The
Defense of the Great Wall () (January 1, 1933 – May 31 1933) was a
campaign between the armies of
Republic of China and
Empire of Japan, which took place before the
Second Sino-Japanese War officially commenced in 1937. It is known in
Japanese as and in many English sources as the
First Battle of Hopei.
During this campaign, Japan successfully captured the
Inner Mongolian province of
Rehe from the
Chinese warlord Zhang Xueliang and annexed it to the new state of
Manchukuo, whose southern frontier was thus extended to the Great Wall of China.
Prelude
Battle of Shanhai Pass
Shanhaiguan is the fortified eastern end of the
Great Wall of China, where the Great Wall meets the ocean. Per the terms of the 1901
Boxer Rebellion accord, the
Imperial Japanese Army maintained a small
garrison of around 200 men at Shanhaiguan. On the night of 1 January 1933, the Japanese garrison commander staged an "incident" by exploding a few
hand grenades and firing a few shots. The
Kwantung Army used this as an excuse to demand that the Chinese 626th Regiment of the
Northeastern Army, guarding Shanhaiguan, evacuate the pass defenses.
When the Chinese garrison refused, the
Japanese 8th Division issued an ultimatum, and then attacked the pass with the support of 4 armoured trains and 10 tanks. The Japanese attack was supported by
close air support from bombers, and by shelling by warships of the
Imperial Japanese Navy's
IJN 2nd Fleet with a dozen warships offshore. On January 3, Chinese regimental commander
Shi Shian, unable to withstand this attack, evacuated from his positions after losing half of his force, while the Japanese incurred casualties estimated at 500.
[http://www.republicanchina.org/war.htm#Chang-Cheng-Zhi-Zhan Battles of the Great Wall]The Battle of Rehe
The province of
Rehe, on the northern side of the Great Wall was the next target. Declaring the province to be historically a portion of
Manchuria, the Japanese Army initially hoped to secure it through the defection of General
Tang Yulin to the Manchukuo cause. When this failed, the military option was placed into action. The Japanese army's
Chief of Staff requested
Emperor Hirohito's sanction for the 'strategic operation' against Chinese forces in Rehe. Hoping that it was the last of the army's operations in the area and that it would bring an end to the Manchurian matter, the Emperor approved, while stating explicitly that the army was not go beyond the Great Wall.
On February 23, 1933, the offensive was launched. On February 25,
Chaoyang and
Kailu were taken. On March 2, the Japanese 4th Cavalry Brigade encountered resistance from the forces of
Sun Dianying, and after days of fighting, took
Chifeng. On March 4, Japanese cavalry and the 1st Special Tank Company took
Chengde the capital of Rehe.
The Battle of the Great Wall

Japanese forces charging toward the wall defense
Falling back from Rehe,
Wan Fulin's 32nd Corps retreated to
Lengkou Pass, while the 29th Corps of General Song Zheyuan also fell back,
Zhang Zuoxiang's 37th Division retreated to
Xifengkou Pass, General
Guan Linzheng's 25th Division to the Gubeikou Pass.
On March 4, the 139th Division of the KMT 32nd Corps managed to hold
Lengkou Pass, and on March 7, KMT 67th Corps withstood attacks by the 16th Brigade of the Japanese 8th Division, at
Gubeikou Pass.
On March 9,
Chiang Kai-shek discussed with
Zhang Xueliang about resisting Japanese invasion in Baoding in Hebei Province. Chiang Kai-shek began to relocate his forces away from his campaign against the Jiangxi Soviet, which would include the forces of
Huang Jie,
Xu Tingyao and
Guan Linzheng. Chiang Kai-shek also called over
Fu Zuoyi's 7th Corps from
Suiyuan. However, his actions were too late and the reinforcements were of insufficient strength to stop the Japanese advance.
On March 11, Japanese troops pushed up to the Great Wall itself. On March 12, Zhang Xueliang resigned his post to
He Yingqin, who as the new leader of the Northeastern Army was assigned the duty of securing defensive positions along the Great Wall.

Silhouettes showing Chinese soldiers armed with swords
Over twenty close assaults were launched, with sword-armed Northwestern Army soldiers repelling them. However on March 21, the Japanese took
Yiyuankou Pass. The KMT 29th Corps evacuated from Xifengkou Pass on April 8. On April 11, Japanese troops retook Lengkou Pass after dozens of seesaw fights over the pass defenses and Chinese forces at
Jielingkou abandoned that pass. The Chinese army was significantly underarmed in comparison with the Japanese in heavy weapons and many units were equipped only with trench
mortars, a few heavy
machine guns, some light machine guns and rifles, but mostly handguns,
hand grenades, and traditional
Chinese swords. Beaten back by overwhelming Japanese firepower, on May 20, the Chinese army retreated from their remaining positions on the Great Wall.
Although the NRA suffered defeat in the end, several individual NRA units like the
He Zhuguo platoon managed to hold off the better equipped Japanese army for up to 3 days before being overrun. Some NRA Divisions also managed to win minor victories in passes like Xifengkuo and Gubeikou by using the ramparts to move soldiers from one sector to another in the Great Wall, just like the
Ming dynasty soldiers before them.
[Osprey Publishing: The Great Wall of China 221 BC–AD 1644. Stephen Turnbull. Paperback January 2007 ISBN 9781846030048]Tanggu Truce
On May 22, 1933, Chinese and Japanese representatives met at
Tanggu,
Tianjin, to negotiate an end of the conflict. The resulting
Tanggu Truce created a
demilitarized zone extending one hundred kilometers south of the Great Wall, which the Chinese army was prohibited from entering, thus greatly reducing the territorial security of China proper, whereas the Japanese were permitted to use
reconnaissance aircraft or ground units to make sure that the Chinese complied. Furthermore, the Chinese government was forced to acknowledge the de facto independence of Manchukuo and the loss of Rehe.
That the terms of the truce were so favorable to Japan and unfavorable to China created a public backlash against the Kuomingtang government and greatly influenced
Zhang Xueliang's later determination to kidnap
Chiang Kai-shek in the
Xi'an Incident to form a
united front with the Communists against Japan.
Popular culture
- An action movie was made in Hong Kong in 1976 called 7 Man Army about seven Chinese soldiers who managed to hold off against 20,000 Japanese soldiers for 5 days.
See also