Japanese Military Execution in Occupied Manchuria after Manchukuo: Blindfolded Chinese Prisoners and Field Execution
Photograph
Chinese prisoner execution photo archive from Japanese-occupied Manchuria, circa 1940s, recording the custody, restraint, killing, and aftermath of Chinese prisoners under Japanese military control. Japan’s occupation of Manchuria followed the Mukden Incident of September 18, 1931, when Japanese forces used an explosion along the South Manchurian Railway as the pretext for military conquest; in 1932 Japan established Manchukuo, a puppet state that drew international condemnation through the League of Nations’ Lytton Commission. By the 1940s, Manchuria remained a central zone of Japanese military power in northeast China, where occupation authority, puppet-state policing, and anti-guerrilla campaigns produced summary punishments, prisoner shootings, and public terror against local Chinese populations.Photo archive of 7 silver gelatin photographs, each 4" x 6.5", Manchuria, circa 1940s. Japanese soldiers in field uniforms and peaked caps surround blindfolded Chinese captives seated in open ground near an earthen bank; in one scene soldiers level rifles toward bound or blindfolded prisoners at close range. Several men lie face down or on their sides at the base of the embankment, with soldiers and civilian onlookers standing above them; plain wooden boxes or planks sit nearby, suggesting prepared burial or removal. Another scene records a prisoner being physically restrained in a courtyard or village setting, with tiled rooflines, uniformed soldiers, and civilian men crowded around him. The sequence moves between armed custody, execution ground, bodies on the earth, and prisoner handling under guard, giving the group a direct evidentiary relationship to Japanese military violence in occupied Manchuria.
Manchuria was not a peripheral theater in Japan’s war in China; it was the region where the Kwantung Army transformed a railway-security pretext into territorial occupation, state building under Manchukuo, and a long-running military presence that helped bring international crisis in the 1930s and full-scale war in Asia. The scenes preserved here are not battlefront combat views but close-range records of prisoners controlled by armed soldiers, making the archive especially significant for the study of occupation violence, Japanese military practice, wartime China, and the fate of Chinese civilians or irregular fighters labeled enemies under Japanese authority. Light edge wear, and minor fading to some areas; images remain primarily clean; overall very good condition. The archive preserves a compact but stark record of military force in Japanese-occupied Manchuria, grounded in the physical proximity between guards, prisoners, rifles, and bodies.
Item #23422
Price: $550.00
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