Cao Rulin was born in Shanghai on January 23, 1877. The son of a scholar, he was given an education in the Chinese classics. From 1899 to 1904, Cao studied law in Japan, first at
Waseda University, and then
Chuo University. Upon returning to China, he passed his examination and received his law degree from the
Qing government. In 1913, he worked as a lawyer working in Beijing when he was appointed by the provisional president,
Yuan Shikai, to a vacant seat in the
National Assembly's senate. He represented
Outer Mongolia because Mongolia boycotted the elections after declaring independence during the
Xinhai Revolution. In 1915, he took
Yuan Shikai's orders and signed the infamous "
Twenty-One Demands" treaty with Japan. He later became the leader of the
New Communications Clique. Cao Rulin was part of the Chinese envoy attending the
Paris Peace Conference. At the conference many former German
concessions in China were handed to Japan instead of back to China. This was widely unpopular in China, leading to student protests and a broader Chinese cultural and anti-imperialist movement known as the
May Fourth Movement. On May 4, 1919, students across Beijing gathered in front of
Tiananmen. Among their demands was the resignation of Cao and two other Chinese officials (Zhang Zongxiang and
Lu Zongyu) who they accused of being collaborators with the Japanese. The demonstration shifted to Cao's house in the East City District, and it was burned down. Cao escaped disguised as a servant, and was aided by his friend,
Nakae Ushikichi, son of
Nakae Chōmin. Cao resigned from his post on June 10, 1919, after a general strike in Shanghai threatened to spread to other provinces. Cao shifted his focus to private business interests after his resignation. He lived in mainland China throughout the
Second Sino-Japanese War and
Chinese Civil War, fleeing to
Taiwan in 1949. Later, he moved to Japan and then the United States, where he died in 1966. ==See also==