was added to the Italian concession after World War I. During the
Boxer Rebellion in 1900, the
Beijing Legation Quarter became the center of an international incident during the
Siege of the International Legations by the Boxers for several months. After the siege had been broken by the
Eight-Nation Alliance (that included Italy) at the end of the
Battle of Peking, the foreign powers obtained the right to station troops to protect their legations under the terms of the
Boxer Protocol. In addition, Italy obtained the concession in Tientsin, southeast of Beijing. On 7 September 1901, a concession in Tientsin was ceded to the
Kingdom of Italy by the
Qing dynasty of China. On 7 June 1902, the concession was taken into Italian possession and administered by an Italian
consul: the first was Cesare Poma and the last (in 1943) was Ferruccio Stefanelli. Along with the other foreign concessions, the Italian concession lay on the
Pei Ho, southeast of the city centre. In the late 1920s, the Italians even held small forts such as the
Forte di Shan Hai Kuan near the
Great Wall of China in
Manchuria and in
Hankow. In 1925,
Benito Mussolini created the
Battaglione italiano in Cina and quartered it with soldiers of the
San Marco Regiment in the new Caserma Ermanno Carlotto. The police were Chinese, while the officers were Italians. There was even a football team in the Italian concession. During
World War II, the Italian concession in Tientsin had a garrison of approximately 600 Italian troops. On 9 September 1943, after the publication of the
Italian armistice with the Allies, the concession was occupied by the
Imperial Japanese Army with initial resistance from the Italians, who were later interned at
Tangshan. In November, they were given the choice to give their allegiance to Mussolini's new
Italian Social Republic. Those that did had their personal weapons returned and were used by the Japanese as labour troops. In July 1944, the Italian Social Republic formally relinquished the concession to
Wang Jingwei's Japanese-sponsored
Reorganized National Government of China which, like the RSI in Axis-held northern Italy, was not recognized by the Kingdom of Italy, the
Republic of China, or most other nations. The Wang Jingwei government fell when the
Empire of Japan was
defeated. At the same time, the Italian commercial concessions in the
Shanghai International Settlement, Hankou, and Beijing were ceded to the Republic of China. On 2 June 1946, the Kingdom of Italy became the
Italian Republic and, on 10 February 1947, by virtue of the
peace treaty with the Allied powers, the Italian concession was formally ceded by Italy to
Chiang Kai-shek's
Republic of China. == Governors ==