by Zhao Hongjun who overthrew the Qingzhuo Emperor and installed his son, the Shanrong Emperor, to the throne. During the 1920's the Shangean state dramatically militarised which increased further as the Shanrong Emperor purged his opponents in the government and ruled as a de facto absolute monarch similar to his grandfather.
In 1926 Senria launched the Second Sakata Incident triggering Shangea to invoke its alliance with Gaullica starting the Great War. Shangea invaded Senria as well as Euclean possessions in Satria initially performing well. By 1932 however Shangea was pushed out of Senria and was invaded by Senrian forces throughout 1933-1935. The Shanrong Emperor died in a plane crash in 1934 with his brother being enthroned as the Taiyi Emperor. The Taiyi Emperor sued for peace and in 1935 an armistice was signed after XIaodong unconditionally surrendered ending the Great War with Shangea being the last major Entente nation to surrender. The resulting Treaty of Keisi formally abolished the Shangean monarchy in favour of a liberal republic ending over 2,000 years of imperial rule.
History
Baiqiao Revolution
Xiyong era
Industrialisation
Shangean imperialism
Constitutional Revolution
Qingzhuo era
Shanrong era
Great War
Politics
Throughout its existence the Heavenly Shangean Empire was governed officially as a
monarchy, with the monarch being known as the Emperor (皇帝;
Huángdì), named after the rulers of Shangean states in the 1400's. The first Emperor, the Xiyong Emperor, was appointed to the position in 1856 at the offset of the
Baiqiao Revolution and led Shangea as an
absolute monarchy with the Emperor being recognised as the divine leader of the nation. The Emperor's primary advisers were the Council of Princes and High Officials (议政王大臣会议;
Yìzhèng wáng dàchén huìyì) whose appointees were delegated to run executive affairs such as maintaining the Treasury, the judicial system, the army and religious matters. The Shangean government was made up of bureaucrat-scholars known as
Mandarins appointed via the examination system who existed on a national and prefectual level. Unlike previous Shangean governments local and regional governments were not very powerful, with the Council of Princes and High Officials centralising power and using the examination system to ensure the most skilled bureaucrats were placed in the central government rather than regional and local ones.
The 1888 Constitutional Revolution saw the government changed from an absolute to a semi-constitutional monarchy. The Constitution drafted by conservatives envisioned a powerful monarch within a parliamentary system and worked to accommodate that aim. A tetracameralist legislature, the Imperial Deliberative Assembly (御用商讨议会; Yùyòng shāngtǎo yìhuì) existed consisting of four houses - the House of Lords which was hereditary and consisted of nobles, the House of Arms which was appointed by the military, the House of Industry which was elected by businesses and the House of Regions which was appointed by local governments. The Council of Princes and High Officials was replaced with the General Affairs State Council (国務院; Guówù yuàn), a cabinet headed by a Prime Minister (总理; Zǒnglǐ) who was appointed by the Emperor. Nevertheless, the Emperor retained enormous power and the system was not democratic, being designed to preserve the power of the aristocracy. The military and the aristocracy were given seats representative bodies and the cabinet was only allowed to be made up of those holding an aristocratic rank. After 1908 the regime was a constitutional military dictatorship being coined by Prime Minister Zhao Hongju as a "national-military state" (国立军事政府; Guólì jūnshì zhèngfǔ) as the military were recognised as the central organ of government.
Emperor
The Emperor was the Shangean head of state and government, recognised as the Son of Heaven. The Emperor alone had control of the armed forces, the right to declare war, ratify treaties, extend and receive diplomatic recognition, appoint and dismiss members of the royal court and later the Cabinet, sign laws into effect, appoint members of the Chamber of Advisers and change the constitution after 1911. The wide ranging powers of the Emperor - especially the sole right to appoint and dismiss cabinets - meant that they were central to the maintenance of the Shangean state, with all lawmakers ultimately being accountable first and foremost to the Emperor.
The Emperor functioned mostly as an autocrat. The first Emperor, Xiyong Emperor, governed dictatorially - whilst he delegated duties to his deputies he kept tight control over the affairs of state and guided developments, being known as a strong ruler and an absolute monarch. Following the Constitutional Revolution the Xiyong Emperor became a more constitutional monarch, but often dismissed Prime Ministers if they did not acquiesce to his wishes - five men two of which served two terms were Prime Minister under the Xiyong Emperor. The Xiyong Emperor advocated his own policies, regardless of whether they elicited support within the General Deliberative Assembly, which was also continually disbanded and put up for re-election. The Qingzhuo Emperor relied heavily on Prime Minister Zhao Hongjun to push through policy, once stating he had "absolute loyalty in Zhao to serve the Emperor as he is requiered to do". This attitude intensified under the Shanrong Emperor whose frustration with civilian politicians and their perceived inability to provide stability led the Shanrong Emperor to appoint a military dominated cabinets and attempted to relegate the General Affairs State Council and Imperial Deliberative Assembly to merely advisory roles (although this was de facto the case to an extent previously).
Executive
Under the 1911 constitution the Emperor was mandated to appoint a Prime Minister (总理; Zǒnglǐ) who would appoint an executive government officially known as the General Affairs State Council (国家务院; Guójiā Yùyuàn) whose members were picked from the General Deliberative Assembly. The Prime Minister himself also had to be picked from the General Deliberative Assembly. The Prime Minister and General Affairs State Council only had to govern with the confidence of the Emperor, not the General Deliberative Assembly which could pass motions of no confidence against the executive that constitutionally would have no effect. Political convention indicated that the Prime Minister at least with court a majority in the General Deliberative Assembly and that after a motion of no confidence the Prime Minister resign from government, although this convention was not always adhered to.
The General Affairs State Council as the executive government consisted of several government departments known as secretariats led by ministers drawn from the General Deliberative Assembly. The General Affairs State Council officially acted as the intermediary between the Emperor and the General Deliberative Assembly, and its autonomy depended largely on the attitude of the Emperor. Under the Qingzhuo Emperor the General Affairs State Council was largely left to its own devices, and so the Prime Ministers in the period created a military dictatorship with the consent of the Emperor and the aristocracy.
In reality the General Affairs State Council always served as one of many institutions in which power within the government in which officials close to the Emperor built their powerbase. This coincided with a general trend during the constitutional period in which official government institutions were reduced to rubbing stamping bodies as a small oligarchy controlled political decisions.
Legislature
Prefectures
Law
Foreign relations
Early imperialism
Other relations
Zhao-Shanrong Doctrine
Military
The military of the Heavenly Shangean Empire was known as the
Heavenly Armed Forces, split between the
army,
navy and
colonial forces. The Heavenly Army was mainly created from a merger of the Southern Army and several other warlord forces who pledged loyalty to the Xiyong Emperor during the Baiqiao Revolution, although commanders of the army always came from those associated with the Southern Army. All members of the military were ordered to swear an oath to serve the Emperor until death, and that to disobey the Emperor was tantamount to the betrayal of the nation. Breaking the oath resulted in death, making the military one of the most loyal and important institutions of the state. There also existed a Heavenly Guard, created to protect the Heavenly Sovereign and in 1925 an airforce.
During the 1890's-10's the military became divided between the veterans of the Baiqiao Revolution who saw the army as a apolitical institution concerned only with the defence of the nation and younger officers who saw the military as an active participant in the militarisation of Shangea. These younger officers, concentrated in the land divisions and led by Zhao Hongjun and Qiu Hanjie, generally became dominant within military bodies, supporting the militaristic policies of the Shanrong Emperor.
The Heavenly Army itself was divided into 16 field armies of 126,000 people each. Most military technology was imported from Nordania prior to the 1900's when a native arms building was developed. The navy was extensively developed being the third largest in Borea in 1927, with only Tuthina's and Evoresia's being larger. The colonial army was split between the Expeditionary Forces (which consisted of ethnic Shangean divisions) and native forces, armies which were staffed by colonial subjects. At its height in 1927 the Heavenly Armed Forces largest contingent was the Narmadi Corps which was staffed mainly by ethnic Narmadi's.
From the merger of warlord armies in 1860 to 1914 paramilitary organisations were banned within core Shangea as the government believed they threatened the unity of the Shangean armed forces. However in 1914 the creation of the Peace Preservation Brigades saw the first paramilitary forces be created in Shangea. Several others were created during the 1910's, mainly connected to mass organisations such as the Front for the Defence of Shangea.
Persecution
The Heavenly Shangean Empire was formed during a period of increasing ethnic nationalism and anti-Senrian sentiment within Shangea, and as such from the beginning was racist in its character openly espousing Shangean ethnic supremacy. During the Constitutional Period this manifested in the ethnic minorities in "core Shangea" (such as Tinzan, Min and Narmadi people) being quickly ghettoised and shunned from ordinary society. Concentration camps and workhouses always existed in the Heavenly Shangean State with the intention to rehabilitate criminals, prostitutes, the homeless and the mentally disabled who were also often tortured in prison. During the rule of Zhao Hongjun the racial laws were expanded, with ethnic minorities being interned into workhouses and concentration camps. Political opponents of the regime were also targeted as being "traitors to the Shangean people" and were subsequently sent to concentration camps and workhouses.
During the Senrian-Shangean war the Shangean government pursued a policy of "purification" (純化) against minorities, with the aim of cleansing core Shangea of all non-ethnic Shangean. Ethnic minorities in ghettos, concentration camps and workhouses were killed through mass shootings, malnutrition, live burial, suffocation in ash and bayonetting. After Shangea occupied parts of Senria, it deported ethnic Senrians and forced them onto death marches, in accordance with Ren Xilian's policy of overseeing "the orderly and complete dismantlement of Senria and the elimination of is people's", with all policies amounting to a genocidal ethnic cleansing of non-Shangean people's. By the Shangean Civil War the state had ended the genocidal policies due to the collapse of law and order within the country.
Jiang Yunshan, author of the
Code of Benevolence The ideological reasons for the Xiao Genocide can be traced to the works of Shangean nationalists, most prominently Jiang Yunshan's
Code of Benevolence (仁爱令; Rén'ài lìng) written in 1848. Jiang argued that both Shangean culture and the Shangean people were morally and racially superior to other people's, especially Shangea's Monic neighbours which Jiang argued were naturally barbaric and lacked the pure, harmonious society of Shangea with paramount values of filial piety, social hierarchy and collectivism. Although especially critical of the Duljunese and Min, Jiang was also critical of Senrian "bandits" amongst others. Jiang and other Shangean nationalists advocated for a jingoist, racist and chauvinistic form of nationalism that was hostile to "barbaric" foreign ideas, culture and people. Scientific racism and later eugenics were accepted by Shangean scholars as being necessary in the development of a modern state, paradoxically importing and amending racialist ideology as found in places such as
Nevanmaa despite their disdain for foreign influences.
Historian Hu Peng states that the Shangean nationalist scholars at the time possessed a "romanticised view on Shangean history, informed by western nationalist thought which they interwove into their philosophy, itself promoting simultaneously modernity and traditionalism". The success of the Baiqiao Revolution emboldened the cause of Shangean nationalism. Shangean nationalists such as Zhang Qiemei compared Shangea is a positive light compared to its neighbours, saying Shangea's embrace of modernity tempered with Oriental culture was proof of the "absolute superiority of the Shangean nation".. As the new government consisted of many ethnic nationalists, racial laws were quickly imposed via the Hokka system to support the ideological notion of Shangean nationalist texts such as the Code of Benevolence which amongst other texts was used as a blueprint in the construction of the newly independent Shangea. Most foreign influences were seen as barbaric, and were quickly segregated in the name of "public safety".
During the 1900's the rapid population growth of Shangea, the expansion of the economy and the strains on agriculture led Shangean nationalists to advocate for Shangea to expand its borders partly for economic reasons, but also to spread Shangean culture and its people as part of the Greater Shangea Order (大晓东地区命令; Dà Xiǎodōng Dìqū Mìnglìng), a concept that advocated for the continual expansion of Shangea. Senria had long been held by Shangean nationalists as a target for Shangea to expand its own influence into, having secured the concession of Sakata in 1908. Shangean nationalists saw Senria's civil conflict between 1918-26 as an example of "barbarian culture" whilst absorbing large numbers of refugees, who were ghettoised the new arrivals. The colonisation of Narmada in the late 1800's was seen as proof of Shangean superiority, as the Narmadan population was used as a pool for slave labour to help industrialise Shangea.
In 1902, criminologist Ye Zhisui proposed that crimes such as prostitution, vagrancy, violence and sodomy were inherited, stating there existed a class of "natural criminals" that could be identified through facial features and which he claimed were disproportionately affected the Narmadi, Min, Duljunese and Senrian races, whilst nationalist writer Lin Yongsheng claimed that there existed a natural order that mandated that stronger, superior races were obliged to wipe out weaker races. Identifying Shangean people as a "strong race" and the Narmadi, Duljunese and Senrians as "weak races", Lin claimed "if Shangea does not take the inevitable but necessary burden of wiping out the Senrian race before to long then our values will be destroyed by barbarity". This pseudo-science found supporters within the media, the military and the bureaucracy who incorporated it into the education system, the mass media and military training thus creating an atmosphere of hypernationalism and racism, with other races especially the Min, Duljunese and the Senrians being reduced to animals and incessantly dehumanised, with their ghettoised conditions being seen as "natural" for their race.
Economic troubles and political instability in the 1920's led to a the small clique of ultranationalists led by the Emperor to take control by the imposition of autocracy who subsequently advocated for the wholesale ethnic cleansing of weak races in Shangea and later Senria. This clique with by 1924 controlled all institutions of state used pseudo-science and decades of Shangean ethnic nationalism to present the slaughter of weak races as an unavoidable burden Shangea had to take if it was to continue the Shangean nationalist cause, and that not to do so would result in Shangea to be swamped in foreign culture which they claimed had previously led to Shangea to be colonised by the Toki. The Senrian action to unilaterally annex the concession of Sakata resulted in anti-Senrian sentiment to intensify within Shangea. Ingrained hatred of the Senrians due to their colonisation of Shangea alongside anti-Duljunese and anti-Min sentiment and the crushing of political dissent therefore led to a culture of xenophobia that allowed the Shangean ethnic supremacists to introduce their policies with the ideological justification that they were merely serving the nation.
Following the March 8th coup, the Taiyi Emperor claimed in a speech On the subject of the harmony of people's the internment and resettlement of Duljunese citizens in Shangea had been done to protect them from racial attacks in urban centres from ethnic Shangean. In the same speech, the Taiyi Emperor also rejected reports of ethnic cleansing stating no genocide had been committed in Senria.
Genocidal policies in Shangea began in 1914, when military chief Qiu Hanjie created "Peace Preservation Brigades" (治安保护队; Zhì'ān bǎohù duì) to clear out Duljunese-populated areas during urban expansion in the city of Rongzhuo. Mayor of Rongzhuo Jiang Guoqing had requested that the Duljunese should be cleared out of the city, due to claims of "persistent violent behaviour and moral barbarity" from Duljunese communities. The Rongzhuo Peace Preservation Brigade was tasked with clearing Duljunese men and women out of Rongzhuo and resettling them in bauxite mines in the prefecture of Qingbei, whilst children were sent to orphanages to be ethnically assimilated into Shangean society. Resettlement to Qingbei took the form of a death march with the Peace Preservation Brigade purposely starving, beating and raping the Kuochew during "resettlement", with many unable to survive the journey. The few that were survived were sent to bauxite mines as slave labour in conditions intentionally designed to kill the miners. In October 1914, the prefectural governor of Qingbei gave control of several bauxite mines to the Peace Preservation Brigades, which expanded under the direct command of Qiu Hanjie who was appointed by the Qingzhuo Emperor in 1917 as the Minister of Racial Harmony, where anti-Duljunese and anti-Senrian ideology was actively promoted.
In March 1922 , the Shanrong Emperor published an imperial edict which called for the "revitalisation of the nation" and for the racially based divisions to be "healed" through the cleansing of the nation. Resettlement of ethnic minorities became a systematic and official policy, being performed across most large cities in the south, with over 100,000 Duljunese being deported on death marches to the north by 1928. Duljunese also had their property forcibly confiscated and distributed to ethnic Shangean.
In June 1923 the financial ministry published an internal report within the Shangean government criticising the cost of resettlement, stating that the high mortality rate of Duljunese miners meant that bauxite mining was seriously behind schedule. As a result, the Ministry of Racial Harmony implemented a new scheme to deport Duljunese to internment camps. These interment camps, staffed and operated by Peace Preservation Brigades, were intended to ensure inmates life expectancy lasted only a few days, denying inmates food, water and other basic necessities. The same month, the Shanrong Emperor ordered for assimilation orphanages to be closed down and for Duljunese children to also be incarcerated in these new interment or concentration camps, believing the assimilation policy had failed.
Around June-August 1925, the Ministry of Racial Harmony saw its budget trebled as the Peace Preservation Brigades were expanded. Speeches made by the Shanrong Emperor, Prime Minister Ren Xilian, Qiu Hanjie and other high ranking Shangean officials began to talk of the removal of the Duljunese people from Shangea, whilst the Ministry of Racial Harmony published internal policy papers that explored the possibility of completely eliminating the Duljunese people from Shangea and deporting the rest to the Narmadan colony to be utilised as slave labour. Shangean officials also began to criticise the ethnic dominance of Duljunese in the prefecture of Duljun, proposing population exchanges with Duljunese and Shangean citizens. In October 1925 the government began internal population exchange programs in Duljun, deporting Duljunese people from the prefecture and replacing them with ethnic Shangean. The deported Duljunese had their property confiscated and given to the resettled Shangean, with the Duljunese often resettled to interment camps or resettlement mines. By 1928, over 30% of the Duljunese population had been forcibly resettled by Shangean authorities. It was also during this period that the Shangean government began to plan the invasion of Senria, where ethnic policy in the planned occupied Senrian territories was formulated by bureaucrats within the Ministry of Racial Harmony who used the population transfer policies implemented in Duljun as a blueprint for Senria.
A photograph of bodies of inmates at MD-24/Shinjōku following its liberation in 1932
Following the invasion of Senria, Qiu Hanjie was appointed as the Commanding Officer of the Senrian Occupied Territory, the
de facto leader of Shangean territory in Senria. Qiu split Senria into "control zones" and "extermination zones". Whereas "control zones" (控制地域;
kòngzhì dìyù) where under civic-military rule, "extermination zones" (灭鼠地域;
mièshǔ dìyù, literally translating to "rodent removal zones") were directly under the command of Qiu, who decreed that Peace Preservation Brigades had full authority to carry out extra-judicial killings of Senrian civilians in extermination zones, cementing the Peace Preservation Brigades as
de facto death squads. Extermination zones became known for being the sites of mass killings in the forms of live burials and mass shootings.
The most infamous of the extermination zones was the Shinjōku Extermination Zone, officially designated MD-24/Shinjōku, centred around the village of Shinjōku. Headed by Peace Preservation Brigade commander Zhao Baozhong, later executed for war crimes, MD-24/Shinjōku saw the Peace Preservation Brigade deport the entire population of the village and use it as a research base in human experimentation. Initially experiments were only done on prisoners of war, and included vivisections, lobotomies, experiments with various pharmaceutical products including eye drops and plastic surgery and testing biological and chemical weapons on humans, with most experiments taking place without anaesthetic. Later in 1941 Qiu authorised civilians including children to be sent to MD-24/Shinjōku for experimentation. According to Peace Preservation Brigade reports, over two-thirds of test subject perished as a result of the experiments at MD-24/Shinjōku with those who survived often remaining disabled or psychologically scarred for life.
Whilst MD-24/Shinjōku was the most infamous of the extermination zones, under Shangean occupation over a million of non-combatant Senrians died, whilst most Wa people in Shangea had been forcibly resettled or killed by Shangean authorities. In total, around 4 million Senrians and 3 million Duljunese died as a result of Shangea's genocidal policies between 1924-33.
The liberation of Senria resulted in the end of the genocide in Senria as occupying Shangean forces retreated to Shangea. In 1933, following the March 8th Coup, the main instigators of the genocide where either dead or had fled Shangea, with the new government dissolving the Peace Preservation Brigades and the Ministry of Racial Harmony, merging the Peace Preservation Brigades into the regular military. The resettlement camps were cleared out with remaining Duljunese communities either being deported to neighbouring Narmada or left to form their own communities in Shangea.
Economy
Prior to the creation of the Heavenly Empire, Shangea under Toki rule was economically undeveloped being under a system of agrarian feudalism in nature. This move was deliberate - the Toki used Shangea as a base for agricultural production of rice, soy and cotton rather then for industry despite tepid moves in that direction during the 1830's-40's after contact with Euclean traders. The Baiqiao Revolution however saw the removal of many feudal landlords, resulting in their land to come under direct ownership of the central government rather than be redistributed to noble families. These areas as such saw a dismantling of the feudal system and the creation of industrial capitalist enterprise such as textile mills and coal mines, with foreign technologies being imported from abroad. These policies were advocated by Rao Qiaonian, one of the early advocates of industrial capitalism in Shangea and a close adviser of the Xiyong Emperor who developed them alongside Gaullican banker Jérôme André Murat who proposed several rationalisations to the Shangean financial system.
A meeting at the Chiangqi Palace in 1860 saw the Xiyong Emperor announce that the government would embark on fiscal and economical reform, most prominently the creation of the Reserve Bank of Shangea which combined separate banking and fiscal institutions owned by the Treasury into a single central bank. The government also began a programme of import substitution industrialisation that collectively sought to dismantle feudalism and create a capitalist economy. Noble lands were reformed along provincial and prefectual lines ending the feudal system and creating capitalist modes of production and use of labour, with the government utilising indicative planning. The government via the Ministry of Finance directed investment into new industrial conglomerates known literally as "fiscal professions" (财行; Cáiháng, sometimes called Ts'aihong) commonly known as Caihongs which were dominated by business owners and nobles who supported the Southern Army during the Baiqiao revolution which subsequently began to produce industrial goods.
The dismantlement of the feudal system and rapid industrialisation in the 1860's soon saw the government relax its interventionist attitude, championing a more laissez faire approach to economic management. Agriculture however remained largely unreformed on the few feudal remnants left over, with the influence of nobles over decision making leading to economic liberalism in most affairs with the exception of tariffs, which remained high due to protectionist attitudes.
Shangean industrialisation rapidly developed following the colonisation of Narmada which was used as a resource base for core Shangea. Large amounts of industrial workers' were imported from Narmada into Shangea to work in Shangean factories whilst Narmadi agriculture was used to feed industrial workers'. Economist and historian Viswanatha Krishnamacharyulu stated that without using the resources Shangea gained through the colonisation of Narmada and Duljun the country would not have been able to industrialise nor develop a modern capitalist economy due to the retention of feudal structures in non-colonised territory.
The relation between the government and the Caihongs were especially close during this period, with Caihongs being the de facto handlers of the economy. According to Senrian historian Yokohama Tarokagyu the government's finances were largely handled by Caihong managers over government bureaucrats and elected ministers. As such the Caihong system evolved over time from supporting laissez faire to directly colluding with government creating a system of state monopoly capitalism. Under Zhao Hongjun in 1912 the Economic Co-ordination Ministry was created, which placed more government regulations on Caihongs and the economy re-organised on corporatist lines . Economic planning was re-implemented as the economy was remodelled to fit a more statist attitude, leading to the military to take direct ownership via nationalisation to promote a program of military Keynesianism.
During the Senrian-Shangean War the government implemented a full-blown command economy. Although private firms existed they had little autonomy as the Economic Co-ordination Ministry directly controlled the economic affairs of the nation.
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