| The Power of the Gun |
| Preface |
| Introduction |
| 1— Late Qing Military Organization |
| • | The Traditional Qing Military System and the Rise of the Yongying |
| • | The Political Legacy of Yongying Organization |
| • | Military Self-Strengthening in the Late Nineteenth Century |
| • | The Organization of the New Armies |
| • | Provincial Military Organization in Hunan and Hubei on the Eve of the Revolution |
| • | Conclusion |
| 2— The Politicization of the Military: The New Army and the 1911 Revolution |
| • | The Social Transformation of the New Army |
| • | The Politicization of the Military |
| • | The Revolutionary Movement in the Hubei and Hunan New Armies |
| • | The Wuchang Uprising |
| • | The Changsha Uprising |
| • | Conclusion |
| 3— The Provincial Regimes of the Early Republic: Civil Government under Military Governors |
| • | Continuity and Change in Local Administration |
| • | Civil Administration and Politics under the Provincial Military Governments |
| • | Hunan's "Civilian Military Governor" |
| • | The Consolidation of Hubei's Military Governorship |
| • | The Establishment of Hubei's Civil Governorship |
| • | Conclusion |
| 4— Military Problems and Policies of the Provincial Regimes |
| • | The Impact of Military Expansion |
| • | Military Control and Discipline |
| • | The Political Threat of the Military |
| • | Disbandment in Hunan |
| • | Disbandment in Hubei |
| • | Conclusion |
| 5— Centralization and the Provinces under the Dictatorship of Yuan Shikai |
| • | The Second Revolution |
| • | Centralization and the Demise of the Provincial Regimes |
| • | The Realignment of Central and Provincial Military Power |
| • | Military Governors and Central Control |
| • | Administrative Centralization in the Provinces |
| • | Political Authority and Coercion under the Dictatorship |
| • | Yuan's Monarchist Venture |
| • | Conclusion |
| 6— The Anti-Monarchical War and the Inception of Warlordism |
| • | Wang Zhanyuan and the Beginning of Beiyang Warlordism |
| • | The Anti-Monarchical Struggle in Hubei and Hunan |
| • | The Fall of Tang Xiangming |
| • | The Restoration of Hunan's Provincialist Regime |
| • | The Consolidation of Wang Zhanyuan's Warlord Regime |
| • | Conclusion |
| 7— The North-South War and the Triumph of Warlordism |
| • | Crisis at the Center and Beiyang Military Power |
| • | The North-South War—Stage One |
| • | The North-South War—Stage Two |
| • | Conclusion |
| 8— Warlord Rule and the Failure of Civil Provincialism |
| • | The Northern Warlord Regimes of Hunan and Hubei |
| • | Military Organization and Autonomy in the Northern Warlord Regimes |
| • | The Independent Provincial Forces |
| • | The Fall of Zhang Jingyao |
| • | The Fall of Wang Zhanyuan |
| • | Conclusion |
| Conclusion |
| Appendix: The Organizational Structure and Strength of Late Qing and Early Republican Armies |
| Notes |
| • | Introduction |
| • | 1— Late Qing Military Organization |
| • | 2— The Politicization of the Military: The New Army and the 1911 Revolution |
| • | 3— The Provincial Regimes of the Early Republic: Civil Government under Military Governors |
| • | 4— Military Problems and Policies of the Provincial Regimes |
| • | 5— Centralization and the Provinces under the Dictatorship of Yuan Shikai |
| • | 6— The Anti-Monarchical War and the Inception of Warlordism |
| • | 7— The North-South War and the Triumph of Warlordism |
| • | 8— Warlord Rule and the Failure of Civil Provincialism |
| • | Conclusion |
| Abbreviations |
| Glossary |
| • | A |
| • | B |
| • | C |
| • | D |
| • | F |
| • | G |
| • | H |
| • | J |
| • | K |
| • | L |
| • | M |
| • | N |
| • | P |
| • | Q |
| • | R |
| • | S |
| • | T |
| • | W |
| • | X |
| • | Y |
| • | Z |
| Works Cited |
| Index |
| • | A |
| • | B |
| • | C |
| • | D |
| • | E |
| • | F |
| • | G |
| • | H |
| • | I |
| • | J |
| • | K |
| • | L |
| • | M |
| • | N |
| • | O |
| • | P |
| • | Q |
| • | R |
| • | S |
| • | T |
| • | W |
| • | X |
| • | Y |
| • | Z |