Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
The time between 1916 and 1928 is commonly called the ‘warlord period,’ and its politics can be analysed from two points of view. The view from the provinces requires a study of regional militarism, while the view from the centre calls for examination of constitutional and military struggles in Peking. These two views will help us appraise the place of warlordism in modern Chinese history.
THE VIEW FROM THE PROVINCES: WARLORDS AND WARLORDISM
Most simply, a ‘warlord’ was one who commanded a personal army, controlled or sought to control territory, and acted more or less independently. The Chinese equivalent – chün-fa – is opprobrious, suggesting a selfish commander with little social consciousness or national spirit; some argue that ‘regional militarist’ is a more neutral term for the diverse personalities found among the military leaders of the time. Others argue that ‘warlord’ is more appropriate in its connotations of violence and usurpation of civil authority. In any event, it was ‘the kind of authority he exercised and not his goals that distinguished the warlord.’ Since many leading warlords held the position of military governor of a province, the term tu-chün is used as a rough synonym for warlord or regional militarist.
The warlords were a diverse lot, and most generalizations about their character and policies suffer from a host of exceptions. Those prominent in the first two or three years after Yuan's death had been senior officers in the Ch'ing military establishment, and their values were set in a Confucianist mould.
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