and Gefion'' arriving at Kiautschou Bay in 1899 , 1898 In 1860, a
Prussian expeditionary fleet arrived in
Asia and explored the region around Jiaozhou Bay. The following year, the Prussian-Chinese Treaty of Peking was signed. After journeys to China between 1868 and 1871, the geographer Baron
Ferdinand von Richthofen recommended the Bay of Jiaozhou as a possible naval base. In 1896, Rear Admiral
Alfred von Tirpitz, at that time commander of the
East Asian Cruiser Division, examined the area personally, as well as three additional sites in China, for the establishment of a naval base. Rear Admiral
Otto von Diederichs replaced Tirpitz in East Asia and focused on Jiaozhou Bay, even though the Berlin admiralty had not formally decided on a base location. On 1 November 1897, the
Big Sword Society murdered two German Roman Catholic priests of the
Steyler Mission in
Juye County in southern
Shandong. This event was known as the "
Juye Incident". Admiral von Diederichs, commander of the cruiser squadron, wired on 7 November 1897, to the admiralty: "May incidents be exploited in pursuit of further goals?" Upon receipt of the Diederichs cable, Chancellor
Chlodwig von Hohenlohe counseled caution, preferring a diplomatic resolution. However, Kaiser
Wilhelm II intervened and the admiralty sent a message for Diederichs to "proceed immediately to Kiautschou [Jiaozhou] with entire squadron ..." to which the admiral replied, "will proceed ... with greatest energy." Diederichs, at that moment, only had his division's flagship and the protected cruiser available at anchor in Shanghai. The corvette was laid up for repairs and the protected cruiser in a dockyard at Hong Kong for an engine refit. The unprotected cruiser , operating independent of the cruiser division, was patrolling the
Yangtze. Diederichs weighed anchor, ordered
Prinzess Wilhelm to follow next day, and
Cormoran to catch up at sea. The three ships arrived off Qingdao after dawn on 13 November 1897, but made no aggressive moves. With his staff and the three captains of his ships aboard, Diederichs landed with his admirals tender at Qingdao's long
Zhanqiao Pier to reconnoiter. He determined that his landing force would be vastly outnumbered by Chinese troops, but he had qualitative superiority. At 06:00, Sunday, 14 November 1897,
Cormoran steamed into the inner harbor to provide inshore fire support, if necessary.
Kaiser and
Prinzess Wilhelm cleared boats to carry an amphibious force of 717 officers, petty officers, and sailors armed with rifles. Diederichs, on horseback, and his column marched toward the Chinese main garrison and artillery battery. A special unit swiftly disabled the Chinese telegraph line and others occupied the outer forts and powder magazines. With speed and effectiveness, Diederichs’ actions had achieved their primary objective by 08:15. Signalmen restored the telegraph line, and the first messages were received and deciphered. Diederichs was stunned to learn that his orders had been canceled, and that he was to suspend operations at Jiaozhou pending negotiations with the Chinese government. If he had already occupied the village of Qingdao, he was to consider his presence temporary. He responded, thinking the politicians in Berlin had lost their nerve to political or diplomatic complications: "Proclamation already published. ... Revocation not possible." After considerable time and uncertainty, the admiralty finally cabled congratulations and the proclamation was to remain in effect; Wilhelm II promoted him to vice admiral. Admiral von Diederichs consolidated his positions at Jiaozhou Bay. The admiralty dispatched the
protected cruiser SMS Kaiserin Augusta from the Mediterranean to Qingdao to further strengthen the naval presence in East Asia. On 26 January 1898, the marines of
III. Seebataillon arrived on the liner
Darmstadt. Jiaozhou Bay was now secure. Negotiations with the Chinese government began and on 6 March 1898, the German Empire retreated from outright cession of the area and accepted a leasehold of the bay for 99 years, or until 1997, as the British were soon to do with
Hong Kong's New Territories and the French with
Guangzhouwan. One month later, the
Reichstag ratified the treaty on 8 April 1898. Kiautschou Bay was officially placed under German protection by imperial decree on 27 April and
Kapitän zur See [captain]
Carl Rosendahl was appointed governor. These events ended Admiral von Diederichs' responsibility (but not his interest) in Kiautschou. He wrote that he had "fulfilled [his] purpose in the navy." As a result of the lease treaty, the Chinese government gave up the exercise of its sovereign rights within the leased territory of approximately 83,000 inhabitants (to which the city of
Kiautschou was excluded), as well as in a 50 km wide neutral zone ("neutrales Gebiet"). According to international law, the leased territory ("territoire à bail") remained legally part of China but for the duration of the lease, all sovereign powers were to be exercised by Germany. Moreover, the treaty included rights for construction of railway lines and mining of local coal deposits. Many parts of Shandong outside of the German leased territory came under German economic influence. Although the lease treaty set limits to the German expansion, it became a starting point for the following cessions of
Port Arthur and
Dalian to
Russia to support Russia's
Chinese Eastern Railway interests in Manchuria, of the transfer of
Weihaiwei and
Liugong Island from Japan to
Great Britain, and the cession of
Guangzhouwan to support
France in southern China and Indochina.
Later history On 15 August 1914, at the outbreak of World War I in Europe, Japan delivered an ultimatum to Germany demanding that it relinquish its control of the disputed territory of Kiautschou. Upon rejection of the ultimatum, Japan declared war on 23 August and the same day, its navy bombarded the German territory. On 7 November 1914, the bay was
occupied by Japanese forces. Following the resolution of the
Shandong Problem, the occupied territory was returned to China on 10 December 1922, but the Japanese again occupied the area from 1937 to 1945, during the
Second Sino-Japanese War. ==Language==