The name Shanghai
dates from the Sung dynasty (11th cent.), but the town,
which became a walled city in the 16th cent., was unimportant
until it was opened to foreign trade by the Treaty
of Nanjing in 1842. The ensuing Western influence launched
the city on its phenomenal growth. The greater part
of the city was incorporated into the British concession
(1843), just north of the old walled city, and into
the U.S. concession of Hongkew (1862). In 1863 the
United States and Great Britain consolidated into the
International Settlement the areas that had been conceded
to them. The French, who had obtained a concession
in 1849, continued it as a separate entity. The foreign
zones, which were under extraterritorial administration,
maintained their own courts, police system, and armed
forces. Thus Shanghai until World War II was a divided
city. In 1927, Chiang Kai-shek, at the head of the
Nationalist army and with the support of the Chinese
Communists, captured Shanghai. The Chinese section
was immediately placed under the Kuomintang government.
Japan invaded and attacked the Chinese city in 1932
to force the government to break an unofficial boycott
of Japanese goods. In Aug., 1937, as part of the Second
Sino-Japanese War, the Japanese again attacked the
Chinese city, and resistance was overcome in November.
The foreign zones were occupied by the Japanese after
Dec. 7, 1941.
In 1943 the United States and Great Britain renounced
their claims in Shanghai, as did France in 1946.
The city was restored to China at the end of World
War II, and the Chinese central government for the
first time gained control of the entire city. In
May, 1949, it fell to the Communist forces. Since
Pudong (East Shanghai) was declared (1990) a special
development zone, government and foreign investment
has revived Shanghai as an international trade and
financial center. |