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In 1938, under the rule of the Japanese Kou, every photo of Beiping City is a visible history

A group of old photos from more than 80 years ago, this is a visible history, a group of photos of old Beijing under the rule of the Japanese Kou, taking you to taste the vicissitudes of the years.

In 1938, under the rule of the Japanese Kou, every photo of Beiping City is a visible history

In August 1937, a Japanese soldier in front of a money house in Beijing. The sign reads Chinese in Japanese. The business scope includes Manchuria Ticket, Japanese Gold Ticket, and Chaha Ticket. It feels like a word "mess"!

In 1938, under the rule of the Japanese Kou, every photo of Beiping City is a visible history

In 1937, the puppet regime of Beiping Mayor Changjiang Chaozong. Although Jiang Chaozong's life looks quite beautiful, and he even became the prime minister of the Republic of China government before he defected to the Japanese, he can be said to be a spineless person. Naturally, it is needless to say that he turned to the Japanese, let alone that he was the prime minister, that is also tricked by Li Yuanhong to become a horse boy, and as a result, he was brushed off after only one day as prime minister.

In comparison, the Japanese are still a little better to Jiang Zhaozong. On the day of the fall of Peiping, Jiang Chaozong gathered more than a dozen so-called Beiping celebrities and former Qing relics in the 13th residence of Nanwanzi to jointly plot to defect to the Japanese, and the next day he established a traitor organization, the Beiping Public Security Maintenance Association, with Jiang Chaozong as its president. On August 19, 1937, Jiang Chaozong became the mayor of the pseudo-Beiping City and began his career as a traitor under the wing of the Japanese Kou until his death in 1943.

In 1938, under the rule of the Japanese Kou, every photo of Beiping City is a visible history

On October 28, 1937, the Japanese officers comforted the wounded in the Beiping Hospital. The wounded of the invaders were able to lie comfortably on their hospital beds, while at the same time the Chinese army on the North China Front was fighting bloody battles, suffering huge casualties under the attack of enemy aircraft and artillery. Due to the gradual defeat of the troops, many wounded people could not be treated, and there were many deaths, and those who were lucky could only hide in the homes of ordinary people.

In 1938, under the rule of the Japanese Kou, every photo of Beiping City is a visible history

In the Spring Festival of 1938, the Beiping Temple Fair, street vendors selling windmills. During the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, compared with other cities, Beiping City was relatively calm, because there was no resistance here, and the Japanese occupied this thousand-year-old capital. But for Chinese with backbone, the Spring Festival in 1938 was also extremely heavy. Because of this, thousands of residents of Beiping City at that time went south to find anti-Japanese troops.

In 1938, under the rule of the Japanese Kou, every photo of Beiping City is a visible history

During the Spring Festival of 1938, ghost-faced monks participated in the performance in front of the Lama Temple in Beijing. It looks a bit like the taste in Korean dramas now, I don't know if our traditions are lost, or if this is originally Korean.

In 1938, under the rule of the Japanese Kou, every photo of Beiping City is a visible history

In the Spring Festival of 1938, in front of the Lama Temple in Beijing, a small Mongolian lama dressed in formal clothes. This is also an event organized by the Japanese.

In 1938, under the rule of the Japanese Kou, every photo of Beiping City is a visible history

In the Spring Festival of 1938, performers wearing strange masks "played ghosts" on the streets of Beiping.

In 1938, under the rule of the Japanese Kou, every photo of Beiping City is a visible history

In 1938, in the southern suburbs of Beiping, the First Regional Self-Defense Regiment of the Japanese Kou, 3,000 Japanese Kou marched toward the regimental flag. The southern outskirts of Beiping were also the most fiercely contested by the enemy and us during the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, and after the Japanese occupation of Beiping, the main forces were also hoarded here.

In 1938, under the rule of the Japanese Kou, every photo of Beiping City is a visible history

In 1938, the flag of the Second District Self-Defense Regiment in the eastern suburbs of Beijing was marked with five-colored stripes and two stars. The Self-Defense Regiment, to put it bluntly, is a team of puppet soldiers and traitors. At that time, because the Japanese were not at ease with Chinese, although they were organized, they did not even fire guns.

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