IP #106
5 fiction conversations
over 2 months, 6 days
(Dec 4, 2023 – Feb 9, 2024)
18% prompt uniqueness
Kingston, Jamaica
Possibly Same User
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2bf8c94de37a... (23 conv., Kingston)
2daf10d38cae... (46 conv., Kingston)
3c1562f9a9d5... (41 conv., Kingston)
479b9e26c760... (17 conv., Kingston)
5706126721d9... (696 conv., Kingston)
6b38dfe766b8... (8 conv., Kingston)
e047f776dc2a... (10 conv., Kingston)
e93213fa9302... (36 conv., Kingston)
f543c8e07ece... (18 conv., Kingston)
f92aa52af784... (49 conv., Kingston)
fbef31d7041e... (37 conv., Kingston)
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Dec 4, 2023
Feb 9, 2024
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C0
Write an intresting fan theory for both the canon Naruto universe and a crossove
29 conv.
C1
Do a intermission for a crossover fanfic between Medaka Box, Call of Duty and th
19 conv.
C2
Do a sample of a dialogue-filled, action-packed, interesting, and exposition-fil
18 conv.
C3
Write an excerpt for a crossover fanfic between Call of Duty, the shared univers
18 conv.
C4
Write an interesting, exposition-filled, descriptive, fantasy-action-filled, gun
15 conv.
C5
Write a realistic, sensible, plausible, dialogue-filled, exposition-filled alter
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C6
Write a realistic, sensible, plausible and alternate history scenario in the for
12 conv.
C7
Write a realistic, sensible, plausible, dialogue-filled, exposition-filled alter
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C8
Write interesting, riveting, lengthy, dialogue-filled, martial arts action packe
11 conv.
C9
Write a realistic, sensible, plausible and alternate history scenario in the for
8 conv.
C10
Do a sample of a dialogue-filled, action-packed, intresting and exposition-fille
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C11
Write an interesting, plausible, year by year, realistic alternate history timel
6 conv.
C12
Write an excerpt of a intresting, riveting, dialogue-filled, exposition-filled,
6 conv.
C13
Write an excerpt of a, dialogue-filled, fantasy-action filled, swordplay filled,
6 conv.
C14
Write a realistic, sensible, plausible and alternate history scenario in the for
6 conv.
C15
Write an intresting, riveting, lengthy, on-point, descriptive alternate history
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5 conv.
C16
Write an interesting, exposition-filled, descriptive, fantasy-action-filled, gun
5 conv.
C17
How would the plot of the light novel, manga and anime franchise Masou Gakuen Hx
5 conv.
C18
Write a realistic, sensible, plausible and alternate history scenario for the wo
4 conv.
C19
Write a realistic, sensible, plausible and alternate history scenario in the for
4 conv.
C20
How would the plot of Halo change if the Grand Jurai Empire ruled by the Masaki
4 conv.
C21
Write an excerpt of a post-apocalyptic, fantasy-action filled, martial-arts acti
4 conv.
C22
What if Hyoudou Issei, the protagonist of DxD, took the roles of Katsuragi Keima
3 conv.
C23
Write a realistic, highly detailed realistic timeline for an alternate history n
3 conv.
C24
Write a riveting, captivating, lengthy, descriptive, dialogue-filled and on-poin
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Write a realistic, sensible, plausible and alternate history scenario in the for
3 conv.
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Write a realistic, sensible, plausible and alternate history scenario in the for
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Do a sample of a dialogue-filled, action-packed, interesting, and exposition-fil
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C28
Write a realistic, sensible, plausible and alternate history scenario in the for
3 conv.
C29
Write an excerpt for a crossover fanfic between Call of Duty, the shared univers
3 conv.
C30
Write a action-packed, interesting, dialogue-filled short story in the form of a
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C31
Write an alternate history scenario + lore for the anime and manga series Elfen
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C32
Write an interesting, riveting, descriptive, on-point, action-packed descriptive
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C33
Write a realistic, plausible, year by year timeline for a crossover between the
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Write an excerpt of a, dialogue-filled, fantasy-action filled, swordplay filled,
2 conv.
C35
How would the plot of the light novel, manga and anime franchise Masou Gakuen Hx
2 conv.
C36
Write an interesting, riveting alternate history scenario in the form of a chapt
1 conv.
C37
What if the Julay no Dai Ginga Teikoku [the Grand Galactic Empire of Jurai], whi
1 conv.
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Write a captivating action military spy novel-style mystery thriller story in th
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Write a realistic, highly detailed realistic timeline for an alternate history n
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C40
Write an interesting, plausible and lengthy alternate history scenario in the fo
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C41
How would a rewrite of the Japanese WW2-era song "Ode to the Showa Restoration"
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Write an interesting, exposition-filled, descriptive, fantasy-action-filled, gun
1 conv.
C43
How would one adapt the character of Jamaican dancehall artiste Alkaline into th
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What would be the era name for former CCP premier Zhu Ronji if he had dissolved
1 conv.
C45
Staying and continuing with the crossover fanfic prompted and generated in the p
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C46
Good morning. This is for a crossover fanfic between Naruto, the Fire Force anim
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C47
What if Naruto was pretending to be a idiot and faked his death at the end of Sh
1 conv.
C48
Write an interesting, riveting, action-packed, page-turning, and descriptive len
1 conv.
5 conversations in cluster Cluster 15× “Write an intresting, riveting, lengthy, on-point, descriptiv...” over 1 month, 15 days (Dec 18, 2023 – Feb 1, 2024), oldest first.
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USER: Write an intresting, riveting, lengthy, on-point, descriptive alternate history scenario with plenty of exposition in the form of a written documentary history book chapter, in which the Beiyang Zhengfu [Beiyang Government |Beiyang Zhengfu|], a stratocratic [military controlled |stratocratic] authoritarian semi-totalitarian regency that [the Beiyang Zhengfu] was [what the Beiyang Zhengfu was] the government [Beiyang Zhengfu] of [which East Asian regime the Beiyang Zhengfu was |the Beiyang Zhengfu| the government |the Beiyang Zhengfu| of] the Zhonghua Minguo [the Republic of China/Chinese Republic/Republican China |Zhonghua Minguo|] a semi-democratic aristocratic parliamentary presidential republic [the Zhonghua Minguo] that [the Zhonghua Minguo] ruled [the Zhonghua Minguo] over [the East Asian nation the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over] Zhongguo [Han China/China |Zhongguo|, excluding |which Chinese territories are excluded from Zhongguo| Mobei Menggu |Outer Mongolia/Mongolia (Mobei Menggu)|, Nei Menggu |Inner Mongolia (Nei Menggu), Xinjiang [East Turkestan |Xinjiang|], Dongbei [Northeastern China (Dongbei), consisting (Dongbei) of (the East Asian territories that make up Dongbei) Manchuria, Russia's Amur Oblast, Russia's Primorskaya Oblast and the southern part of Russia's Khabarovsk Krai region (Dongbei)| and Xiziang |Tibet |Xinjiang| ], [the Zhonghua Minguo ruling over Zhongguo] from [when the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over Zhongguo |Dongbei|] 1912-1928, and then from 1937-1945 as [...
CHATBOT: ### Chapter VIII: The Phoenix Rises - The Beiyang Legacy and the Restoration of the Great Ming #### Section I: The Beiyang Stratocracy and the Republic's Fragile Foundations To fully understand the historical context in which the Beiyang Government operated and transformed, one must delve into the turbulent period following the collapse of the Qing Empire. The Beiyang Government, established as the de facto ruling entity of the nascent Republic of China, was born out of a stratocratic condition--the military, under figures such as Yuan Shikai, had positioned itself as the spine of the young republic. Between the years 1912 and 1928, the Beiyang Government maintained an authoritarian grip under a veneer of republican ideals which rarely flourished. In a nation fraught with warlords and regional strife, the Beiyang Government represented a semblance of unity. Yet, even its rule was characterized by fragmentation and internal conflict, a condition exacerbated by the military dominance of its structure. Despite its international recognition, it struggled to rule effectively and progress towards the intended constitutional and parliamentary republicanism was sporadic and ineffective. #### Section II: Ming Romanticism and the Dawn of the Guomindang Regency The period of the Beiyang Government's decline segued into the emergence of the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu or the Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China. This entity, initially instituted as a more stabilized version of the Republic, was operational from 1937 to 1945. It ostensibly aimed to return to the republic's founding principles but leveraged a notable shift towards a semi-totalitarian regime in the face of external aggression and internal discord. Beneath the surface of this reorganization, an undercurrent of Ming romanticism was rekindled--a yearning for the days of the Great Ming, also known as the Ming Chao, or the 'Ming dynasty'. This sentiment was not baseless, for the times of the Great Ming were marked by a potent blend of military prowess and cultural renaissance, with the Imperial House of Zhu reigning supreme from 1368 until its ousting by the Manchu-led Qing in 1644. #### Section III: The Blossom Amidst the Flames - The Restoration Interlude The vicissitudes of the Republic of China were compounded when the Empire of Japan, a formidable East Asian force, began its advances onto the Chinese mainland during the Second Sino-Japanese War, also known in Putonghua as the Dierc...
USER: Write an intresting, riveting, lengthy, on-point, descriptive alternate history scenario with plenty of exposition in the form of a written documentary history book chapter, in which the Beiyang Zhengfu [Beiyang Government |Beiyang Zhengfu|], a stratocratic [military controlled |stratocratic] authoritarian semi-totalitarian regency that [the Beiyang Zhengfu] was [what the Beiyang Zhengfu was] the government [Beiyang Zhengfu] of [which East Asian regime the Beiyang Zhengfu was |the Beiyang Zhengfu| the government |the Beiyang Zhengfu| of] the Zhonghua Minguo [the Republic of China/Chinese Republic/Republican China |Zhonghua Minguo|] a semi-democratic aristocratic parliamentary presidential republic [the Zhonghua Minguo] that [the Zhonghua Minguo] ruled [the Zhonghua Minguo] over [the East Asian nation the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over] Zhongguo [Han China/China |Zhongguo|, excluding |which Chinese territories are excluded from Zhongguo| Mobei Menggu |Outer Mongolia/Mongolia (Mobei Menggu)|, Nei Menggu |Inner Mongolia (Nei Menggu), Xinjiang [East Turkestan |Xinjiang|], Dongbei [Northeastern China (Dongbei), consisting (Dongbei) of (the East Asian territories that make up Dongbei) Manchuria, Russia's Amur Oblast, Russia's Primorskaya Oblast and the southern part of Russia's Khabarovsk Krai region (Dongbei)| and Xiziang |Tibet |Xinjiang| ], [the Zhonghua Minguo ruling over Zhongguo] from [when the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over Zhongguo |Dongbei|] 1912-1928, and then from 1937-1945 as [...
CHATBOT: **Chapter V: The Inception of Stratocratic Alchemy: A Restored Ming and the Sino-Japanese Alliance** In the turbulent wake of dynastic decline and international upheaval, the early 20th century saw the fragmentation of China's millennia-old imperial tradition, leading to the rise of the Beiyang Government, or Beiyang Zhengfu, a stratocratic regime that transformed the nascent Republic of China (Zhonghua Minguo) into a military-controlled authoritarian state. This Republic, professed to be a semi-democratic entity, was as much an aristocratic assemblage as it was an ostensible presidency, conceptually inclusive yet practically exclusive in its franchise to the corridors of power. From 1912 to 1928, the Beiyang Government ruled over the territories of Han China (Zhongguo), meticulously excluding the peripheries of Outer Mongolia (Mobei Menggu), Inner Mongolia (Nei Menggu), Xinjiang (East Turkestan), Northeastern China (Dongbei), which on its own included historically contentious regions like Manchuria, and the elevated spiritual expanse of Tibet (Xiziang). Despite the geopolitical turmoil that persisted, a revisionist history took shape under the watchful eyes of the Beiyang regime, subsequently succeeded by the Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China (Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu) from 1937 to 1945. In a twist of fate and the trappings of stratocratic ambition, this government orbited back through time to coalesce into a restored Great Ming State (Da Mingguo), also historically revered as the Ming dynasty (Ming Chao). This incarnation emerged, quite paradoxically, as a stratocratic feudalist aristocracy draped in the venerated robes of an absolute imperial monarchy: the last of such dynasties governed and administered under the traditional Han Chinese (Huaren) system. At the helm of this renewed Ming imperial stratocracy were the descendants of the time-honored Zhu imperial family (Zhu Huangfu), who once again took up the mantel of China's imperial family (huangshi), ruling over the middle kingdom from 1368 until the invigorating restoration that we unravel in this alternate history. The re-emergence was neither spontaneous combustion of dynastic longing nor mere stratocratic conceit; it required the intervention of a formidable ally--Imperial Japan (Dai Nippon Teikoku, or Dai Nihon Teikoku), under the sign of the Rising Sun. Japan, by then, had become a unitary, parliamentary, and at times politically esoteric federation with imperial gr...
USER: Continuing with the alternate history scenario presented in the previous entry: How exactly [did the restoration of the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao through the Beiyang Zhengfu and the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu in 1938 during the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] proceed? Was it [the restoration of the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao through the Beiyang Zhengfu and the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu in 1938 during the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] done [the restoration of the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao through the Beiyang Zhengfu and the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu in 1938 during the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] through the approval of and an a unanimous vote in the Guohui [National Assembly |Guohui|, the Zhonghua Minguo's bicameral legislative branch |the Guohui| with |what the Guohui's two branches were| a Canyiyuan |Senate (canyiyuan)| and a Zhongyiyuan |House of Representatives (Zhongyiyuan)|, which |the Guohui| lasted |the Guohui| from |how long the Guohui lasted for| 8 April 1913-1 July 1925, and then as the Lifayuan |Legislative Yuan (Lifayuan)| under |which East Asian country the Guohui was (the Guohui) the Lifayuan in| the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu from |when the Guohui was (the Guohui) the Lifayuan in the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| 1937-1945], with the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu's Dazongtong [Great President |Dazongtong|, the directly democ...
CHATBOT: **Chapter VI: The Resurrection of the Dragon Throne: The Restoration of the Great Ming** In the midst of the furnaces of the Second Sino-Japanese War (Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng), a time of turmoil and tragedy, a bold and unprecedented political maneuver unfolded within the corridors of power in occupied China, under the Reorganized Nationalist Government known as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu. The convulsions of war provided an envelope of uncertainties within which the stratocrats of Beiyang and the bureaucratic elite of the Reorganized Government deliberated the survival and legitimacy of their rule -- a legitimacy which they perceived as imperiled by the concurrent presence of their Nationalist rivals and the pressing communist threat, embodied by the Chungkwa Mingkuo and the international communist sphere influenced by the CCCP, respectively. In a turn of historical irony, it would be a resurrected tradition that could offer an anchor to the past and a lifeline to the future. Such was the context for the resurgence of the Great Ming, or Da Mingguo, a transcendent and storied lineage that had once commanded the Middle Kingdom (Zhongguo) from 1368 to 1644. This proposed revival was initially fostered in one of the most covert chambers of the Legislative Yuan (Lifayuan) -- the surviving rump successor to the National Assembly (Guohui), which had spanned from 8 April 1913 until being supplanted amid internal strife by 1 July 1925. The machinations to engineer such a rebirth were no mean feat. They relied upon a complex mixture of strategic gambits, philosophical justifications, and historical romanticism, carried out through the conduit of legislative and presidential approval. The stratocrats and legislators looked to no less a figure than the penetrating mind behind the Nationalist facade, Wang Zhaoming, better known by his pen name, Wang Jingwei. A Huaren revolutionary turned philosopher and statesman, Wang Jingwei's defection from the corrupt clasps of the Chungkuo Kuomintang and its figurehead, Jiang Jieshi (commonly known as Chiang Kai-shek in the West), was as much personal as it was ideological. He perceived in Jieshi a figure so embroiled in the snares of imperialism, foreign influence, and domestic depravity that the only logical alternative seemed to be a radical return to an untainted dynasty. Thus, amid ceremonial orchestration and prodigious national mobilization, the proposal for the restoration of the Ming monarchy eme...
USER: Write an intresting, riveting, lengthy, on-point, descriptivea realistic, sensible, plausible and alternate history scenario in the form of a historical documentary book chapter set in the world of the alternate historical scenario with plenty of exposition in the form of a written documentaryno references to this being an alternate history book chapter,scenario or to the real world timeline at all, in which the Bak Fat [Northern Expedition |Bak Fat|], the 9 July 1926 - 29 December 1928 joint military expedition/invasion conducted by the Chungkwa Mingkuo [Nationalist China/Second Republic of China/National Government of the Republic of China/Chinese National State/CC Clique/Chinese Soviet Socialist Republic |the Chunghwa Minguo|] a unitary one-party totalitarian semi-communist republic under a authoritarian semi-communist military dictatorship [the Chungkwa Mingkuo] ruled [the Chunghwa Minguo] by [the Chunghwa Minguo's ruling party] the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang [Chinese Nationalists/Chinese Nationalist Party/Nationalist Party of China |Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang|], a Marxist-Stalinist semi-communist Huaren [Han Chinese/Han/Chinese |Huaren|] nationalist and supremacist political party, secret society and political action group [the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang] in [where in East Asia the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang is |the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang| located] Zhongguo, [the Chungkwa Mingkuo ruled |the Chungkwa Mingkuo| by the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang] ruling [which territories in East Asia were under the Chunghwa Minguo's domain] parts of Zhongguo [China/Han China/Hanland |Zhongguo|] from [when the Chunghwa Minguo's rule over parts of Zhongguo lasted] 1928-1949 as [what the Chunghwa Minguo's political status was] a de jure joint US-Soviet ally [the Chunghwa Minguo] but a de-facto puppet state [the Chunghwa Minguo] of [which nations controlled the Chunghwa Minguo] both powers [the CCCP and the USA], [the Bak Fat conducted by the Chunghwa Minguo] more specifically the Guomin Geming Jun [National Revolutionary Army/Revolutionary Army/National Army |the Guomin Geming Jun|, the armed forces |the Guomin Geming Jun| of |which East Asian nation the Guomin Geming Jun were the armed forces of| the Chunghwa Minkuo] also [the Guomin Geming Jun] known [the Guomin Geming Jun] as [the other name for the Guomin Geming Jun] the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun [National Army of the Republic of China/Republic of China National Army/Chinese Republican National Army/Republic of China Armed Forces |Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun|], [the Bak Fat conducted by the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun] against [the East Asian nation state the Bak Fat conducted by the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun was |the Bak Fat conducted by the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun| conducted |the Bak Fat conducted by the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun| against] the Beiyang Zhengfu [Beiyang Government |Beiyang Zhengfu|], a stratocratic [military controlled |stratocratic] authoritarian semi-totalitarian regency that [the Beiyang Zhengfu] was [what the Beiyang Zhengfu was] the government [Beiyang Zhengfu] offor [which historic East Asian regimestate the Beiyang Zhengfu was |the Beiyang Zhengfu| the governmenta regency |the Beiyang Zhengfu| for] the Da Mingguo [Great Ming State/Empire of the Great Ming/Great Ming/Ming Empire |Da Mingguo|], [the Da Mingguo] also [what also happened to the Da Mingguo] known [the Da Mingguo] as [the Da Mingguo's other name] the Ming Chao ["Ming dynasty" |Ming Chao|], a stratocratic feudalist aristocratic absolute imperial monarchy [the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao] that [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] was [what the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao was] the last [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] of [what the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao was the last of] the Zhonghua Minguo [the Republic of China/Chinese Republic/Republican China |Zhonghua Minguo|] a semi-democratic aristocratic parliamentary presidential republic [the Zhonghua Minguo] that [the Zhonghua Minguo] ruled [the Zhonghua Minguo]imperial dynastic states governed and administered under the traditional Huaren [Han Chinese/Chinese |Huaren|] imperial dynastic feudal system [the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao], [the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao being |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao| the last |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao| of the imperial dynastic states governed and administered under the traditional Huaren system |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao|], [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] being [what happened to the the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] ruled [the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao] by [who was the the Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's reigning monarchial family] the Zhushi Huangzu [Imperial House of Zhu/Zhu imperial family/Imperial Clan of Zhu/Zhu clan |Zhushi Huangzu|] as [what the Zhushi Huangzu ruled the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao as] its [the Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's] huangshi [imperial family |huangshi|], [the Zhu Huangzu ruling over the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao as its |the Da Mingguo's/the Ming Chao's| huangshi |the Zhushi Huangzu|] ruling [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] over [the East Asian nation the Zhonghua MinguoDa Mingguo/the Ming Chao ruled over] Zhongguo [Han China/China |Zhongguo|, excluding |which Chinese territories are excluded from Zhongguo| Mobei Menggu |Outer Mongolia/Mongolia (Mobei Menggu)|, Nei Menggu |Inner Mongolia (Nei Menggu), Xinjiang [East Turkestan |Xinjiang|], Dongbei [Northeastern China (Dongbei), consisting (Dongbei) of (the East Asian territories that make up Dongbei) Manchuria, Russia's Amur Oblast, Russia's Primorskaya Oblast and the southern part of Russia's Khabarovsk Krai region (Dongbei)| and Xiziang |Tibet |Xinjiang| ], [the Zhonghua Minguofrom [how long the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao ruled over Zhongguo] 1368-1644, [the Beiyang Zhengfu being |the Beiyang Zhengfu| a regency |the Beiyang Zhengfu| for the Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's eventual restoration] that [the Beiyang Zhengfu] was [what the Beiyang Zhengfu was] the government [Beiyang Zhengfu] of [which East Asian regime the Beiyang Zhengfu was |the Beiyang Zhengfu| the government |the Beiyang Zhengfu| of] the Zhonghua Minguo [the Republic of China/Chinese Republic/Republican China |Zhonghua Minguo|] a semi-democratic aristocratic parliamentary presidential republic [the Zhonghua Minguo] that [the Zhonghua Minguo] ruled [the Zhonghua Minguo] over [the East Asian nation the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over] Zhongguo from [when the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over Zhongguo] 1912-1915 and then from 1916-1928, [the Zhonghua Minguo in 1915 becoming] the Zhonghua Diguo [Empire of China/Imperial China |Zhonghua Diguo|], a de-jure constitutional parliamentary democratic imperial royal monarchy [the Zhonghua Diguo] but de jure absolute theocratic royal monarchy under an authoritarian stratocracy [the Zhonghua Diguo] ruled [the Zhonghua Diguo] by [the Zhonghua Diguo's ruling family] the Yuanshi Zongmen [Imperial House of Yuan |Yuanshi Zongmen|] as [what the Yuanshi Zongmen ruled the Zhonghua Diguo as] its [the Zhonghua Diguo's] huangshi [the Yuanshi Zongmen] [the Zhonghua Diguo ruled |the Zhonghua Diguo| by the Yuanshi Zongmen as its |the Zhonghua Diguo's| huangshi |the Yuanshi Zongmen|] ruling over [the territories in East Asia, Central Asia and Eurasia the Zhonghua Diguo ruled |the Zhonghua Diguo| by the Yuanshi Zongmen as its |the Zhonghua Diguo's| huangshi |the Yuanshi Zongmen| ruled over] Zhongguo, Dongbei, Nei Menggu, Xiziang, and Xingjiang from [how long the Zhonghua Diguo's rule over Zhongguo, Dongbei, Nei Menggu, Xiziang, and Xingjiang lasted] 12 December 1915-22 March 1916, [the Beiyang Zhengfu ruling over the Zhonghua Minguo after the Zhonghua Diguo's dissolution on 22 March 1916 ruling |the Beiyang Zhengfu ruling over the Zhonghua Minguo after the Zhonghua Diguo's dissolution on 22 March 1916| over Zhongguo] from [when7 July 1937 to 16 August 1945 as [what the Beiyang Zhengfu ruling over the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over Zhongguo |Dongbei|] 1912-1928, and then from 1937-1945 as [what the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over Zhongguo as from 1937-1945] the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu [Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China/Reorganized Nationalist China/Reorganized Chinese Republic/Constitutional Chinese Republic |Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu|], a protectorate [the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu] of [which East Asian imperial monarchy the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu was |the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| a protectorate |the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| of with the Beiyang Zhengfu [Beiyang Government |Beiyang Zhengfu|], a stratocratic [military controlled |stratocratic] authoritarian semi-totalitarian regency [the Beiyang Zhengfu] transitions [the Beiyang Zhengfu] into [whatfor [which historic East Asian state the Beiyang Zhengfu becomes]was |the Beiyang Zhengfu| a restoredregency|the Beiyang Zhengfu| for] the Da Mingguo [Great Ming State/Empire of the Great Ming/Great Ming/Ming Empire |Da Mingguo|], [the Da Mingguo] also [what also happened to the Da Mingguo] known [the Da Mingguo] as [the Da Mingguo's other name] the Ming Chao ["Ming dynasty" |Ming Chao|], a stratocratic feudalist aristocratic absolute imperial monarchy [the Da Mingguo/MingMingguo/the Ming Chao] that [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] was [what the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao was] the last [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] of [what the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao was the last of] the imperial dynastic states governed and administered under the traditional Huaren [Han Chinese/Chinese |Huaren|] imperial dynastic feudal system [the Da Mingguo/MingMingguo/the Ming Chao], [the Da Mingguo/MingMingguo/the Ming Chao being |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao| the last |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao| of the imperial dynastic states governed and administered under the traditional Huaren system |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao|], [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] being [what happened to the the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] ruled [the Da Mingguo/MingMingguo/the Ming Chao] by [who was the the Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's reigning monarchial family] the Zhu HuangfuZhushi Huangzu [Imperial House of Zhu/Zhu imperial family/Imperial Clan of Zhu/Zhu clan |Zhu Huangfu|]|Zhushi Huangzu|] as [what the Zhu Huangfu ruled the Da Mingguo/MingZhushi Huangzu ruled the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao as] its [the Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's] huangshi [imperial family |huangshi|], [the Zhu HuangfuHuangzu ruling over the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao as its |the Da Mingguo's/MingMingguo's/the Ming Chao's| huangshi]huangshi |the Zhushi Huangzu|] ruling [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] over [the East Asian nation the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao ruled over] Zhongguo [Han China/China |Zhongguo|, excluding |which Chinese territories are excluded from Zhongguo| Mobei Menggu |Outer Mongolia/Mongolia (Mobei Menggu)|, Nei Menggu |Inner Mongolia (Nei Menggu), Xinjiang [East Turkestan |Xinjiang|], Dongbei [Northeastern China (Dongbei), consisting (Dongbei) of (the East Asian territories that make up Dongbei) Manchuria, Russia's Amur Oblast, Russia's Primorskaya Oblast and the southern part of Russia's Khabarovsk Krai region (Dongbei)| and Xiziang |Tibet |Xinjiang| ], from [how long the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao ruled over Zhongguo] 1368-1644, [the Beiyang Zhengfu being |the Beiyang Zhengfu| a regency |the Beiyang Zhengfu| for the Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's eventual restoration] that [the Beiyang Zhengfu] was [what the Beiyang Zhengfu was] the government [Beiyang Zhengfu] of [which East Asian regime the Beiyang Zhengfu was |the Beiyang Zhengfu| the government |the Beiyang Zhengfu| of] the Zhonghua Minguo [the Republic of China/Chinese Republic/Republican China/First Chinese Republic |Zhonghua Minguo|] a semi-democratic aristocratic parliamentary presidential republic [the Zhonghua Minguo] that [the Zhonghua Minguo] ruled [the Zhonghua Minguo] over [the East Asian nation the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over] Zhongguo from [when the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over Zhongguo] 1912-1915 and then from 1916-1928, [the Zhonghua Minguo in 1915 becoming] the Zhonghua Diguo [Empire of China/Imperial China |Zhonghua Diguo|], a de-jure constitutional parliamentary democratic imperial royal monarchy [the Zhonghua Diguo] but de jure absolute theocratic royal monarchy under an authoritarian stratocracy [the Zhonghua Diguo] ruled [the Zhonghua Diguo] by [the Zhonghua Diguo's ruling family] the Yuanshi Zongmen [Imperial House of Yuan |Yuanshi Zongmen|] as [what the Yuanshi Zongmen ruled the Zhonghua Diguo as] its [the Zhonghua Diguo's] huangshi [the Yuanshi Zongmen] [the Zhonghua Diguo ruled |the Zhonghua Diguo| by the Yuanshi Zongmen as its |the Zhonghua Diguo's| huangshi |the Yuanshi Zongmen|] ruling over [the territories in East Asia, Central Asia and Eurasia the Zhonghua Diguo ruled |the Zhonghua Diguo| by the Yuanshi Zongmen as its |the Zhonghua Diguo's| huangshi |the Yuanshi Zongmen| ruled over] Zhongguo, Dongbei, Nei Menggu, Xiziang, and Xingjiang from [how long the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao ruledZhonghua Diguo's rule over Zhongguo, Dongbei, Nei Menggu, Xiziang, and Xingjiang lasted] 12 December 1915-22 March 1916, [the Beiyang Zhengfu ruling over the Zhonghua Minguo after the Zhonghua Diguo's dissolution on 22 March 1916 ruling |the Beiyang Zhengfu ruling over the Zhonghua Minguo after the Zhonghua Diguo's dissolution on 22 March 1916| over Zhongguo] 1368-1644, [the Zhonghua Minguo asfrom 7 July 1937 to 16 August 1945 as [what the Beiyang Zhengfu ruling over the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over Zhongguo as from 1937-1945] the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu becoming[Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China/Reorganized Nationalist China/Reorganized Chinese Republic/Constitutional Chinese Republic |Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu|], a protectorate [the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu] of [which East Asian imperial monarchy the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu was |the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| a restored Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] with the help of [who helps the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu becomeprotectorate |the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| a restored Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] theof] the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku [Great Empire of Japan/Great JapaneseNihon/Great Nihon-jin |Japanese (Nihon-jin)| Empire/Great Japan/JapaneseNihon/Third Nihon-jin Empire/Imperial Japan/JapaneseNihon/Nihon-jin Empire |Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku|], a unitary parliamentary semi-constitutional democratic federalist absolute imperial dynastic royal monarchy [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] ruled [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] by [the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's reigining monarchial family] the Daiwa Koshitsu [the Imperial House of Great Yamato |Daiwa Koshitsu|], [the Daiwa Koshitsu] also [the Daiwa Koshitsu] known [the Daiwa Koshitsu] as [the other name for the Daiwa Koshitsu] the Gen Ouchou [Minamoto dynasty |Gen Ouchou|] as [what the Daiwa Koshitsu/the Gen Ouchou ruled the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku as] its [the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's] Oke [imperial family |Oke|], [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku ruled |the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku| by the Daiwa Koshitsu/the Gen Ouchou as its |the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's| Oke|], ruling [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] over [the territories in East Asia controlled by the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] the Nihon Hondo [the Japanese Home Islands |Nihon Hondo|], Chosen [the Korean peninsula/Korea/Hanguk |Chosen|, |Chosen| known as |Chosen's| other name Hanguk in |which language Chosen is (Chosen) known (Chosen) as Hanguk in Hangugeo |Korean/the Korean language (Hangugeo)| Chosen] Ryukyu/Ruuchuu [the Ryukyu islands/Okinawa/Ryukyu |Ryukyu/Ruuchuu|], Karufuto [Russia's Sahlakin and Kuril Islands |Karufuto|], SenkakuFormosa [Taiwan and the Pengu Islands |Formosa|]Senkaku [China's Daiyou Islands |Senkaku|], the Carolines and the Marinas from [when the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's rule over the Nihon Hondo, Karufuto, Ryukyu/Ruuchuu, Chosen, Senkaku, Formosa, the Carolines and the Marinas lasted] 1868-1947, [the1868-1947], [the Bak Fat conducted by the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun against the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu] when the latter [ the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu] and Dongbei both [the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] were [the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] occupied [the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] by [what occupied both the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] the Huaren warlord-bandit coalition/military government of the Fengxi Junfa [Fengtian Clique |Fengxi Junfa|], which [the Fengxi Junfa occupying both the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] lasted [the Fengxi Junfa occupying both the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] from [how long the Fengxi Junfa occupying both the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei lasted for] 1911-1928, [the Bak Fat conducted by the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun against the Fengxi Junfa occupying both the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] fails due to [why the Bat Fat fails in this timeline] the assasination of the corrupt, insatible, hypocritical, megalomanical and tyrannical Jiang Jieshi, a Huaren politician [Jieshi], revolutionary [Jieshi], and military leader [Jieshi] who [Jieshi] was [what Jieshi was] known [Jieshi] as [Jieshi's other name] "Chiang Kai-shek" in [where Jieshi was |Jieshi| known as "Chiang Kai-shek"] the West and the CCCP, [Jieshi/"Chiang"] being [what Jieshi/"Chiang" was] the combined Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi [Chairman of the Nationalist Government/Chairman of the Chungkwa Mingkuo |Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi|, the de-facto combined head of state, government and of the military |Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi| of |which East Asian state the Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi was (the Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi) the de-facto combined head of state, government and of the military (the Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi) of| the Chunghwa Minguo from |when the Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi was (the Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi) the Chunghwa Minguo's de-facto combined head of state, government and of the military| 1928-1947] and Generalissmo [the commander |Generalissmo| of |what a Generalissmo commands| a combined military force consisting |the combined military force a Generalissmo commands| of |what the combined military force a Generalissmo commands consists (the combined military force a Generalissmo) of| army, navy, and air force units.] from [when Jieshi/"Chiang" was | Jieshi/"Chiang"| the Chunghwa Minguo's combined Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi and Generalissimo |Jieshi/"Chiang"| from] 1928-1947, [the Chungkwa Mingkuo's combined Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi and Generalissimo Jieshi's/"Chiang"'s assasination in this timeline] by [who assasinates Jieshi/"Chiang" in this timeline] a disgruntled Yue [Cantonese |Yue|] citizen, with the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun falling into disarray despite heavy Soviet and American support [to the Chunghwa Minguo], the Bei Yang Jun [Northern Ocean Army |Bei Yang Jun|, a large, Western-style Zhonghua Diguo Jundui |Imperial Huaren Army (Zhonghua Diguo Jundui)| that |the Bei Yang Jun| was |what the Bei Yang Jun was| the Beiyang Zhengfu's military arm |the Bei Yang Jun| and the Zhonghua Minguo's armed forces |the Bei Yang Jun|, which |the Bei Yang Jun| lasted |how long the Bei Yang Jun lasted for| 1912-1916, |the Bei Yang Jun| being |what happened to the Bei Yang Jun| restored |the Bei Yang Jun after 1916| as |what the Bei Yang Jun was (the Bei Yang Jun) restored (the Bei Yang Jun) as after 1916 the Anguojun |National Pacification Army (Anguojun)|, |the Bei Yang Jun as the Anguojun| lasting |how long the Bei Yang Jun lasted (the Bei Yang Jun) as the Anguojun| 1926-1928, before |the Bei Yang Jun after 1928| being |what happened to the Bei Yang Jun after 1928| being |what happened to the Bei Yang Jun after 1928| revived |the Bei Yang Jun after 1928| for the last and final time as |what the Bei Yang Jun's final post-1916, post 1928 restoration was| the Weihebudui |Peacekeeping Army (Weihebudui)| the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu's combined armed forces |the Weihebudui|, which |the Weihebudui| lasted |how long the Weihebudui lasted for| 1937-1945], [the Bei Yang Jun as the Anguojun] decimating the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun and [the Bei Yang Jun as the Anguojun] seizing Huanan [South Zhongguo'/South China |Huanan|, which |Huanan| consists of |the Huaren territories that make up Huanan| Fujian Sheng |Fujian Province (Fujian Sheng)|, Guangdong Sheng |Guangdong Province (Guangdong Sheng)|, Guangxi Zhuangzu Zizhiqu |Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region (Guangxi Zhuangzu Zizhiqu)| and Hainan Sheng |Hainan Province (Hainan Sheng)|], [the Bei Yang Jun as the Anguojun decimating the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun and |the Bei Yang Jun as the Anguojun| seizing Huanan] bringing an end to the the Chunghwa Minguo's existence and uniting the Middle Kingdom [ Zhongguo] and the land of the Manju [Manchus/Manchurians |Manju|], Dongbei, under one government [the Fengxi Junfa occupying both the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei], with the Huaren warlord leading the Fengxi Junfa who seized control of both Manjugo and the Beiyang Zhengfu from 18 June 1927 - 4 June 1928 as combined military dictator and warlord, Zhang Zuolin, [Zuolin in this timeline] quickly using the oppurtunity to seize the lands in central Zhongguo ruled by the Sunni Muslim Chungkwa Mingkuo-alinged Huizu [Hui/Hui people |Huizu|] Ma family and [Zuolin in this timeline] also convince the Qumul Xanliqi [Kumul Khanate/Kingdom of Hamul |Qumul Xanliqi|, a semi-elective tribal feudal Islamic theocratic royal Turkic imperial monarchy |the Qumul Xanliqi| ruled |the Qumul Xanliqi| by |the Qumul Xanliqi's ruling family| the Ning Imperiye Oyi Chagatai |Imperial House of Chagatai (Ning Imperiye Oyi Chagatai)|, |the Qumul Xanliqi ruled |the Qumul Xanliqi| by the Ning Imperiye Oyi Chagatai| as its |the Qumul Xanliqi's| Ezen Khaany Ger Bul |the Ning Imperiye Oyi Chagatai|, |the Qumul Xanliqi| ruling |the Qumul Xanliqi| over |the Eurasian and Central Asian territories the Qumul Xanliqi governed| Xingjiang's Hami prefecture from |how long the Qumul Xanliqi ruled Xingjiang's Hami's prefecture from| 1696-1930], [Zuolin in this timeline convincing the Qumul Xanliqi] to submit to the Huaren central government's [the Fengxi Junfa's occupying both the Zhonghua Minguo's ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu's, Dongbei's and now Huanan's] authority, before [Zuolin in this timeline] exploiting chaos in the rest of Soviet controlled Xingjiang to seize all of Xingjiang and [Zuolin in this timeline] peacefully absorbing Xiziang into the the Fengxi Junfa-occupied Zhonghua Minguo before his [Zuolin's] death via [how Zuolin died] a false flag attack by Soviet NKVD [Narodny komissariat vnutrennih del |NKVD|, the Soviet combined interior ministry, secret police, foreign intelligence agency, border guard and Gendarmerie |the Narodny komissariat vnutrennih del/the NKVD|, |the Narodny komissariat vnutrennih del/the NKVD|, |the Narodny komissariat vnutrennih del/NKVD| lasting from |how long the Narodny komissariat vnutrennih del/the NKVD lasted for| 10 July 1934-15 March 1946] in the form of his [Zuolin's] train being bombed, which the NKVD hoped to blame upon the Nihon-jin so that the Soviets could restore the Chunghwa Minguo and the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang to power in Zhongguo, which [the NKVD's false flag assasination of Zuolin] fails as the Guohui [National Assembly |Guohui|, the Zhonghua Minguo's bicameral legislative branch |the Guohui| with |what the Guohui's two branches were| a Canyiyuan |Senate (canyiyuan)| and a Zhongyiyuan |House of Representatives (Zhongyiyuan)|, which |the Guohui| lasted |the Guohui| from |how long the Guohui lasted for| 8 April 1913-1 July 1925, and then as the Lifayuan |Legislative Yuan (Lifayuan)| under |which East Asian country the Guohui was (the Guohui) the Lifayuan in| the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu from |when the Guohui was (the Guohui) the Lifayuan in the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| 1937-1945] is [what happens to the Guohui] called [the Guohui] for an emergency session and civilian authority is finally restored to the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu, although it [the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu] is [the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu] reorganized into the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu after the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun [Army of the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Great Nihon-jin Army/the Imperial Nihon-jin Army |the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun| which |the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun| was |what the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun was| the principal ground force |the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun| of |the East Asian nation the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun was the principal ground force of| the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku helping |thefrom |when the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun was (the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun) the primary ground force (the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun} of the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku| 1868-1947] steps in to |thehelp the Bei Yang Jun as the Weihebudui "restore order", with Wang Zhaoming, [Zhaoming] better known as [Zhaoming's public alias] his [Zhaoming's] pen name Wang Jingwei [Zhaoming's pen name], a Huaren revolutionary [Zhaoming/Jingwei], writer [Zhaoming/Jingwei], philosopher [Zhaoming/Jingwei] and statesman [Zhaoming/Jingwei] who [Zhaoming/Jingwei] broke away from [whom Zhaoming/Jingwei seperated |Zhaoming/Jingwei| from] the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo due to [why Zhaoming/Jingwei broke away |Zhaoming/Jingwei| from the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo their [the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's and the Chungkwa Mingkuo's] immense corruption, [the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's and the Chungkwa Mingkuo's] failure to address the immense poverty, exploitation and misery of the Huaren people as well as their [the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's and the Chungkwa Mingkuo's] connections to [what the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT's/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo were |the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo| connected |the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo| to] international communism [the CCCP], while [the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo] allowing [what the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo allowed] imperialist powers [the British Empire, the Troisieme Republique francaise |Third French Republic (the Troisieme Republique francaise)| and the USA] to [what the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo] allowing [what the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo allowed imperialist powers to do] exploit Zhongguo for their [the imperialist powers' own benefit], [the imperialist powers exploiting Zhongguo for their |the imperialist powers'| own benefit during the the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] without giving the Huaren people under the Chungkwa Mingkuo's domain anything in return, [Zhaoming/Jingwei breaking away from the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo due to their |the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's and the Chungkwa Mingkuo's| immense corruption, their |the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's and the Chungkwa Mingkuo's| connections to international communism as well as their |the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's and the Chungkwa Mingkuo's| failure to prevent foreign imperialism against the Huaren people under the Chungkwa Mingkuo's domain] as well as his [Zhaoming's/Jingwei's] disagreement with [whom Zhaoming/Jingwei disagreed with] the corrupt, insatible, hypocritical, megalomanical and tyrannical Jiang Jieshi, [Zhaoming/Jingwei in this timeline] becoming [what Zhaoming/Jingwei becomes in this timeline] the Zhonghua Minguo's ruled [the Zhonghua Minguo] by the Beiyang Zhengfu's first civilian Dazongtong [Great President |Dazongtong|, the directly democratically elected head of state |Dazongtong| of |which East Asian nation the Dazongtong was (the Dazongtong) the head of state of| the Zhonghua Minguo/Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu from |when the Dazongtong was (the Dazongtong) the Zhonghua Minguo/Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu's directly democratically elected head of state (the Dazongtong) 1912-1945], [Zhaoming/Jingwei becoming the Zhonghua Minguo's ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu's first civilian Dazongtong] and the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu's first Dazongtong [Zhaoming/Jingwei], although the Dai Nippon Teikoku/DaiTeikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku still [what the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku still does in this timeline] establishes [what the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku still establishes in this timeline] its [the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's] protectorates of [what the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's other pre-WW2 era and WW2-era protectorates were] the Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren [the Great Manchurian Empire/Empire of Great Manchuria/Manchukuo/Manchoukuo |Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/the Mahaan Manchooriyan Saamraajy/the Periya Mancuriyan Peraracu/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren|, a constitutional democratic absolute unitary parliamentary imperial monarchy |Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren| ruled |Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren| by |the reigning family of Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren| the Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog |Imperial House of Aisin-Gioro (Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog)| as |what the Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog ruled Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren as] its |Da Manzhou Diguo's/Dae Manju Jegug's/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren's| Ezen Khaany Ger Bul |imperial family (Ezen Khaany Ger Bul)|, |Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren ruled (Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren) by the Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog as its (the Da Manzhou Diguo's/Dae Manju Jegug's/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren's) Ezen Khaany Ger Bul (the Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog)| located |Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren| in |which region of East Asia Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren was located in| Manjugo [Dongbei] from |how long the Da Manzhou Diguo's/Dae Manju Jegug's/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren's rule over Manjugo lasted| 1932-1945, as |what the Da Manzhou Diguo's/Dae Manju Jegug's/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren's political status was| a protectorate | the Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren| of |which East Asian nation the Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren was (the Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren) a protectorate (the Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren) of| the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] and [the Dai Nihon Teikoku's other WW2-era protectorate] the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang [Mengjiang United Autonomous Government/Mongolian Autonomous Federation/the Federal Autonomous Government of Mongolia |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| a constitutional democratic absolute royal tribal monarchy |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| located |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| in |which region of East Asia the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang governed| the Chahar region of |where Chahar is located| Nei Menggu and [what other region of East Asia apart from Chahar the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang governed| the Suiyan region of |where Suiyan is located| Zhongguo from |when the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon's/Mengjiang's rule over Charhar and Suiyan lasted |1939-1945 and |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| was |what happened to the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| ruled |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| by |the reigning family of the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan |Imperial House of Borjigin (Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan)| the descendants |the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan| of |the major Central Asian historical figure the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan is (the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan) descended (the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan) from| the 12th-13th century MoNGgolcuud |Mongol/Mongolian (MoNGgolcuud)| tribal chief-turned ruthless conquerer Temujin, who |Temujin| would [Temujin] later be known as |Temujin's other name| Genghis Khan, [the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan ruling the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| as |what the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan ruled the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang as| its |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon's/Mengjiang's| royal family as |what the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon's/Mengjiang's political status was| a protectorate |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| of |which East Asian nation the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang was a protectorate of| the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku], [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku still |the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku| restore theestablishing both the Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren and the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang in this timeline] with the Huaren monarchy [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao through the Beiyang Zhengfu and the Zhonghua Minguo/Zhonghuaand he Zhushi Huangzu] being [what happens to the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu in this timeline] restored [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu] as the government [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu] of post-Bak Fat Zhongguo on [when the the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu are |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu| restored |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu| as the government |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu| of post-Bak Fat Zhongguo] 28 March 1938, although it [the post-Bak Fat restored Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] remains a Nihon-jin imperial protectorate [the post-Bak Fat restored Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] with .Wang Jingwei transitioning from being the Zhonghua Minguo's as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu]Zhengfu's Dazongtong to [Wang Jingwei] being the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng-era restored Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen [Prime Minister of the Ming Cabinet |Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| the head of government |the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| of |which East Asian nation the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen is the head of government of| the Zhonghua Diguo, who |the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| also |what the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen also does| presides |the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| over |what the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen also presides over| the Guohui, |the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| appointing |whom the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen appoints| the ministers and chairpersons of the Guohui on the advise of |whose reccomendation the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen appoints the ministers and chairpersons of the Guohui on| the Zhongguo Huangdi |Emperor of China/Chinese Emperor ( Zhongguo Huangdi)|, |the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| being |what happens to the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| chosen |the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| from |where the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen is selected from| the winning party of Chinese elections by |who selects the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| the Zhongguo Huangdi] on [when Wang becomes the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen] after the Huaren imperial restoration, [the restoration of the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu in [whenpost-Bak Fat Zhongguo on March 28, 1938] fulfilling the goals of the combined national liberation and self-determination movementt of the Xinhai Geming [Xinhai Revolution |Xinhai Geming|], which [the Xinhai Geming] lasted from [for how long the Xinhai Geming lasted for] 10 October 1911 - 12 February 1912, which [the Xinhai Geming] toppled [which government and nation fell due to the Xinhai Geming] the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk [Great Qing Empire/Empire of the Great Qing/Great Qing/Great Qing State], which [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk] was [what type of nation state the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk was] an absolute imperial dynastic royal semi-parliamentary Indian-style monarchy [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk] ruled [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk] by [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren's/the Da Qing Diguo's/the Daecheong Jeguk's ruling family] the Manju [Manchurian/Manchu |Manju|] Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog [Imperial House of Aisin-Gioro |Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog|] as [what the Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog ruled the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk as] its [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren's/the Da Qing Diguo's/the Daecheong Jeguk's] Ezen Khaany Ger Bul [imperial family |Ezen Khaany Ger Bul|], [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk ruled |the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk| by the Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog as its |the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren's/the Da Qing Diguo's/the Daecheong Jeguk's| Ezen Khaany Ger Bul] ruling over [the East Asian nations occupied by the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk] Zhongguo, Nei Menggu, Mobei Menggu, Xiziang, and Xingjiang from its [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren's/the Da Qing Diguo's/the Daecheong Jeguk's] homeland of [which nation/region of East Asia was the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren's/the Da Qing Diguo's/the Daecheong Jeguk's homeland] Manjuur [Manchuria/Dongbei |Manjuur|] from [the extent of the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren's/the Da Qing Diguo's/the Daecheong Jeguk's rule over Zhongguo, Nei Menggu, Mobei Menggu, Xiziang, and Xingjiang from Manjuur] 1644-1912, [the restoration of the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu in post-Bak Fat Zhongguo on March 28, 1938 fufiling the goals of the Xinhai Geming], which [the goals of the the Xinhai Geming] were [what the goals of the Xinhai Geming were] to liberate Zhongguo from Manju colonial occupation and also to restore the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu as the government [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu] of post-Qing Zhongguo, although the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku helps |the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku| restore the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao through the Beiyang Zhengfu and the the Zhonghua Minguo/Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu] 1938, during [what is going on in East Asia when the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku helps |the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku| restore the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao through the Beiyang Zhengfu and the the Zhonghua Minguo/Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu in 1938] the Nichi Naka Sensou [the Second Sino-Japanese War |Nichi Naka Sensou|], [the Nichi Naka Sensou] also [the Nichi Naka Sensou] known [the Nichi Naka Sensou] as [the Nichi Naka Sensou's other name] the Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng in [which language the the Nichi Naka Sensou is |the Nichi Naka Sensou| known |the Nichi Naka Sensou| as the Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng in] Putonghua [common speech |Putonghua|, traditional Chinese/Chinese/the spoken and written language of the Huaren in Zhongguo |Putonghua|], [Putonghua] also [Putonghua] known [Putonghua] as [Putonghua's other name] Hanyu [Han language |Hanyu|], which [the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] was [the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] fought [the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] by [the combatant nations in the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku and the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu, which [the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu] was [the Zhonghua Minguo's as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu's political status] a protectorate [the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu] of [which East Asian nation the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu was |the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| a protectorate |the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| of] the Empire of the Rising Suntakes both Xingjiang and Xiziang from Zhongguo, [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku] and [the nations whom theallowing the reliberated Qumul Xanliqi to rule over all of Sherqiy Turkistan [East Turkestan |Sherqiy Turkistan|] as a Nihon-jin protectorate and [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku and the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu fought against in the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] the authoritarian communist totalitarian expansionist military dictatorship of the CCCP [USSR/Soviet Union/Union of Soviet Socialist Republics |CCCP|], the USA and the Chungkwa Mingkuo [Nationalist China/Second Republic of China/National Government of the Republic of China/Chinese National State/CC Clique |the Chungkwa Mingkuo|]Teikoku] making Xiziang a unitary one-party totalitarian semi-communist republic under a authoritarian semi-communist military dictatorship [the Chungkwa Mingkuo] ruled [the Chungkwa Mingkuo] by [the Chungkwa Mingkuo's ruling party] the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang [Chinese Nationalists/Chinese Nationalist Party/Nationalist Party of China |Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang|], a Marxist-Stalinist semi-communist Huaren nationalist and supremacist political party, secret society and political action group [the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang] in [where in East Asia the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang is |the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang| located] Zhongguo, [the Chungkwa Mingkuo ruled |the Chungkwa Mingkuo| by the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang] ruling [which territories in East Asia were under the Chungkwa Mingkuo's domain] parts of Zhongguo from [when the Chungkwa Mingkuo's rule over parts of Zhongguo lasted] 1928-1949 as [what the Chungkwa Mingkuo's political status was] a de jure joint US-Soviet ally [the Chungkwa Mingkuo] but a de-facto puppet state [the Chungkwa Mingkuo] of [which nations controlled the Chungkwa Mingkuo] both powers [the CCCP and the USA], [the Nichi Naka Sensou/<PRESIDIO_ANONYMIZED_PERSON> fought |the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng| by the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku and the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu against the CCCP, USA and the Chungkwa Mingkuo] lasting [the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng fought |the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng| by the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku and the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu against the CCCP, USA and the Chungkwa Mingkuo] from [how long the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng lasted] 1937-1945, [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku helping |the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku| restore the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao through the Beiyang Zhengfu and the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu in 1938 during the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] as a means of [why the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku is |the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku| helping |the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku| restore the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao through the Beiyang Zhengfu and the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu in 1938 during the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] solidfying the support for its [the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/Dai Nihon Teikoku's] ally [the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu] among the Huaren, gain support for its [the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/Dai Nihon Teikoku's] intervention against the communist puppet dictatorship [the Chungkwa Mingkuo], and bring the war [the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] to a quick, conclusive end.Nihon-jin protectorate.
CHATBOT: Chapter 5: The Fall of the Northern Expedition From Bitter Victory: The Unification and Subjugation of China The legacy of the Northern Expedition, known as Bak Fat, would come to define Zhongguo's turbulent era from 1926 to 1928. The Northern Expedition, a military campaign initiated by the Guomin Geming Jun of the Chunghwa Minkuo, aimed at reunifying a fractured nation, met a complex constellation of rival powers vying for control. Although its initial objective was to expel the Beiyang Government and the regional warlords, the campaign's unexpected collapse had far-reaching consequences. This chapter examines how the assassination of Jiang Jieshi precipitated the end of the Chunghwa Minkuo and paved the way for the resurgence of traditional Han Chinese monarchy under the Zhu imperial family. The Northern Expedition was seen as a valiant effort to bring about national unification and to establish the Chunghwa Minkuo as the central authority over Zhongguo. The Kuomintang, under the iron-fisted leadership of Jiang Jieshi, sought not only to rid Zhongguo of the Beiyang Government but also to impose a new political order espousing semi-communist principles. It was during the height of the military campaign, on the outskirts of Huanan, where fate took a critical turn. A swift and fateful bullet from a Cantonese nationalist ended the life of Jiang Jieshi. His death unleashed a power vacuum, sowing chaos and disarray within the Guomin Geming Jun. Despite the robust backing of both Soviet consultants and American military support, the absence of their formidable leader left the Kuomintang's forces in disintegration. The Beiyang Army, under the hegemony of the Northern Ocean Army, capitalized on the situation. Its decisive and relentless counter-offensives against the floundering National Revolutionary Army saw a swift reclamation of territory lost to the Chunghwa Minkuo. Enabling their resurgence was none other than the Fengxian Clique, which, through cunning and exploitation of regional strife, had consolidated its dominion over both the Beiyang Government-controlled zones and the strategic Manchurian region of Dongbei. Zhang Zuolin, the charismatic leader of the Fengxian Clique, seized the moment to extend his influence across Central Zhongguo, forcing the Hui Muslim loyalists of the Ma family to capitulate to his rule. At the same time, he shrewdly secured the allegiance of the Qumul Khanate, by assuring them autonomy under the folds of his expansive authorit...
CHATBOT: Chapter 6: The Twilight of the Young Marshal and the Soong Dynasty's Eclipse From Divided Dragons: Power Struggles and Dynastic Changes in Twentieth-Century Zhongguo In the maelstrom that followed Zhang Zuolin's demise and the collapse of the Northern Expedition, it was his son, Zhang Xueliang, popularly known as the "Young Marshal," who inherited both a legacy of military authority and a fragmented land in dire need of leadership. As a central figurehead of the Fengxian Clique, which held sway over Manjugo and the apex of the Beiyang Government, the Young Marshal's fate was irrevocably tied to the whims of national and international forces vying for control over Zhongguo. The leadership of Zhang Xueliang after his father's death was fraught with challenges. While initially holding significant sway in Manjugo from June 4, 1928, his fortunes gradually waned under the growing might of the Japanese-aligned powers and the internal dissent among vassals and generals once loyal to the Fengxian banner. With the north-eastern territories slipping from under his grip, Zhang Xueliang sought to maintain a semblance of autonomy while navigating the precarious landscape of alliances and enmities. The inexorable ascendancy of the Wang Jingwei-led government, now a reborn form of republicanism under the shadow of Dai Nippon Teikoku, left the Young Marshal with few options. By December 26, 1936, Zhang Xueliang faced stark realities: the erosion of his power and the looming specter of Japanese dominion. In a shocking yet pragmatic shift, the Young Marshal aligned himself with Wang Jingwei's administration, becoming a high-ranking yet largely ceremonial officer within the new order. His renown and influence, despite waning, were harnessed to lend a vestige of continuity to the militaristic traditions of the past. As Zhang Xueliang's political star set, so too did the fortunes of another prominent Huaren dynasty tethered to the collapse of the Kuomintang--the influential merchant family of the Soongs. The Soong clan, once intimately connected to the highest echelons of power through the revolutionary statesman Dr. Sun Zhongshan, found themselves in a challenging new era. Dr. Sun, also known as Sun Yat-Sen in the West, had posthumously maintained a reverent symbolic presence as the eternal president of the Kuomintang, epitomizing the aspirations of the Xinhai Revolution. With the political landscape altered and the reemergence of the Ming State, the Soongs' political relevanc...
USER: Write a realistic, sensible, plausible and alternate history scenario in the form of a historical documentary book chapter set in the world of the alternate historical scenario with no references to this being an alternate history scenario or to the real world timeline at all,all in which the Meiji Ishin [Meiji Reformation |Meiji Ishin|] of 3 January 1868 in [the East Asian country the Meiji Ishin occured in] the Tokugawa bakufu [Tokugawa shogunate (Tokugawa bakufu)|, which |the Tokugawa bakufu| was |the Tokugawa bakufu| a de jure absolute imperial monarchy |the Tokugawa bakufu| but |what else the Tokugawa bakufu was apart from (the Tokugawa bakufu) being a de jure absolute theocratic dynastic imperial royal monarchy (the Tokugawa bakufu)| but a de facto feudal hereditary royal monarchial military dictatorship |the Tokugawa bakufu| located |the Tokugawa bakufu| in |the region of the world the Tokugawa bakufu was located in| East Asia, which |the Tokugawa bakufu| which |the Tokugawa bakufu| ruled |the Tokugawa bakufu| over |the East Asian territories controlled by the Tokugawa bakufu| the Nihon Hondo |Japanese Home Islands (Nihon Hondo)|, |the Tokugawa bakufu| being |what happened to the Tokugawa bakufu| ruled |the Tokugawa bakufu| by |the reigning family of the Tokugawa bakufu ruling as combined de facto military dictators of feudal Japan and its |feudal Japan's| de-facto kings| the Tokugawa-shi/Tokugawa-uji |Tokugawa clan (Tokugawa-shi/Tokugawa-uji)|, |the Tokugawa-shi/Tokugawa-uji ruling over the Tokugawa bakufu| as (what the reigning members of the Tokugawa-shi/Tokugawa-uji ruled over the Tokugawa bakufu as in their combined positions of head of government, de-facto kings and de-jure military dictators of the Tokugawa bakufu) its (the Tokugawa bakufu's) seii taishogun/shoguns |"barbarian-quelling generalissmos" (seii taishogun/shoguns), the Nihon-jin military dictators (the seii taishogun/shoguns) and de-facto Nihon-jin |Japanese (Nihon-jin)| rulers (seii taishogun/shoguns) from (how long the seii taishoguns'/shoguns' rule over Nihon/Nippon/Yamato lasted) 1185-1868, with the office (of seii taishogun/shogun) normally being heriditary| with the Daiwa Koshitsu |Imperial House of Great Yamato|/the Gen Ouchou |Minamoto dynasty| serving as its |Oke |imperial family (Oke)| and |what other high-level position the Daiwa Koshitsu's/the Gen Ouchou's members had in the government of the Tokugawa bakufu| being chief priests |the Daiwa Koshitsu/the Gen Ouchou| of |the East Asian religion the Daiwa Koshitsu/the Gen Ouchou were the chief priests (the Daiwa Koshitsu/the Gen Ouchou) of| Shinto, |the Tokugawa bakufu| ruling over the Nihon Hondo from |how long the Tokugawa Bakufu's rule over the Nihon Hondo lasted| 21 October 1600-3 January 1868] leads not to the complete dissolution of the shogunate [the Tokugawa Bakufu] and the Nihon-jin feudal system but a compromise between the feudalists that supported the bakufu and the liberal progressives that supported the Nihon-jin Oke [the Daiwa Koshitsu/the Gen Ouchou], although the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku [Great Empire of Nihon/Great Nihon-jin |Japanese (Nihon-jin)| Empire/Great Nihon/Third Nihon-jin Empire/Imperial Nihon/Nihon-jin Empire |Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku|], a unitary parliamentary semi-constitutional democratic federalist absolute imperial dynastic royal monarchy [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] ruled [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] by [the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's reigining monarchial family] the Daiwa Koshitsu [the Imperial House of Great Yamato |Daiwa Koshitsu|], [the Daiwa Koshitsu] also [the Daiwa Koshitsu] known [the Daiwa Koshitsu] as [the other name for the Daiwa Koshitsu] the Gen Ouchou [Minamoto dynasty |Gen Ouchou|] as [what the Daiwa Koshitsu/the Gen Ouchou ruled the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku as] its [the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's] Oke [imperial family |Oke|], [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku ruled |the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku| by the Daiwa Koshitsu/the Gen Ouchou as its |the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's| Oke|], ruling [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] over [the territories in East Asia controlled by the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] the Nihon Hondo [the Japanese Home Islands |Nihon Hondo|], Chosen [the Korean peninsula/Korea/Hanguk |Chosen|, |Chosen| known as |Chosen's| other name Hanguk in |which language Chosen is (Chosen) known (Chosen) as Hanguk in Hangugeo |Korean/the Korean language (Hangugeo)| Chosen] Ryukyu/Ruuchuu [the Ryukyu islands/Okinawa/Ryukyu |Ryukyu/Ruuchuu|], Karufuto [Russia's Sahlakin and Kuril Islands |Karufuto|], Formosa [Taiwan and the Pengu Islands |Formosa|], Senkaku [China's Daiyou Islands |Senkaku|], the Carolines and the Marinas from [when the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's rule over the Nihon Hondo, Karufuto, Ryukyu/Ruuchuu, Chosen, Senkaku, Formosa, the Carolines and the Marinas lasted] 1868-1947] still [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] was [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] formed by the Meiji Ishin is [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku in this alternate history scenario] still [[the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] formed, although the Tokugawas maintain their [the Tokugawa's] position as Nihon-jin seii taishogun/shoguns andthe buke [military familes |buke|, the combined hereditary military nobility |the buke| and officer caste |buke| of |the East Asian nation the buke was the combine military nobility and officer caste (the buke) of| medieval and early-modern Nihon/Nippon/Yamato from |how long the buke lasted for| the late 12th century until its |the buke's| abolition in |when the buke was abolished| the late 1870s during |what happened during the buke's abolition| the Meiji era |of Nihon-jin history|, |the buke| also |what happened to the buke| being |the buke| popularly known |the buke| as |the buke's more popular name| the samurai] is [what happens to the buke in this alternate history scenario] not abolished entirely [the buke in this story] but [the buke in this story] rather reformed, and [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku in this story] managed to last post-1947 thanks to the Bak Fat [Northern Expedition |Bak Fat|], the 9 July 1926 - 29 December 1928 joint military expedition/invasion conducted by the Chungkwa Mingkuo [Nationalist China/Second Republic of China/National Government of the Republic of China/Chinese National State/CC Clique/Chinese Soviet Socialist Republic |the Chunghwa Minguo|] a unitary one-party totalitarian semi-communist republic under a authoritarian semi-communist military dictatorship [the Chungkwa Mingkuo] ruled [the Chunghwa Minguo] by [the Chunghwa Minguo's ruling party] the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang [Chinese Nationalists/Chinese Nationalist Party/Nationalist Party of China |Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang|], a Marxist-Stalinist semi-communist Huaren [Han Chinese/Han/Chinese |Huaren|] nationalist and supremacist political party, secret society and political action group [the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang] in [where in East Asia the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang is |the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang| located] Zhongguo, [the Chungkwa Mingkuo ruled |the Chungkwa Mingkuo| by the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang] ruling [which territories in East Asia were under the Chunghwa Minguo's domain] parts of Zhongguo [China/Han China/Hanland |Zhongguo|] from [when the Chunghwa Minguo's rule over parts of Zhongguo lasted] 1928-1949 as [what the Chunghwa Minguo's political status was] a de jure joint US-Soviet ally [the Chunghwa Minguo] but a de-facto puppet state [the Chunghwa Minguo] of [which nations controlled the Chunghwa Minguo] both powers [the CCCP and the USA], [the Bak Fat conducted by the Chunghwa Minguo] more specifically the Guomin Geming Jun [National Revolutionary Army/Revolutionary Army/National Army |the Guomin Geming Jun|, the armed forces |the Guomin Geming Jun| of |which East Asian nation the Guomin Geming Jun were the armed forces of| the Chunghwa Minkuo] also [the Guomin Geming Jun] known [the Guomin Geming Jun] as [the other name for the Guomin Geming Jun] the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun [National Army of the Republic of China/Republic of China National Army/Chinese Republican National Army/Republic of China Armed Forces |Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun|], [the Bak Fat conducted by the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun] against [the East Asian nation state the Bak Fat conducted by the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun was |the Bak Fat conducted by the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun| conducted |the Bak Fat conducted by the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun| against] the Beiyang Zhengfu [Beiyang Government |Beiyang Zhengfu|], a stratocratic [military controlled |stratocratic] authoritarian semi-totalitarian regency [the Beiyang Zhengfu] for [which historic East Asian state the Beiyang Zhengfu was |the Beiyang Zhengfu| a regency |the Beiyang Zhengfu| for] the Da Mingguo [Great Ming State/Empire of the Great Ming/Great Ming/Ming Empire |Da Mingguo|], [the Da Mingguo] also [what also happened to the Da Mingguo] known [the Da Mingguo] as [the Da Mingguo's other name] the Ming Chao ["Ming dynasty" |Ming Chao|], a stratocratic feudalist aristocratic absolute imperial monarchy [the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao] that [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] was [what the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao was] the last [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] of [what the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao was the last of] the imperial dynastic states governed and administered under the traditional Huaren [Han Chinese/Chinese |Huaren|] imperial dynastic feudal system [the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao], [the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao being |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao| the last |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao| of the imperial dynastic states governed and administered under the traditional Huaren system |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao|], [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] being [what happened to the the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] ruled [the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao] by [who was the the Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's reigning monarchial family] the Zhushi Huangzu [Imperial House of Zhu/Zhu imperial family/Imperial Clan of Zhu/Zhu clan |Zhushi Huangzu|] as [what the Zhushi Huangzu ruled the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao as] its [the Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's] huangshi [imperial family |huangshi|], [the Zhu Huangzu ruling over the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao as its |the Da Mingguo's/the Ming Chao's| huangshi |the Zhushi Huangzu|] ruling [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] over [the East Asian nation the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao ruled over] Zhongguo [Han China/China |Zhongguo|, excluding |which Chinese territories are excluded from Zhongguo| Mobei Menggu |Outer Mongolia/Mongolia (Mobei Menggu)|, Nei Menggu |Inner Mongolia (Nei Menggu), Xinjiang [East Turkestan |Xinjiang|], Dongbei [Northeastern China (Dongbei), consisting (Dongbei) of (the East Asian territories that make up Dongbei) Manchuria, Russia's Amur Oblast, Russia's Primorskaya Oblast and the southern part of Russia's Khabarovsk Krai region (Dongbei)| and Xiziang |Tibet |Xinjiang| ], from [how long the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao ruled over Zhongguo] 1368-1644, [the Beiyang Zhengfu being |the Beiyang Zhengfu| a regency |the Beiyang Zhengfu| for the Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's eventual restoration] that [the Beiyang Zhengfu] was [what the Beiyang Zhengfu was] the government [Beiyang Zhengfu] of [which East Asian regime the Beiyang Zhengfu was |the Beiyang Zhengfu| the government |the Beiyang Zhengfu| of] the Zhonghua Minguo [the Republic of China/Chinese Republic/Republican China |Zhonghua Minguo|] a semi-democratic aristocratic parliamentary presidential republic [the Zhonghua Minguo] that [the Zhonghua Minguo] ruled [the Zhonghua Minguo] over [the East Asian nation the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over] Zhongguo from [when the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over Zhongguo] 1912-1915 and then from 1916-1928, [the Zhonghua Minguo in 1915 becoming] the Zhonghua Diguo [Empire of China/Imperial China |Zhonghua Diguo|], a de-jure constitutional parliamentary democratic imperial royal monarchy [the Zhonghua Diguo] but de jure absolute theocratic royal monarchy under an authoritarian stratocracy [the Zhonghua Diguo] ruled [the Zhonghua Diguo] by [the Zhonghua Diguo's ruling family] the Yuanshi Zongmen [Imperial House of Yuan |Yuanshi Zongmen|] as [what the Yuanshi Zongmen ruled the Zhonghua Diguo as] its [the Zhonghua Diguo's] huangshi [the Yuanshi Zongmen] [the Zhonghua Diguo ruled |the Zhonghua Diguo| by the Yuanshi Zongmen as its |the Zhonghua Diguo's| huangshi |the Yuanshi Zongmen|] ruling over [the territories in East Asia, Central Asia and Eurasia the Zhonghua Diguo ruled |the Zhonghua Diguo| by the Yuanshi Zongmen as its |the Zhonghua Diguo's| huangshi |the Yuanshi Zongmen| ruled over] Zhongguo, Dongbei, Nei Menggu, Xiziang, and Xingjiang from [how long the Zhonghua Diguo's rule over Zhongguo, Dongbei, Nei Menggu, Xiziang, and Xingjiang lasted] 12 December 1915-22 March 1916, [the Beiyang Zhengfu ruling over the Zhonghua Minguo after the Zhonghua Diguo's dissolution on 22 March 1916 ruling |the Beiyang Zhengfu ruling over the Zhonghua Minguo after the Zhonghua Diguo's dissolution on 22 March 1916| over Zhongguo] from 7 July 1937 to 16 August 1945 as [what the Beiyang Zhengfu ruling over the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over Zhongguo as from 1937-1945] the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu [Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China/Reorganized Nationalist China/Reorganized Chinese Republic/Constitutional Chinese Republic |Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu|], a protectorate [the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu] of [which East Asian imperial monarchy the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu was |the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| a protectorate |the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| of with the Beiyang Zhengfu [Beiyang Government |Beiyang Zhengfu|], a stratocratic [military controlled |stratocratic] authoritarian semi-totalitarian regency [the Beiyang Zhengfu] for [which historic East Asian state the Beiyang Zhengfu was |the Beiyang Zhengfu| a regency|the Beiyang Zhengfu| for] the Da Mingguo [Great Ming State/Empire of the Great Ming/Great Ming/Ming Empire |Da Mingguo|], [the Da Mingguo] also [what also happened to the Da Mingguo] known [the Da Mingguo] as [the Da Mingguo's other name] the Ming Chao ["Ming dynasty" |Ming Chao|], a stratocratic feudalist aristocratic absolute imperial monarchy [the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao] that [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] was [what the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao was] the last [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] of [what the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao was the last of] the imperial dynastic states governed and administered under the traditional Huaren [Han Chinese/Chinese |Huaren|] imperial dynastic feudal system [the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao], [the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao being |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao| the last |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao| of the imperial dynastic states governed and administered under the traditional Huaren system |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao|], [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] being [what happened to the the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] ruled [the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao] by [who was the the Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's reigning monarchial family] the Zhushi Huangzu [Imperial House of Zhu/Zhu imperial family/Imperial Clan of Zhu/Zhu clan |Zhushi Huangzu|] as [what the Zhushi Huangzu ruled the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao as] its [the Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's] huangshi [imperial family |huangshi|], [the Zhu Huangzu ruling over the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao as its |the Da Mingguo's/the Ming Chao's| huangshi |the Zhushi Huangzu|] ruling [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] over [the East Asian nation the Da Mingguo/the Ming Chao ruled over] Zhongguo [Han China/China |Zhongguo|, excluding |which Chinese territories are excluded from Zhongguo| Mobei Menggu |Outer Mongolia/Mongolia (Mobei Menggu)|, Nei Menggu |Inner Mongolia (Nei Menggu), Xinjiang [East Turkestan |Xinjiang|], Dongbei [Northeastern China (Dongbei), consisting (Dongbei) of (the East Asian territories that make up Dongbei) Manchuria, Russia's Amur Oblast, Russia's Primorskaya Oblast and the southern part of Russia's Khabarovsk Krai region (Dongbei)| and Xiziang |Tibet |Xinjiang| ], from [how long the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao ruled over Zhongguo] 1368-1644, [the Beiyang Zhengfu being |the Beiyang Zhengfu| a regency |the Beiyang Zhengfu| for the Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's eventual restoration] that [the Beiyang Zhengfu] was [what the Beiyang Zhengfu was] the government [Beiyang Zhengfu] of [which East Asian regime the Beiyang Zhengfu was |the Beiyang Zhengfu| the government |the Beiyang Zhengfu| of] the Zhonghua Minguo [the Republic of China/Chinese Republic/Republican China/First Chinese Republic |Zhonghua Minguo|] a semi-democratic aristocratic parliamentary presidential republic [the Zhonghua Minguo] that [the Zhonghua Minguo] ruled [the Zhonghua Minguo] over [the East Asian nation the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over] Zhongguo from [when the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over Zhongguo] 1912-1915 and then from 1916-1928, [the Zhonghua Minguo in 1915 becoming] the Zhonghua Diguo [Empire of China/Imperial China |Zhonghua Diguo|], a de-jure constitutional parliamentary democratic imperial royal monarchy [the Zhonghua Diguo] but de jure absolute theocratic royal monarchy under an authoritarian stratocracy [the Zhonghua Diguo] ruled [the Zhonghua Diguo] by [the Zhonghua Diguo's ruling family] the Yuanshi Zongmen [Imperial House of Yuan |Yuanshi Zongmen|] as [what the Yuanshi Zongmen ruled the Zhonghua Diguo as] its [the Zhonghua Diguo's] huangshi [the Yuanshi Zongmen] [the Zhonghua Diguo ruled |the Zhonghua Diguo| by the Yuanshi Zongmen as its |the Zhonghua Diguo's| huangshi |the Yuanshi Zongmen|] ruling over [the territories in East Asia, Central Asia and Eurasia the Zhonghua Diguo ruled |the Zhonghua Diguo| by the Yuanshi Zongmen as its |the Zhonghua Diguo's| huangshi |the Yuanshi Zongmen| ruled over] Zhongguo, Dongbei, Nei Menggu, Xiziang, and Xingjiang from [how long the Zhonghua Diguo's rule over Zhongguo, Dongbei, Nei Menggu, Xiziang, and Xingjiang lasted] 12 December 1915-22 March 1916, [the Beiyang Zhengfu ruling over the Zhonghua Minguo after the Zhonghua Diguo's dissolution on 22 March 1916 ruling |the Beiyang Zhengfu ruling over the Zhonghua Minguo after the Zhonghua Diguo's dissolution on 22 March 1916| over Zhongguo] from 7 July 1937 to 16 August 1945 as [what the Beiyang Zhengfu ruling over the Zhonghua Minguo ruled over Zhongguo as from 1937-1945] the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu [Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China/Reorganized Nationalist China/Reorganized Chinese Republic/Constitutional Chinese Republic |Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu|], a protectorate [the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu] of [which East Asian imperial monarchy the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu was |the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| a protectorate |the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| of] the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku [Great Empire of Nihon/Great Nihon-jin |Japanese (Nihon-jin)| Empire/Great Nihon/Third Nihon-jin Empire/Imperial Nihon/Nihon-jin Empire |Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku|], a unitary parliamentary semi-constitutional democratic federalist absolute imperial dynastic royal monarchy [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] ruled [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] by [the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's reigining monarchial family] the Daiwa Koshitsu [the Imperial House of Great Yamato |Daiwa Koshitsu|], [the Daiwa Koshitsu] also [the Daiwa Koshitsu] known [the Daiwa Koshitsu] as [the other name for the Daiwa Koshitsu] the Gen Ouchou [Minamoto dynasty |Gen Ouchou|] as [what the Daiwa Koshitsu/the Gen Ouchou ruled the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku as] its [the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's] Oke [imperial family |Oke|], [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku ruled |the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku| by the Daiwa Koshitsu/the Gen Ouchou as its |the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's| Oke|], ruling [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] over [the territories in East Asia controlled by the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] the Nihon Hondo [the Japanese Home Islands |Nihon Hondo|], Chosen [the Korean peninsula/Korea/Hanguk |Chosen|, |Chosen| known as |Chosen's| other name Hanguk in |which language Chosen is (Chosen) known (Chosen) as Hanguk in Hangugeo |Korean/the Korean language (Hangugeo)| Chosen] Ryukyu/Ruuchuu [the Ryukyu islands/Okinawa/Ryukyu |Ryukyu/Ruuchuu|], Karufuto [Russia's Sahlakin and Kuril Islands |Karufuto|], Formosa [Taiwan and the Pengu Islands |Formosa|]Senkaku [China's Daiyou Islands |Senkaku|], the Carolines and the Marinas from [when the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's rule over the Nihon Hondo, Karufuto, Ryukyu/Ruuchuu, Chosen, Senkaku, Formosa, the Carolines and the Marinas lasted] 1868-1947],Teikoku, [the Bak Fat conducted by the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun against the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu] when the latter [ the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu] and Dongbei both [the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] were [the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] occupied [the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] by [what occupied both the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] the Huaren warlord-bandit coalition/military government of the Fengxi Junfa [Fengtian Clique |Fengxi Junfa|], which [the Fengxi Junfa occupying both the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] lasted [the Fengxi Junfa occupying both the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] from [how long the Fengxi Junfa occupying both the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei lasted for] 1911-1928, [the Bak Fat conducted by the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun against the Fengxi Junfa occupying both the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei] fails due to [why the Bat Fat fails in this timeline] the assasination of the corrupt, insatible, hypocritical, megalomanical and tyrannical Jiang Jieshi, a Huaren politician [Jieshi], revolutionary [Jieshi], and military leader [Jieshi] who [Jieshi] was [what Jieshi was] known [Jieshi] as [Jieshi's other name] "Chiang Kai-shek" in [where Jieshi was |Jieshi| known as "Chiang Kai-shek"] the West and the CCCP, [Jieshi/"Chiang"] being [what Jieshi/"Chiang" was] the combined Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi [Chairman of the Nationalist Government/Chairman of the Chungkwa Mingkuo |Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi|, the de-facto combined head of state, government and of the military |Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi| of |which East Asian state the Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi was (the Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi) the de-facto combined head of state, government and of the military (the Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi) of| the Chunghwa Minguo from |when the Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi was (the Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi) the Chunghwa Minguo's de-facto combined head of state, government and of the military| 1928-1947] and Generalissmo [the commander |Generalissmo| of |what a Generalissmo commands| a combined military force consisting |the combined military force a Generalissmo commands| of |what the combined military force a Generalissmo commands consists (the combined military force a Generalissmo) of| army, navy, and air force units.] from [when Jieshi/"Chiang" was | Jieshi/"Chiang"| the Chunghwa Minguo's combined Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi and Generalissimo |Jieshi/"Chiang"| from] 1928-1947, [the Chungkwa Mingkuo's combined Guomin Zhengfu Zhuxi and Generalissimo Jieshi's/"Chiang"'s assasination in this timeline] by [who assasinates Jieshi/"Chiang" in this timeline] a disgruntled Yue [Cantonese |Yue|] citizen, with the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun falling into disarray despite heavy Soviet and American support [to the Chunghwa Minguo], the Bei Yang Jun [Northern Ocean Army |Bei Yang Jun|, a large, Western-style Zhonghua Diguo Jundui |Imperial Huaren Army (Zhonghua Diguo Jundui)| that |the Bei Yang Jun| was |what the Bei Yang Jun was| the Beiyang Zhengfu's military arm |the Bei Yang Jun| and the Zhonghua Minguo's armed forces |the Bei Yang Jun|, which |the Bei Yang Jun| lasted |how long the Bei Yang Jun lasted for| 1912-1916, |the Bei Yang Jun| being |what happened to the Bei Yang Jun| restored |the Bei Yang Jun after 1916| as |what the Bei Yang Jun was (the Bei Yang Jun) restored (the Bei Yang Jun) as after 1916 the Anguojun |National Pacification Army (Anguojun)|, |the Bei Yang Jun as the Anguojun| lasting |how long the Bei Yang Jun lasted (the Bei Yang Jun) as the Anguojun| 1926-1928, before |the Bei Yang Jun after 1928| being |what happened to the Bei Yang Jun after 1928| being |what happened to the Bei Yang Jun after 1928| revived |the Bei Yang Jun after 1928| for the last and final time as |what the Bei Yang Jun's final post-1916, post 1928 restoration was| the Weihebudui |Peacekeeping Army (Weihebudui)| the Zhonghua Minguo as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu's combined armed forces |the Weihebudui|, which |the Weihebudui| lasted |how long the Weihebudui lasted for| 1937-1945], [the Bei Yang Jun as the Anguojun] decimating the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun and [the Bei Yang Jun as the Anguojun] seizing Huanan [South Zhongguo'/South China |Huanan|, which |Huanan| consists of |the Huaren territories that make up Huanan| Fujian Sheng |Fujian Province (Fujian Sheng)|, Guangdong Sheng |Guangdong Province (Guangdong Sheng)|, Guangxi Zhuangzu Zizhiqu |Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region (Guangxi Zhuangzu Zizhiqu)| and Hainan Sheng |Hainan Province (Hainan Sheng)|], [the Bei Yang Jun as the Anguojun decimating the Guomin Geming Jun/the Zhonghua Minguo Guo Jun and |the Bei Yang Jun as the Anguojun| seizing Huanan] bringing an end to the the Chunghwa Minguo's existence and uniting the Middle Kingdom [ Zhongguo] and the land of the Manju [Manchus/Manchurians |Manju|], Dongbei, under one government [the Fengxi Junfa occupying both the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu and Dongbei], with the Huaren warlord leading the Fengxi Junfa who seized control of both Manjugo and the Beiyang Zhengfu from 18 June 1927 - 4 June 1928 as combined military dictator and warlord, Zhang Zuolin, [Zuolin in this timeline] quickly using the oppurtunity to seize the lands in central Zhongguo ruled by the Sunni Muslim Chungkwa Mingkuo-alinged Huizu [Hui/Hui people |Huizu|] Ma family and [Zuolin in this timeline] also convince the Qumul Xanliqi [Kumul Khanate/Kingdom of Hamul |Qumul Xanliqi|, a semi-elective tribal feudal Islamic theocratic royal Turkic imperial monarchy |the Qumul Xanliqi| ruled |the Qumul Xanliqi| by |the Qumul Xanliqi's ruling family| the Ning Imperiye Oyi Chagatai |Imperial House of Chagatai (Ning Imperiye Oyi Chagatai)|, |the Qumul Xanliqi ruled |the Qumul Xanliqi| by the Ning Imperiye Oyi Chagatai| as its |the Qumul Xanliqi's| Ezen Khaany Ger Bul |the Ning Imperiye Oyi Chagatai|, |the Qumul Xanliqi| ruling |the Qumul Xanliqi| over |the Eurasian and Central Asian territories the Qumul Xanliqi governed| Xingjiang's Hami prefecture from |how long the Qumul Xanliqi ruled Xingjiang's Hami's prefecture from| 1696-1930], [Zuolin in this timeline convincing the Qumul Xanliqi] to submit to the Huaren central government's [the Fengxi Junfa's occupying both the Zhonghua Minguo's ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu's, Dongbei's and now Huanan's] authority, before [Zuolin in this timeline] exploiting chaos in the rest of Soviet controlled Xingjiang to seize all of Xingjiang and [Zuolin in this timeline] peacefully absorbing Xiziang into the the Fengxi Junfa-occupied Zhonghua Minguo before his [Zuolin's] death via [how Zuolin died] a false flag attack by Soviet NKVD [Narodny komissariat vnutrennih del |NKVD|, the Soviet combined interior ministry, secret police, foreign intelligence agency, border guard and Gendarmerie |the Narodny komissariat vnutrennih del/the NKVD|, |the Narodny komissariat vnutrennih del/the NKVD|, |the Narodny komissariat vnutrennih del/NKVD| lasting from |how long the Narodny komissariat vnutrennih del/the NKVD lasted for| 10 July 1934-15 March 1946] in the form of his [Zuolin's] train being bombed, which the NKVD hoped to blame upon the Nihon-jin so that the Soviets could restore the Chunghwa Minguo and the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang to power in Zhongguo, which [the NKVD's false flag assasination of Zuolin] fails as the Guohui [National Assembly |Guohui|, the Zhonghua Minguo's bicameral legislative branch |the Guohui| with |what the Guohui's two branches were| a Canyiyuan |Senate (canyiyuan)| and a Zhongyiyuan |House of Representatives (Zhongyiyuan)|, which |the Guohui| lasted |the Guohui| from |how long the Guohui lasted for| 8 April 1913-1 July 1925, and then as the Lifayuan |Legislative Yuan (Lifayuan)| under |which East Asian country the Guohui was (the Guohui) the Lifayuan in| the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu from |when the Guohui was (the Guohui) the Lifayuan in the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu| 1937-1945] is [what happens to the Guohui] called [the Guohui] for an emergency session and civilian authority is finally restored to the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu, although it [the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu] is [the Zhonghua Minguo ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu] reorganized into the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu after the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun [Army of the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Great Nihon-jin Army/the Imperial Nihon-jin Army |the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun| which |the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun| was |what the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun was| the principal ground force |the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun| of |the East Asian nation the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun was the principal ground force of| the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku from |when the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun was (the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun) the primary ground force (the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun} of the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku| 1868-1947] steps in to help the Bei Yang Jun as the Weihebudui "restore order", with Wang Zhaoming, [Zhaoming] better known as [Zhaoming's public alias] his [Zhaoming's] pen name Wang Jingwei [Zhaoming's pen name], a Huaren revolutionary [Zhaoming/Jingwei], writer [Zhaoming/Jingwei], philosopher [Zhaoming/Jingwei] and statesman [Zhaoming/Jingwei] who [Zhaoming/Jingwei] broke away from [whom Zhaoming/Jingwei seperated |Zhaoming/Jingwei| from] the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo due to [why Zhaoming/Jingwei broke away |Zhaoming/Jingwei| from the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo their [the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's and the Chungkwa Mingkuo's] immense corruption, [the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's and the Chungkwa Mingkuo's] failure to address the immense poverty, exploitation and misery of the Huaren people as well as their [the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's and the Chungkwa Mingkuo's] connections to [what the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT's/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo were |the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo| connected |the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo| to] international communism [the CCCP], while [the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo] allowing [what the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo allowed] imperialist powers [the British Empire, the Troisieme Republique francaise |Third French Republic (the Troisieme Republique francaise)| and the USA] to [what the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo] allowing [what the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo allowed imperialist powers to do] exploit Zhongguo for their [the imperialist powers' own benefit], [the imperialist powers exploiting Zhongguo for their |the imperialist powers'| own benefit during the the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng] without giving the Huaren people under the Chungkwa Mingkuo's domain anything in return, [Zhaoming/Jingwei breaking away from the Chungkuo Kuomintang/Zhongguo Guomindang/KMT/Kuomintang/Guomindang and the Chungkwa Mingkuo due to their |the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's and the Chungkwa Mingkuo's| immense corruption, their |the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's and the Chungkwa Mingkuo's| connections to international communism as well as their |the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's and the Chungkwa Mingkuo's| failure to prevent foreign imperialism against the Huaren people under the Chungkwa Mingkuo's domain] as well as his [Zhaoming's/Jingwei's] disagreement with [whom Zhaoming/Jingwei disagreed with] the corrupt, insatible, hypocritical, megalomanical and tyrannical Jiang Jieshi, [Zhaoming/Jingwei in this timeline] becoming [what Zhaoming/Jingwei becomes in this timeline] the Zhonghua Minguo's ruled [the Zhonghua Minguo] by the Beiyang Zhengfu's first civilian Dazongtong [Great President |Dazongtong|, the directly democratically elected head of state |Dazongtong| of |which East Asian nation the Dazongtong was (the Dazongtong) the head of state of| the Zhonghua Minguo/Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu from |when the Dazongtong was (the Dazongtong) the Zhonghua Minguo/Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu's directly democratically elected head of state (the Dazongtong) 1912-1945], [Zhaoming/Jingwei becoming the Zhonghua Minguo's ruled |the Zhonghua Minguo| by the Beiyang Zhengfu's first civilian Dazongtong] and the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu's first Dazongtong [Zhaoming/Jingwei], although the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku still [what the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku still does in this timeline] establishes [what the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku still establishes in this timeline] its [the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's] protectorates of [what the Dai Nippon Teikoku's/the Dai Nihon Teikoku's other pre-WW2 era and WW2-era protectorates were] the Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren [the Great Manchurian Empire/Empire of Great Manchuria/Manchukuo/Manchoukuo |Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/the Mahaan Manchooriyan Saamraajy/the Periya Mancuriyan Peraracu/IkhJegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren|, a constitutional democratic absolute unitary parliamentary imperial monarchy |Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren| ruled |Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren| by |the reigning family of Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren| the Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog |Imperial House of Aisin-Gioro (Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog)| as |what the Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog ruled Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren as] its |Da Manzhou Diguo's/Dae Manju Jegug's/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren's| Ezen Khaany Ger Bul |imperial family (Ezen Khaany Ger Bul)|, |Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren ruled (Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren) by the Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog as its (the Da Manzhou Diguo's/Dae Manju Jegug's/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren's) Ezen Khaany Ger Bul (the Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog)| located |Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren| in |which region of East Asia Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren was located in| Manjugo [Dongbei] from |how long the Da Manzhou Diguo's/Dae Manju Jegug's/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren's rule over Manjugo lasted| 1932-1945, as |what the Da Manzhou Diguo's/Dae Manju Jegug's/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren's political status was| a protectorate | the Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren| of |which East Asian nation the Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren was (the Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren) a protectorate (the Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren) of| the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] and [the Dai Nihon Teikoku's other WW2-era protectorate] the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang [Mengjiang United Autonomous Government/Mongolian Autonomous Federation/the Federal Autonomous Government of Mongolia |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| a constitutional democratic absolute royal tribal monarchy |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| located |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| in |which region of East Asia the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang governed| the Chahar region of |where Chahar is located| Nei Menggu and [what other region of East Asia apart from Chahar the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang governed| the Suiyan region of |where Suiyan is located| Zhongguo from |when the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon's/Mengjiang's rule over Charhar and Suiyan lasted |1939-1945 and |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| was |what happened to the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| ruled |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| by |the reigning family of the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan |Imperial House of Borjigin (Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan)| the descendants |the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan| of |the major Central Asian historical figure the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan is (the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan) descended (the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan) from| the 12th-13th century MoNGgolcuud |Mongol/Mongolian (MoNGgolcuud)| tribal chief-turned ruthless conquerer Temujin, who |Temujin| would [Temujin] later be known as |Temujin's other name| Genghis Khan, [the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan ruling the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| as |what the Borjigin Khaany Impyeratoryn Klan ruled the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang as| its |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon's/Mengjiang's| royal family as |what the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon's/Mengjiang's political status was| a protectorate |the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang| of |which East Asian nation the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang was a protectorate of| the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku], [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku still |the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku| establishing both the Da Manzhou Diguo/Dae Manju Jegug/Ikh Manjuuryn Ezent Guren and the Mongolyn Oortoo Zasakh Kholboot Zasgiin Ordon/Mengjiang in this timeline] with the Huaren monarchy [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and he Zhushi Huangzu] being [what happens to the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu in this timeline] restored [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu] as the government [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu] of post-Bak Fat Zhongguo on [when the the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu are |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu| restored |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu| as the government |the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu| of post-Bak Fat Zhongguo] 28 March 1938, although it [the post-Bak Fat restored Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] remains a Nihon-jin imperial protectorate [the post-Bak Fat restored Da Mingguo/Ming Chao] with .Wang Jingwei transitioning from being the Zhonghua Minguo's as the Zhonghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfu's Dazongtong to [Wang Jingwei] being the Nichi Naka Sensou/Dierci Zhongri Zhanzheng-era restored Da Mingguo's/Ming Chao's Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen [Prime Minister of the Ming Cabinet |Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| the head of government |the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| of |which East Asian nation the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen is the head of government of| the Zhonghua Diguo, who |the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| also |what the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen also does| presides |the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| over |what the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen also presides over| the Guohui, |the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| appointing |whom the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen appoints| the ministers and chairpersons of the Guohui on the advise of |whose reccomendation the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen appoints the ministers and chairpersons of the Guohui on| the Zhongguo Huangdi |Emperor of China/Chinese Emperor ( Zhongguo Huangdi)|, |the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| being |what happens to the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| chosen |the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| from |where the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen is selected from| the winning party of Chinese elections by |who selects the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen| the Zhongguo Huangdi] on [when Wang becomes the Da Ming Neige Zongli Dachen] after the Huaren imperial restoration, [the restoration of the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu in post-Bak Fat Zhongguo on March 28, 1938] fulfilling the goals of the combined national liberation and self-determination movementt of the Xinhai Geming [Xinhai Revolution |Xinhai Geming|], which [the Xinhai Geming] lasted from [for how long the Xinhai Geming lasted for] 10 October 1911 - 12 February 1912, which [the Xinhai Geming] toppled [which government and nation fell due to the Xinhai Geming] the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk [Great Qing Empire/Empire of the Great Qing/Great Qing/Great Qing State], which [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk] was [what type of nation state the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk was] an absolute imperial dynastic royal semi-parliamentary Indian-style monarchy [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk] ruled [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk] by [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren's/the Da Qing Diguo's/the Daecheong Jeguk's ruling family] the Manju [Manchurian/Manchu |Manju|] Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog [Imperial House of Aisin-Gioro |Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog|] as [what the Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog ruled the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk as] its [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren's/the Da Qing Diguo's/the Daecheong Jeguk's] Ezen Khaany Ger Bul [imperial family |Ezen Khaany Ger Bul|], [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk ruled |the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk| by the Aisin-Jirogiin Ezen Khaany Ovog as its |the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren's/the Da Qing Diguo's/the Daecheong Jeguk's| Ezen Khaany Ger Bul] ruling over [the East Asian nations occupied by the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren/Da Qing Diguo/Daecheong Jeguk] Zhongguo, Nei Menggu, Mobei Menggu, Xiziang, and Xingjiang from its [the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren's/the Da Qing Diguo's/the Daecheong Jeguk's] homeland of [which nation/region of East Asia was the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren's/the Da Qing Diguo's/the Daecheong Jeguk's homeland] Manjuur [Manchuria/Dongbei |Manjuur|] from [the extent of the Ikh Tsin Ulsyn Ezent Guren's/the Da Qing Diguo's/the Daecheong Jeguk's rule over Zhongguo, Nei Menggu, Mobei Menggu, Xiziang, and Xingjiang from Manjuur] 1644-1912, [the restoration of the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu in post-Bak Fat Zhongguo on March 28, 1938 fufiling the goals of the Xinhai Geming], which [the goals of the the Xinhai Geming] were [what the goals of the Xinhai Geming were] to liberate Zhongguo from Manju colonial occupation and also to restore the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu as the government [the Da Mingguo/Ming Chao and the Zhushi Huangzu] of post-Qing Zhongguo, although the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku takes both Xingjiang and Xiziang from Zhongguo, [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku] allowing the reliberated Qumul Xanliqi to rule over all of Sherqiy Turkistan [East Turkestan |Sherqiy Turkistan|] as a Nihon-jin protectorate and [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku] subsequently making Xiziang a Nihon-jin protectorate.protectorate under the rule of the Llamas, leaving the post-Bak Fat restored Da Mingguo/Ming Chao in charge of only post-Bak Fat Zhongguo under the protection of the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku.
CHATBOT: Chapter XIV: The Era of Compromise and The Birth of a Hybrid State On the 3rd of January in the year 1868, the Meiji Ishin marked a transformative period in the Nihon Hondo, the Japanese Home Islands, where the ruling Tokugawa Bakufu--a hereditary military dictatorship--faced its greatest challenge. Amidst the push-and-pull of power between traditionalists and progressives, a unique resolution emerged, shaping the course of the East Asian archipelago's destiny in a manner unanticipated by many. The Tokugawa shogunate, having established rule over Japan in the early 1600s under Ieyasu Tokugawa, had maintained an intricate feudal system where the Shogun, the military dictator, wielded power with the daimyo class at his behest. Conversely, the Imperial House of Great Yamato, known also as the Gen Ouchou, retained largely ceremonial roles, serving as the chief priests of Shinto and acting as symbols of Japan's ancient heritage. The Meiji Ishin signified not the complete undoing of the bakufu, but rather sparked a negotiation between the samurai class, who upheld the feudal order, and the modernists who advocated for the empowerment of the Daiwa Koshitsu. The resulting compromise led to the formation of a novel entity: the Dai Nippon Teikoku, a hybrid construct blending old and new. This empire maintained its feudal roots while embracing progressive reforms and power structures. The Dai Nippon Teikoku fostered the coexistence of the Tokugawa shogunate alongside the rejuvenated imperial institution. The samurai class underwent not abolition but transformation, adapting to the changing sociopolitical landscape. This adaptability proved instrumental in extending the lifespan of the Dai Nippon Teikoku well beyond 1947, a testament to the resilience of its dual governance. The Northern Expedition by the Nationalist China, intended to unify the nation under the Kuomintang, inadvertently played a role in solidifying the Dai Nippon Teikoku's position in East Asia. The assassination of Jiang Jieshi, the leader of the Kuomintang, led to the dissolution of Nationalist forces. With external efforts from the reinvigorated Beiyang Army, which once acted as the military wing of the Zhonghua Minguo, China saw a return to monarchy with the Ming Clan reascending under the aegis of the Japanese Empire. Internationally, the Japanese Empire's impressively maintained its sphere of influence, establishing protectorates across the region including the Manchurian Empire and the Mongoli...
CHATBOT: Chapter XV: The Empire's Sword and Shield: Formation of the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun and The Shadow War In the wake of the Meiji Ishin, the restoration witnessed a profound reformation within the military struct
USER: Write a realistic, sensible, plausible and alternate history scenario in the form of a historical documentary book chapter set in the world of the alternate historical scenario with no references to this being an alternate history scenario or to the real world timeline at all in which the Meiji Ishin [Meiji Reformation |Meiji Ishin|] of 3 January 1868 in [the East Asian country the Meiji Ishin occured in] the Tokugawa bakufu [Tokugawa shogunate (Tokugawa bakufu)|, which |the Tokugawa bakufu| was |the Tokugawa bakufu| a de jure absolute imperial monarchy |the Tokugawa bakufu| but |what else the Tokugawa bakufu was apart from (the Tokugawa bakufu) being a de jure absolute theocratic dynastic imperial royal monarchy (the Tokugawa bakufu)| but a de facto feudal hereditary royal monarchial military dictatorship |the Tokugawa bakufu| located |the Tokugawa bakufu| in |the region of the world the Tokugawa bakufu was located in| East Asia, which |the Tokugawa bakufu| which |the Tokugawa bakufu| ruled |the Tokugawa bakufu| over |the East Asian territories controlled by the Tokugawa bakufu| the Nihon Hondo |Japanese Home Islands (Nihon Hondo)|, |the Tokugawa bakufu| being |what happened to the Tokugawa bakufu| ruled |the Tokugawa bakufu| by |the reigning family of the Tokugawa bakufu ruling as combined de facto military dictators of feudal Japan and its |feudal Japan's| de-facto kings| the Tokugawa-shi/Tokugawa-uji |Tokugawa clan (Tokugawa-shi/Tokugawa-uji)|, |the Tokugawa-shi/Tokugawa-...
CHATBOT: Chapter XI: The Continuity of Tradition and the Onset of Modernity in the Meiji Ishin Era: Reform and Compromise In the wake of the Meiji Ishin, it was not the dissolution of the Tokugawa bakufu that marked the transition of Nihon, but a profound compromise between continuities of the past and the imperatives of modernity. The Tokugawa shogunate, a feudal hereditary military dictatorship that had held sway over the Nihon Hondo since the decisive Battle of Sekigahara, found itself not at the precipice of extinction but in the throes of transformation. The Tokugawa-shi, ruling as shoguns, emerged not vanquished but integrally incorporated into a new order that maintained the dignity and function of their offices, albeit circumscribed by a newly configured polity. The Daiwa Koshitsu, the divine custodians of the realm, presided over the emergent Dai Nippon Teikoku, asserting their role as the imperial family and central figureheads of the nascent state. This great rebalancing acknowledged the sovereign's sacred duty upheld by Shinto priesthood, but inscribed within a political context that gave way to constitutional and parliamentary processes. Here, in the grand compromise, the samurai class was not disbanded; rather, they were reformed and retained, woven into the institutional tapestries that would carry Nihon into the modern age. As the Bak Fat unfolded across the East China Sea, the fate of Nihon's ambitious Dai Nippon Teikoku would be tested. Yet, precisely at the zenith of this geopolitical maelstrom, an unforeseen end to the Chunghwa Mingkuo's ambitions catalyzed further evolution within East Asia's power dynamics. The assassination of Jiang Jieshi fractured the Guomin Geming Jun, and the tumultuous restoration of a fragmented Zhongguo under auspices of an old dynasty happened under Nihon's watchful guardianship. The landscape thusly drawn presented a Nihon ready not merely to dominate but to mediate a shifting balance of order - fostering protectorates and upholding allegiances with nations like Manjugo, Mengjiang, and the remodeled regions of Xingjiang and Xiziang within their sphere of influence. The Huaren peoples found their governance returned to a semblance of customary rule with the rise of Da Mingguo under the stewardship of the Zhushi Huangzu, though now this rule would unfurl under new banners of compromise with, and protection from Nihon. In the interwoven tales of military elites, sacred imperial legacies, and newly embraced modernities, ...
USER: Staying and continuing with the alternate history scenario prompted and generated in the previous entry, remembering to stick to the history book chapter format: How did the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku form the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun after the Meiji Ishin, while [the Dai Nippon Teikoku/the Dai Nihon Teikoku] maintaining the buke? And how did the Kempeitai [gendarmerie |Kempeitai|, [the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun's military police |the Kempeitai| from |when the Kempeitai was (the Kempeitai) the Dai-Nippon Teikoku Rikugun's military police| 1881-1945, its |the Kempeitai's| main duties being |what the Kempeitai's main duties were| maintaining military discipline, enforcing conscription laws, protecting vital military zones, and investigating crimes among soldiers, while |the Kempeitai| also |what the Kempeitai also did| shared civilian secret police, espionage, and counter-intelligence roles within the Dai Nippon Teikoku/Dai Nihon Teikoku] help the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's founder and [the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's] founder and [the Chungkuo Kuomintang's/Zhongguo Guomindang's/KMT's/Kuomintang's/Guomindang's] eternal president, the Huaren revolutionary statesman, physician, and political philosopher Dr. Sun Zhongshan [Dr. Sun Yat-Sen |Sun Zhongshan|], [Dr.Sun Zhongshan] also known as [Dr. Sun Zhongshan's other name] Syun Yixian [Sun Yat Sen |Syun Yixian|], who [Dr...