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Wellington Koo: China (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R323
Discovery Miles 3 230
You Save: R95
(23%)
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Wellington Koo: China (Hardcover)
Series: Makers of the Modern World
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List price R418
Loot Price R323
Discovery Miles 3 230
You Save R95 (23%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Born in Shanghai and raised in the city's International Settlement,
Gu Weijun, a.k.a. Wellington Koo (1887-1985) became fluent in
English during his postgraduate studies abroad - he got a PhD in
Law from Columbia in 1912. He was recalled soon afterwards to
become the English Secretary to the newly formed Republic of China,
and became ambassador to the United States in 1915. He achieved
notoriety at the Paris Peace Conference where he sternly resisted
Japanese attempts to hold onto seized German colonial territory in
mainland China. In protest at their treatment, the Chinese were the
only delegates not to sign the subsequent Treaty of Versailles. Koo
was China's first representative to the League of Nations, and
ended up as acting president of Republican China during the unrest
of the period 1926-7.He subsequently served briefly as a Foreign
Minister during the peak of the Warlord Era, before returning to
Europe, first as a delegate at the League of Nations, and then as
China's ambassador to France. With the Nazi occupation, Koo fled to
Britain, where he became the Chinese ambassador to the UK until
1946. A founder member of the United Nations, Koo was instrumental
in maintaining the position of Republican China on the Security
Council - by this time, 'Republican China' was limited solely to
the island of Taiwan, while the Communists proclaimed themselves to
be the new rulers of China itself.Retiring from the diplomatic
service in 1956, the venerable Koo went on to become a judge at the
International Court of Justice at the Hague, rising to
vice-president before his retirement, aged 80, in 1967. He settled
in New York, where his final years were tormented by 'Republican'
China's loss of its seat on the United Nations Security Council to
the Communists, following Nixon's famous visit to China.
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