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Vandalism removed 75.2.167.71 00:44, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
Can someone explain what MTV means?
"..and an MTV was made with the modified lyrics "China will be strong.."
I think it was the Nine Powers Treaty that convened during the battle, not the League of Nations. I read it from somewhere that the guy remembered the wrong convention in his recollections. Blue Shirts 23:54, 12 April 2006 (UTC)
This is in regards to: [1]. I've actually got a few questions about this. Is it Really on the roof? I don't know anything about chinese warehouse building, especially since all the roofs I've known are of modern construction, but it seems that those guys are on cobble stones with a lip of a sidewalk nearby. It appears there looks like a building that looks like other pictures of the Sihang warehouse in the background, which doesn't mean anything, but it might mean the picture is not on the roof but nearby. Given that all the surrounding buildings (which mentioned in the article were occupied by the IJA, and that those 'occupied buildings' were higher than the warehouse (as the picture implies) it'd be a poor choice (tactically, not for a picture) for soldiers to be prone when the IJA occupies higher building floors across the street, And given that the article states that the roof was heavily fortified (2 HMGs, etc.) I don't think it'd be easy to accomplish that with IJA on higher building floors a few score meters ways away. Continuing, barbed wire positions on the roof? It wouldn't be unheard of, especially since the IJA was trying to scale the building using ladders. -- What I suppose i'm saying, is unless cited, I can't reasonably believe that is a shot of soldiers on the roof. I'd suggest rather "Picture taken of NRA troops in a fortified position during the defense of Sihang Warehouse." Chapparal 08:16, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
I agree. The buildings on the photo look higher than the warehouse (if the photo was indeed taken on the roof), while the warehouse is the highest building in the vicinity on other photos. Also, cobblestones on a roof? Mr.WaeseL 16:47, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
"This drew the attention, if only briefly, of the international community to Chiang Kai-shek's bid for world-wide support against Japanese aggression." In the U.S. at least the Japanese invasion of China was very closely followed and CKS was well-known and supported, albeit by Christian missionaries who wanted to convert the whole country but still, the statement doesn't seem accurate. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 205.177.1.127 ( talk) 13:51, 26 October 2007 (UTC)
If I judge this correctly, the amazing part of this is not merely the success of the defence itself, but the method in which the foreign concessions distanced themselves. "Hey look, our hosts are fighting a war of resistance, let's not lift a finger to help them in any way!" Elle vécut heureuse à jamais ( Be eudaimonic!) 09:23, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
I dont want to rain on anyones parade but the whole tone of the articles is jingoistic celebration of chinese strength. Its was a sucessful rearguard action not a victory and the Japanese aggressors captured the warehouse and eventually also captured the surviving defenders. Militarily it had little value as the escaping army was not within the boundaries of the defence. Its purpose was entirely political and though casualties were high and terrible the action was hardly suicidal.
The intro looks good, but I think the sentence The successful defense [...] proving that when properly led and motivated, even a small group of Chinese troops could overcome a much greater Japanese force is rather misleading. The main force of Chiang Kai-shek's army, including the 88th division which the lost battalion belonged to, had already fought the Japanese to a standstill valiantly until its lines crumpled after continuously delayed order to retreat. Thus I think right now the intro sentence implies that the defense was the "only" instance of Chinese fortitude and resourcefulness during the battle and that is patently incorrect. The defense of the warehouse itself was militarily rather insignificant, and it did not really "cover" the retreat of the Chinese troops eastward. The bulk of the Chinese troops have already retired from Shanghai and were on route to take part in the defense of Nanking. The main purpose of the lost battalion was to let the international delegates of the Nine-Powers Treaty, in session in Brussels, to know that the Chinese were still fighting. Blue Shirts 23:32, 4 May 2006 (UTC)
Okay, the part where it mentions that the battalion was "technically over-strength" but in actuality "under-strength" - can someone explain that? Is this related to having 800 troops in one battalion (a number made up when Yang Huimin asked for a list of names) and thus this technicality occurred during the battle, or was there something "on paper, but not in practice" that occurred before the battle? Elle vécut heureuse à jamais ( Be eudaimonic!) 13:25, 5 May 2006 (UTC)
Cut half that paragraph out and make it it's own section within the article, which wouldn't be terribly necessary, or explain "While on paper, the 88th was an overstrength batallion [linked to an article about overstrengthed batallions], by the time of the defense of Sihang Warehouse, they're numbers were reduced to about 400 men." Chapparal 21:46, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
I find that having the article title translations, such as ( simplified Chinese: 四行仓库保卫战; traditional Chinese: 四行倉庫保衛戰; pinyin: Sìháng Cāngkù Bǎowèi Zhàn), in the lead really kills the readability of the first few lines of text. Ideally, we want the lead to be as clear and concise as possible and having the translations clutters the flow without any real benefit. The interwiki links are available if I need to know what the event is called in another language, and for the vast majority of people reading the article these translations merely get in the way when they're put in the lead. I'd like to see the translations removed. Just something to think about. -- NormanEinstein 06:39, 7 May 2006 (UTC)
Was there a Zhabei District during the ROC era? — Insta ntnood 14:05, 18 June 2006 (UTC)
-- Миборовский 16:14, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
Something somewhat related: http://www.im.tv/vlog/personal.asp?memid=200483&fid=383998 I like KFC a bit more now :) -- Миборо в ский 00:18, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
I just Figured that I'd let the person who contributes to this entry know that there is more vandalism on the page: in large blue letters at the top it says "cunt". I tried to fix it but I could not locate it. Have a Good One!
24.248.188.125 19:12, 30 October 2006 (UTC)R
This is really inconsistent throughout the article - can we just stick to the title "defenSe" в Wakipedia 19:36, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
Maybe it is just me and my browser (Firefox 2.0.0.8), but "sihangmap.png" obscures the text at the beginning of the Background section on my screen. It would be nice if it didn't, especially given that this is an FA. Thanks. -- Cromwellt| talk| contribs 19:26, 26 October 2007 (UTC)
In the chapter ″29 October″: ″He grabbed the first Japanese soldier's rifle, choked him with the other hand, pushed him off, and finally shot another Japanese soldier on the ladder before pushing the ladder off.[6]″
Is this action sequence encyclopedic prose enough? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 62.236.60.19 ( talk) 22:16, 31 July 2008 (UTC)
The entry as written appears to be written entirely from the Chinese side. We hear about Chinese personnel of various ranks down to private but not their Japanese counterparts. Is there a Japanese account of the battle that identifies some of the Japanese soldiers who led small units, threw grenades, climbed ladders, etc., that could provide more information on what was taking place on the other side of the battle? Imagine a contemporary account of the Battle of Iwo Jima that discussed only the American experience in detail. This is not a dis on China and the Chinese, but is there more information out there. ( 71.22.47.232 ( talk) 01:26, 26 October 2010 (UTC))
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The defense is intentionally made to be a piece of propaganda; given that, the lede should contain not the slightest bit of unsourced material, yet I see more citation needed here than in any other article I can remember. -- 84.189.84.17 ( talk) 20:24, 3 January 2022 (UTC)
Changes have been recently made which have replaced the information for the commander, participating unit, strength, and casualty figures for the Japanese side. The person did not provide any citations or reference material for the changes made regarding the commanding officer and the participating unit.
Other sources attached to figures regarding the strength and casualties come from sources that do not seem to provide any comprehensive data or evidence of the limited. I think there needs to be more evidence before changes like these are pushed. There is little to no reference provided for Haji Kitaro being the overall commander and Shanghai SNLF 10th Battalion being the primary force in this operation.
Out of the sources used two of them do not support the new figures that were changed.
Source 1 here is a unit personnel chart, and makes no mention of unit tasking orders or specific deployments. Source 2 is pertaining to battles and reports that are not of the appropriate dates and events. Kapitan318 ( talk) 02:50, 9 April 2023 (UTC)
There are no primary Japanese sources saying the IJA 9th Division was involved in the assault on the Sihang Warehouse. The operation was conducted by elements of the Shanghai Special NAVAL Landing Force. If edits are made to include the IJA 9th Division, they will be swiftly reverted on the grounds that the editor is clueless about history or at the very least a victim of Chinese propaganda. Adachi1939 ( talk) 22:32, 14 June 2023 (UTC)
As of 2023/06/28 I have restored the article to a more historically verifiable version. It should be understood that there are NO Japanese sources that can attest to the any IJA divisions let alone the IJA at all being involved in the Defense of Sihang Warehouse. Japanese sources point to this being an entirely IJN operation carried out by the Shanghai Special Naval Landing Force. The correct forces present in the battle have been added to the article, with their strength and casualty figures included. The claim of "200+ killed - Hundreds wounded" is not only historically unverifiable--as it relies heavily on Chinese language sources which themselves draw from period accounts from NRA soldiers which are generally propagandistic in nature and of dubious authenticity--they are even more so illogical. Based on the Japanese order of battle, only some 980 troops were involved, meaning 200 KIA would have absolutely devastated the Japanese forces and resulted at the very least in a call for reinforcements from another battalion/company if not suspension of the operation altogether. Yet there is no mention of this in any Japanese sources. Japanese sailors killed during the fighting in Shanghai are meticulously documented in this book ( https://dl.ndl.go.jp/pid/1906225/1/1 ) yet there is only one mention of an officer succumbing to his injuries after fighting around Sihang Warehouse. Where are the other 199 supposed KIA? What unit were they from? For this figure to be correct we would have to assume the Japanese just decided to cover up 199 KIA for this particular part of the battle but made no effort to conceal other heavy losses such as the dozens killed in a single day while landing at Woosung covered in the same book. There are a number of local histories published in Japan which cover the deaths of men sent to war during the Battle of Shanghai but my search did not result in any more KIA at Sihang Warehouse being discovered. No contemporary Japanese scholars or any scholars in the past 85+ years have uncovered Japanese sources for this figure. It's far more logical that the Chinese accounts are simply using false figures that have no historical basis.
If others wish to make large changes to the article, I kindly ask that you use sources which are historically verifiable, not dubious accounts which defy logic. I am open to discussion and looking for more good sources but as it stands there is not any justification for altering the Japanese order of battle or casualty figures beyond pro-Chinese historical negationism. Adachi1939 ( talk) 13:28, 28 June 2023 (UTC)
Yesterday I had added a number of citation needed tags as well as failed verification and irrelevant citation tags for changes previously made by user @ KresyRise in addition to labeling the Chinese account of events used for the article as "Chinese Account of Events" and adding a section for the Japanese Account of Events. These changes were made in an effort to improve the neutrality of the article and bring improper citations into question.
The first area of contention is the strength figure, which the aforementioned has listed as 20,000. The citation they have used (Hattori, Satoshi; Dera, Edward J. (2013). Japanese Operations from July to December 1937, The Battle for China. Stanford University Press. p. 173. ISBN 0-804-79207-0.) has failed verification as the page mentioned does not mention this figure on the page and an examination of this work shows this figure is not mentioned on any page for the Japanese forces involved on the assault on Sihang Warehouse. They have removed the failed verification tag in spite of this and added an additional citation (Robinson, Stephen (2022). Eight Hundred Heroes: China's lost battalion and the fall of Shanghai. Exisle Publishing.
ISBN
978-1-922539-20-5.). While the citation fails to provide a page number for the page, I did read through the book and did not find a mention of this figure for the Japanese force involved in the assault on Sihang Warehouse. These citations are not proper.
The second area I would like to bring attention to is participating forces on the Japanese side. Users have listed the IJA 3rd and 9th Divisions along with "Special Naval Landing Forces: Japanese Marine and Naval Infantry Units" (it should be noted Imperial Japan did not have marines after 1876). The participating forces are disputed as Japanese sources list the only unit involved as the Shanghai Special Naval Landing Force (see 1st citation on the article), which was part of the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN), not IJA. I have not been able to examine all of the sources provided as they are not properly cited and are missing ISBN numbers, but of the one citation I could verify (Hattori, Satoshi (2013). Japanese Operations from July to December 1937, The Battle for China (1st ed.). Stanford University Press. p. 172. ISBN 978-0804792073.), I was able to confirm it makes no mention of either of the IJA 3rd Division nor the IJA 9th Division being involved in the assault on Sihang Warehouse. I had previously added an irrelevant citation tag for this citation but it has been removed by KresyRise without explanation. There needs to be work made to this section as the poor citations and conflicting sources points to it being factually inaccurate.
The third area I would like to address is the accounts of the battle. As the account of the battle relies heavily on Chinese primary sources and secondary sources drawing from the former, I had taken the liberty to label it as "Chinese Account of Events" and add the Japanese Account of Events below for neutrality's sake. The Chinese Account of Events has instead been relabeled to to simply "Battle" by another user with the Japanese Account of Events preserved below. Given the large number of disputed and/or historically unverifiable claims made in what is now called the battle section, I believe it is appropriate to keep the events based on Chinese accounts labeled as such. Exerts such as "Hundreds of Japanese infantry attacked the warehouse from all directions with artillery fire and support from Type 94 Te-Ke tankettes." are present in the battle section, with citations leading to articles that themselves provide no sources. Meanwhile Japanese sources make no mention of employing armor in the assault at all. It is extremely misleading to prevent this section as a neutral retelling of events.
The last area I would like to bring to attention is the following two paragraphs in the Japanese account of events. It was originally written as follows:
"Surviving reports from the Imperial Japanese Navy do not include specific figures for the number of Japanese wounded nor enemy dead in Sihang Warehouse alone, but do make mention of some 100 enemy corpses left in Chapei on October 31 and a total of 42 Japanese troops wounded during the advance on Chapei. Of the 42 wounded, three were in serious condition, including a warrant officer from the 10th Battalion involved in the assault on Sihang Warehouse who would later succumb to his injuries on November 2, 1937.[10][11]
The Imperial Japanese Naval Ministry Educational Bureau recorded and published all servicemen killed in action during the Battle of Shanghai across three volumes of books known as Shina Jihen Jinchuroku (支那事変尽忠録, China Incident Loyalty Records). Aside from the aforementioned warrant officer, there are no other records of Japanese troops killed in action or gravely wounded during the assault on Sihang Warehouse, making the Chinese claims of 200+ Japanese killed highly unlikely if not impossible."
User @ KresyRise has altered it to the following, removing the Chinese casualty figure and explanation of Japanese killed in action recording purported by the Japanese:
"Surviving reports from the Imperial Japanese Navy do not include specific figures for the number of Japanese wounded nor enemy dead in Sihang Warehouse alone, but do make mention a total of 42 Japanese troops wounded during the advance on Chapei. Of the 42 wounded, three were in serious condition, including a warrant officer from the 10th Battalion involved in the assault on Sihang Warehouse who would later succumb to his injuries on November 2, 1937.[14][15]
The Imperial Japanese Naval Ministry Educational Bureau recorded and published all servicemen killed in action during the Battle of Shanghai across three volumes of books known as Shina Jihen Jinchuroku (支那事変尽忠録, China Incident Loyalty Records)."
I can agree some language used in the original two paragraphs may have been somewhat partisan in nature, but I would like to understand their reasoning for removing the Chinese casualty figure and explanation of why Japanese sources bring Chinese claims into dispute. Doesn't the inclusion of these details help with the neutrality of the article? While my analysis of the sources has made me reach the conclusion that the Chinese sources are largely exaggerated and of dubious accuracy, I am willing to compromise and work to both viewpoints being presented in the article, so that a reader may reach their own conclusion on what occurred during the Defense of Sihang Warehouse. Removing areas from the Japanese account while preserving highly contested allegations from the Chinese accounts will not allow for this.
@KresyRise please provide me some insight into your changes and why you are using citations that do not support the information you are adding to the article. If I don't hear back I will be requesting a third opinion.
Thanks,
Adachi
Adachi1939 (
talk) 22:15, 29 July 2023 (UTC)
As previously mentioned in the Talk:Defense of Sihang Warehouse#Factual accuracy and neutrality, @ KresyRise has added a number of claims with citations that are either irrelevant or do not support what they have written. I had added tags to dispute these questionable citations but they were promptly removed by the user. There is also an issue with the user asserting western sources support the Chinese account of events without providing citations of such (perhaps they are confusing English-language sources using Chinese primary and secondary sources as "western sources"), and removing passages from the Japanese account of events. In an effort to avoid further edit-warring, I would like a comment from a third party on what measures should be taken.
Thank You, Adachi1939 Adachi1939 ( talk) 20:44, 1 August 2023 (UTC)
There are a several issues with the Japanese Account of Events sections, which do not line up with the scholarly consensus of the battle.
First is the assertion that only the Imperial Navy was involved in the assault, despite Western, Chinese and Japanese scholars and accounts indicating the assault was consisted of the 3rd Division and supporting elements of the Imperial Army (and some Japanese marines too) (Sattaroshi, Harmsen, Robinson, Xie, Yuanliang, etc.).
Second is the claim that Japanese cleared the Warehouse within ninety minutes, which is in direct contradiction with the scholarly consesus that the battle lasted more than three days (which is backed up by nearly all sources provided). The claim that the battle was over in relative ease in the early morning is a direct contradiction to the various eyewitnesses and photographs depicting combat in daytime within Sihang Warehouse (some from Robinson's photo collection).
Third, the claim that Japanese used heavy artillery against Chinese defenders does not match the scholarly consensus of how the Japanese army refrained from using heavy artillery due to the presence of the Settlement in the area (backed by Robinson, Harmsen and Xie).
Finally, Japanese casualty reports do not line up with the Chinese battalion roster, which accounted for 420 troops present and 387 evacuated (including wounded), which would mean that a maximum of 33 Chinese were killed in action, not 80.
In addition with these issues, there is also the dubious origin of the sources used in the account, which mostly come from the same Japanese archive with untranslated documents without footnotes, context or references, and does not cite a larger or more diverse range of sources.
There is also the section editor's insistence that there is a lack of secondary sources for the Japanese side of the battle, which is both untrue and kind of a dubious claim too.
While a Japanese perspective on the event is appreciated, a whole section dealing with a minority opinion in direct contradiction to the scholarly consensus of the article (that a battle did in fact take place that lasted several days with heavy fighting in the warehouse) creates several issues, especially since most sources cited in the section stem from a single archive of dubious quality.
I request that some other editors comment on this issue too, especially given the rather disruptive manner the editor responsible for this section has been trying to get this point across (edit-warring, talk page battlegrounds, etc.).
Thanks.
KresyRise (
talk) 22:21, 2 August 2023 (UTC)
The recent edits by Adachi1939, which replaced the original order of battle for the Japanese and casualty estimates for Chinese and Japanese troops with his own edits, don't seem to be done in good faith.
Deleting the entire section detailing the IJA movements and replacing it with contents from an untranslated Japanese naval report doesn't seem to evoke good faith, even if one considers Adachi's claimed issues with the citations as valid.
In addition, the placement of Cao Juren's quote on behalf Adachi1939 in the intro also seems biased. While it can be agreed that certain accounts of the battle in the contemporary newspapers were exaggerated (for example the number of Chinese troops in the warehouse), the fact that Adachi put the quote immediately after the Japanese perspective out of context doesn't seem to evoke neutrality. It also seems odd that Adachi also uses contemporary newspapers to inflate Chinese casualty numbers (the "Western Claim" that 200 Chinese were killed despite these being early estimations based on Xie's exaggerated 800 number), but doesn't do the same for the Japanese perspective.
This is not an invitation for an argument, I am simply calling for a greater respect for the historiography of the article and for Adachi1939 to stop deleting entire sections that contradict his point of view.
Overall, this topic is just to request a more neutral and consistent edit philosophy. Thanks. KresyRise ( talk) 05:14, 6 August 2023 (UTC)
A passage was removed for the reason "Removed improperly cited content (Robinson makes no mention of dogs) " however citation "Robinson, Stephen (2022). Eight Hundred Heroes: China's lost battalion and the fall of Shanghai. Australia: Exisle Publishing. p. 134. ISBN 978-1-922539-20-5." has the passage as follows "“After sunset the Chinese defenders observed dogs dragging away Japanese corpses." As such, I am re-adding the passage.
Going forward, @ KresyRise please read sources before saying there is no mention of such things in them. I even included the page number which in many cases you have neglected to do. Thank you. Adachi1939 ( talk) 21:56, 1 September 2023 (UTC)
1180 sailors or 1180 marines? There's a big difference. I think the word we are looking for is marines, but I could be wrong. I seriously doubt they were pure sailors though. Alexysun ( talk) 15:26, 20 May 2024 (UTC)
This is the
talk page for discussing improvements to the
Defense of Sihang Warehouse article. This is not a forum for general discussion of the article's subject. |
Article policies
|
Find sources: Google ( books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL |
Defense of Sihang Warehouse is a former featured article. Please see the links under Article milestones below for its original nomination page (for older articles, check the nomination archive) and why it was removed. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
This article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page as Today's featured article on October 30, 2006. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
This article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Vandalism removed 75.2.167.71 00:44, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
Can someone explain what MTV means?
"..and an MTV was made with the modified lyrics "China will be strong.."
I think it was the Nine Powers Treaty that convened during the battle, not the League of Nations. I read it from somewhere that the guy remembered the wrong convention in his recollections. Blue Shirts 23:54, 12 April 2006 (UTC)
This is in regards to: [1]. I've actually got a few questions about this. Is it Really on the roof? I don't know anything about chinese warehouse building, especially since all the roofs I've known are of modern construction, but it seems that those guys are on cobble stones with a lip of a sidewalk nearby. It appears there looks like a building that looks like other pictures of the Sihang warehouse in the background, which doesn't mean anything, but it might mean the picture is not on the roof but nearby. Given that all the surrounding buildings (which mentioned in the article were occupied by the IJA, and that those 'occupied buildings' were higher than the warehouse (as the picture implies) it'd be a poor choice (tactically, not for a picture) for soldiers to be prone when the IJA occupies higher building floors across the street, And given that the article states that the roof was heavily fortified (2 HMGs, etc.) I don't think it'd be easy to accomplish that with IJA on higher building floors a few score meters ways away. Continuing, barbed wire positions on the roof? It wouldn't be unheard of, especially since the IJA was trying to scale the building using ladders. -- What I suppose i'm saying, is unless cited, I can't reasonably believe that is a shot of soldiers on the roof. I'd suggest rather "Picture taken of NRA troops in a fortified position during the defense of Sihang Warehouse." Chapparal 08:16, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
I agree. The buildings on the photo look higher than the warehouse (if the photo was indeed taken on the roof), while the warehouse is the highest building in the vicinity on other photos. Also, cobblestones on a roof? Mr.WaeseL 16:47, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
"This drew the attention, if only briefly, of the international community to Chiang Kai-shek's bid for world-wide support against Japanese aggression." In the U.S. at least the Japanese invasion of China was very closely followed and CKS was well-known and supported, albeit by Christian missionaries who wanted to convert the whole country but still, the statement doesn't seem accurate. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 205.177.1.127 ( talk) 13:51, 26 October 2007 (UTC)
If I judge this correctly, the amazing part of this is not merely the success of the defence itself, but the method in which the foreign concessions distanced themselves. "Hey look, our hosts are fighting a war of resistance, let's not lift a finger to help them in any way!" Elle vécut heureuse à jamais ( Be eudaimonic!) 09:23, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
I dont want to rain on anyones parade but the whole tone of the articles is jingoistic celebration of chinese strength. Its was a sucessful rearguard action not a victory and the Japanese aggressors captured the warehouse and eventually also captured the surviving defenders. Militarily it had little value as the escaping army was not within the boundaries of the defence. Its purpose was entirely political and though casualties were high and terrible the action was hardly suicidal.
The intro looks good, but I think the sentence The successful defense [...] proving that when properly led and motivated, even a small group of Chinese troops could overcome a much greater Japanese force is rather misleading. The main force of Chiang Kai-shek's army, including the 88th division which the lost battalion belonged to, had already fought the Japanese to a standstill valiantly until its lines crumpled after continuously delayed order to retreat. Thus I think right now the intro sentence implies that the defense was the "only" instance of Chinese fortitude and resourcefulness during the battle and that is patently incorrect. The defense of the warehouse itself was militarily rather insignificant, and it did not really "cover" the retreat of the Chinese troops eastward. The bulk of the Chinese troops have already retired from Shanghai and were on route to take part in the defense of Nanking. The main purpose of the lost battalion was to let the international delegates of the Nine-Powers Treaty, in session in Brussels, to know that the Chinese were still fighting. Blue Shirts 23:32, 4 May 2006 (UTC)
Okay, the part where it mentions that the battalion was "technically over-strength" but in actuality "under-strength" - can someone explain that? Is this related to having 800 troops in one battalion (a number made up when Yang Huimin asked for a list of names) and thus this technicality occurred during the battle, or was there something "on paper, but not in practice" that occurred before the battle? Elle vécut heureuse à jamais ( Be eudaimonic!) 13:25, 5 May 2006 (UTC)
Cut half that paragraph out and make it it's own section within the article, which wouldn't be terribly necessary, or explain "While on paper, the 88th was an overstrength batallion [linked to an article about overstrengthed batallions], by the time of the defense of Sihang Warehouse, they're numbers were reduced to about 400 men." Chapparal 21:46, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
I find that having the article title translations, such as ( simplified Chinese: 四行仓库保卫战; traditional Chinese: 四行倉庫保衛戰; pinyin: Sìháng Cāngkù Bǎowèi Zhàn), in the lead really kills the readability of the first few lines of text. Ideally, we want the lead to be as clear and concise as possible and having the translations clutters the flow without any real benefit. The interwiki links are available if I need to know what the event is called in another language, and for the vast majority of people reading the article these translations merely get in the way when they're put in the lead. I'd like to see the translations removed. Just something to think about. -- NormanEinstein 06:39, 7 May 2006 (UTC)
Was there a Zhabei District during the ROC era? — Insta ntnood 14:05, 18 June 2006 (UTC)
-- Миборовский 16:14, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
Something somewhat related: http://www.im.tv/vlog/personal.asp?memid=200483&fid=383998 I like KFC a bit more now :) -- Миборо в ский 00:18, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
I just Figured that I'd let the person who contributes to this entry know that there is more vandalism on the page: in large blue letters at the top it says "cunt". I tried to fix it but I could not locate it. Have a Good One!
24.248.188.125 19:12, 30 October 2006 (UTC)R
This is really inconsistent throughout the article - can we just stick to the title "defenSe" в Wakipedia 19:36, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
Maybe it is just me and my browser (Firefox 2.0.0.8), but "sihangmap.png" obscures the text at the beginning of the Background section on my screen. It would be nice if it didn't, especially given that this is an FA. Thanks. -- Cromwellt| talk| contribs 19:26, 26 October 2007 (UTC)
In the chapter ″29 October″: ″He grabbed the first Japanese soldier's rifle, choked him with the other hand, pushed him off, and finally shot another Japanese soldier on the ladder before pushing the ladder off.[6]″
Is this action sequence encyclopedic prose enough? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 62.236.60.19 ( talk) 22:16, 31 July 2008 (UTC)
The entry as written appears to be written entirely from the Chinese side. We hear about Chinese personnel of various ranks down to private but not their Japanese counterparts. Is there a Japanese account of the battle that identifies some of the Japanese soldiers who led small units, threw grenades, climbed ladders, etc., that could provide more information on what was taking place on the other side of the battle? Imagine a contemporary account of the Battle of Iwo Jima that discussed only the American experience in detail. This is not a dis on China and the Chinese, but is there more information out there. ( 71.22.47.232 ( talk) 01:26, 26 October 2010 (UTC))
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The defense is intentionally made to be a piece of propaganda; given that, the lede should contain not the slightest bit of unsourced material, yet I see more citation needed here than in any other article I can remember. -- 84.189.84.17 ( talk) 20:24, 3 January 2022 (UTC)
Changes have been recently made which have replaced the information for the commander, participating unit, strength, and casualty figures for the Japanese side. The person did not provide any citations or reference material for the changes made regarding the commanding officer and the participating unit.
Other sources attached to figures regarding the strength and casualties come from sources that do not seem to provide any comprehensive data or evidence of the limited. I think there needs to be more evidence before changes like these are pushed. There is little to no reference provided for Haji Kitaro being the overall commander and Shanghai SNLF 10th Battalion being the primary force in this operation.
Out of the sources used two of them do not support the new figures that were changed.
Source 1 here is a unit personnel chart, and makes no mention of unit tasking orders or specific deployments. Source 2 is pertaining to battles and reports that are not of the appropriate dates and events. Kapitan318 ( talk) 02:50, 9 April 2023 (UTC)
There are no primary Japanese sources saying the IJA 9th Division was involved in the assault on the Sihang Warehouse. The operation was conducted by elements of the Shanghai Special NAVAL Landing Force. If edits are made to include the IJA 9th Division, they will be swiftly reverted on the grounds that the editor is clueless about history or at the very least a victim of Chinese propaganda. Adachi1939 ( talk) 22:32, 14 June 2023 (UTC)
As of 2023/06/28 I have restored the article to a more historically verifiable version. It should be understood that there are NO Japanese sources that can attest to the any IJA divisions let alone the IJA at all being involved in the Defense of Sihang Warehouse. Japanese sources point to this being an entirely IJN operation carried out by the Shanghai Special Naval Landing Force. The correct forces present in the battle have been added to the article, with their strength and casualty figures included. The claim of "200+ killed - Hundreds wounded" is not only historically unverifiable--as it relies heavily on Chinese language sources which themselves draw from period accounts from NRA soldiers which are generally propagandistic in nature and of dubious authenticity--they are even more so illogical. Based on the Japanese order of battle, only some 980 troops were involved, meaning 200 KIA would have absolutely devastated the Japanese forces and resulted at the very least in a call for reinforcements from another battalion/company if not suspension of the operation altogether. Yet there is no mention of this in any Japanese sources. Japanese sailors killed during the fighting in Shanghai are meticulously documented in this book ( https://dl.ndl.go.jp/pid/1906225/1/1 ) yet there is only one mention of an officer succumbing to his injuries after fighting around Sihang Warehouse. Where are the other 199 supposed KIA? What unit were they from? For this figure to be correct we would have to assume the Japanese just decided to cover up 199 KIA for this particular part of the battle but made no effort to conceal other heavy losses such as the dozens killed in a single day while landing at Woosung covered in the same book. There are a number of local histories published in Japan which cover the deaths of men sent to war during the Battle of Shanghai but my search did not result in any more KIA at Sihang Warehouse being discovered. No contemporary Japanese scholars or any scholars in the past 85+ years have uncovered Japanese sources for this figure. It's far more logical that the Chinese accounts are simply using false figures that have no historical basis.
If others wish to make large changes to the article, I kindly ask that you use sources which are historically verifiable, not dubious accounts which defy logic. I am open to discussion and looking for more good sources but as it stands there is not any justification for altering the Japanese order of battle or casualty figures beyond pro-Chinese historical negationism. Adachi1939 ( talk) 13:28, 28 June 2023 (UTC)
Yesterday I had added a number of citation needed tags as well as failed verification and irrelevant citation tags for changes previously made by user @ KresyRise in addition to labeling the Chinese account of events used for the article as "Chinese Account of Events" and adding a section for the Japanese Account of Events. These changes were made in an effort to improve the neutrality of the article and bring improper citations into question.
The first area of contention is the strength figure, which the aforementioned has listed as 20,000. The citation they have used (Hattori, Satoshi; Dera, Edward J. (2013). Japanese Operations from July to December 1937, The Battle for China. Stanford University Press. p. 173. ISBN 0-804-79207-0.) has failed verification as the page mentioned does not mention this figure on the page and an examination of this work shows this figure is not mentioned on any page for the Japanese forces involved on the assault on Sihang Warehouse. They have removed the failed verification tag in spite of this and added an additional citation (Robinson, Stephen (2022). Eight Hundred Heroes: China's lost battalion and the fall of Shanghai. Exisle Publishing.
ISBN
978-1-922539-20-5.). While the citation fails to provide a page number for the page, I did read through the book and did not find a mention of this figure for the Japanese force involved in the assault on Sihang Warehouse. These citations are not proper.
The second area I would like to bring attention to is participating forces on the Japanese side. Users have listed the IJA 3rd and 9th Divisions along with "Special Naval Landing Forces: Japanese Marine and Naval Infantry Units" (it should be noted Imperial Japan did not have marines after 1876). The participating forces are disputed as Japanese sources list the only unit involved as the Shanghai Special Naval Landing Force (see 1st citation on the article), which was part of the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN), not IJA. I have not been able to examine all of the sources provided as they are not properly cited and are missing ISBN numbers, but of the one citation I could verify (Hattori, Satoshi (2013). Japanese Operations from July to December 1937, The Battle for China (1st ed.). Stanford University Press. p. 172. ISBN 978-0804792073.), I was able to confirm it makes no mention of either of the IJA 3rd Division nor the IJA 9th Division being involved in the assault on Sihang Warehouse. I had previously added an irrelevant citation tag for this citation but it has been removed by KresyRise without explanation. There needs to be work made to this section as the poor citations and conflicting sources points to it being factually inaccurate.
The third area I would like to address is the accounts of the battle. As the account of the battle relies heavily on Chinese primary sources and secondary sources drawing from the former, I had taken the liberty to label it as "Chinese Account of Events" and add the Japanese Account of Events below for neutrality's sake. The Chinese Account of Events has instead been relabeled to to simply "Battle" by another user with the Japanese Account of Events preserved below. Given the large number of disputed and/or historically unverifiable claims made in what is now called the battle section, I believe it is appropriate to keep the events based on Chinese accounts labeled as such. Exerts such as "Hundreds of Japanese infantry attacked the warehouse from all directions with artillery fire and support from Type 94 Te-Ke tankettes." are present in the battle section, with citations leading to articles that themselves provide no sources. Meanwhile Japanese sources make no mention of employing armor in the assault at all. It is extremely misleading to prevent this section as a neutral retelling of events.
The last area I would like to bring to attention is the following two paragraphs in the Japanese account of events. It was originally written as follows:
"Surviving reports from the Imperial Japanese Navy do not include specific figures for the number of Japanese wounded nor enemy dead in Sihang Warehouse alone, but do make mention of some 100 enemy corpses left in Chapei on October 31 and a total of 42 Japanese troops wounded during the advance on Chapei. Of the 42 wounded, three were in serious condition, including a warrant officer from the 10th Battalion involved in the assault on Sihang Warehouse who would later succumb to his injuries on November 2, 1937.[10][11]
The Imperial Japanese Naval Ministry Educational Bureau recorded and published all servicemen killed in action during the Battle of Shanghai across three volumes of books known as Shina Jihen Jinchuroku (支那事変尽忠録, China Incident Loyalty Records). Aside from the aforementioned warrant officer, there are no other records of Japanese troops killed in action or gravely wounded during the assault on Sihang Warehouse, making the Chinese claims of 200+ Japanese killed highly unlikely if not impossible."
User @ KresyRise has altered it to the following, removing the Chinese casualty figure and explanation of Japanese killed in action recording purported by the Japanese:
"Surviving reports from the Imperial Japanese Navy do not include specific figures for the number of Japanese wounded nor enemy dead in Sihang Warehouse alone, but do make mention a total of 42 Japanese troops wounded during the advance on Chapei. Of the 42 wounded, three were in serious condition, including a warrant officer from the 10th Battalion involved in the assault on Sihang Warehouse who would later succumb to his injuries on November 2, 1937.[14][15]
The Imperial Japanese Naval Ministry Educational Bureau recorded and published all servicemen killed in action during the Battle of Shanghai across three volumes of books known as Shina Jihen Jinchuroku (支那事変尽忠録, China Incident Loyalty Records)."
I can agree some language used in the original two paragraphs may have been somewhat partisan in nature, but I would like to understand their reasoning for removing the Chinese casualty figure and explanation of why Japanese sources bring Chinese claims into dispute. Doesn't the inclusion of these details help with the neutrality of the article? While my analysis of the sources has made me reach the conclusion that the Chinese sources are largely exaggerated and of dubious accuracy, I am willing to compromise and work to both viewpoints being presented in the article, so that a reader may reach their own conclusion on what occurred during the Defense of Sihang Warehouse. Removing areas from the Japanese account while preserving highly contested allegations from the Chinese accounts will not allow for this.
@KresyRise please provide me some insight into your changes and why you are using citations that do not support the information you are adding to the article. If I don't hear back I will be requesting a third opinion.
Thanks,
Adachi
Adachi1939 (
talk) 22:15, 29 July 2023 (UTC)
As previously mentioned in the Talk:Defense of Sihang Warehouse#Factual accuracy and neutrality, @ KresyRise has added a number of claims with citations that are either irrelevant or do not support what they have written. I had added tags to dispute these questionable citations but they were promptly removed by the user. There is also an issue with the user asserting western sources support the Chinese account of events without providing citations of such (perhaps they are confusing English-language sources using Chinese primary and secondary sources as "western sources"), and removing passages from the Japanese account of events. In an effort to avoid further edit-warring, I would like a comment from a third party on what measures should be taken.
Thank You, Adachi1939 Adachi1939 ( talk) 20:44, 1 August 2023 (UTC)
There are a several issues with the Japanese Account of Events sections, which do not line up with the scholarly consensus of the battle.
First is the assertion that only the Imperial Navy was involved in the assault, despite Western, Chinese and Japanese scholars and accounts indicating the assault was consisted of the 3rd Division and supporting elements of the Imperial Army (and some Japanese marines too) (Sattaroshi, Harmsen, Robinson, Xie, Yuanliang, etc.).
Second is the claim that Japanese cleared the Warehouse within ninety minutes, which is in direct contradiction with the scholarly consesus that the battle lasted more than three days (which is backed up by nearly all sources provided). The claim that the battle was over in relative ease in the early morning is a direct contradiction to the various eyewitnesses and photographs depicting combat in daytime within Sihang Warehouse (some from Robinson's photo collection).
Third, the claim that Japanese used heavy artillery against Chinese defenders does not match the scholarly consensus of how the Japanese army refrained from using heavy artillery due to the presence of the Settlement in the area (backed by Robinson, Harmsen and Xie).
Finally, Japanese casualty reports do not line up with the Chinese battalion roster, which accounted for 420 troops present and 387 evacuated (including wounded), which would mean that a maximum of 33 Chinese were killed in action, not 80.
In addition with these issues, there is also the dubious origin of the sources used in the account, which mostly come from the same Japanese archive with untranslated documents without footnotes, context or references, and does not cite a larger or more diverse range of sources.
There is also the section editor's insistence that there is a lack of secondary sources for the Japanese side of the battle, which is both untrue and kind of a dubious claim too.
While a Japanese perspective on the event is appreciated, a whole section dealing with a minority opinion in direct contradiction to the scholarly consensus of the article (that a battle did in fact take place that lasted several days with heavy fighting in the warehouse) creates several issues, especially since most sources cited in the section stem from a single archive of dubious quality.
I request that some other editors comment on this issue too, especially given the rather disruptive manner the editor responsible for this section has been trying to get this point across (edit-warring, talk page battlegrounds, etc.).
Thanks.
KresyRise (
talk) 22:21, 2 August 2023 (UTC)
The recent edits by Adachi1939, which replaced the original order of battle for the Japanese and casualty estimates for Chinese and Japanese troops with his own edits, don't seem to be done in good faith.
Deleting the entire section detailing the IJA movements and replacing it with contents from an untranslated Japanese naval report doesn't seem to evoke good faith, even if one considers Adachi's claimed issues with the citations as valid.
In addition, the placement of Cao Juren's quote on behalf Adachi1939 in the intro also seems biased. While it can be agreed that certain accounts of the battle in the contemporary newspapers were exaggerated (for example the number of Chinese troops in the warehouse), the fact that Adachi put the quote immediately after the Japanese perspective out of context doesn't seem to evoke neutrality. It also seems odd that Adachi also uses contemporary newspapers to inflate Chinese casualty numbers (the "Western Claim" that 200 Chinese were killed despite these being early estimations based on Xie's exaggerated 800 number), but doesn't do the same for the Japanese perspective.
This is not an invitation for an argument, I am simply calling for a greater respect for the historiography of the article and for Adachi1939 to stop deleting entire sections that contradict his point of view.
Overall, this topic is just to request a more neutral and consistent edit philosophy. Thanks. KresyRise ( talk) 05:14, 6 August 2023 (UTC)
A passage was removed for the reason "Removed improperly cited content (Robinson makes no mention of dogs) " however citation "Robinson, Stephen (2022). Eight Hundred Heroes: China's lost battalion and the fall of Shanghai. Australia: Exisle Publishing. p. 134. ISBN 978-1-922539-20-5." has the passage as follows "“After sunset the Chinese defenders observed dogs dragging away Japanese corpses." As such, I am re-adding the passage.
Going forward, @ KresyRise please read sources before saying there is no mention of such things in them. I even included the page number which in many cases you have neglected to do. Thank you. Adachi1939 ( talk) 21:56, 1 September 2023 (UTC)
1180 sailors or 1180 marines? There's a big difference. I think the word we are looking for is marines, but I could be wrong. I seriously doubt they were pure sailors though. Alexysun ( talk) 15:26, 20 May 2024 (UTC)