Category:Japanese Period (1914-1941)
From Habele Institute
Japan entered and secured the German colonies of the Palau, Caroline, and Marshall Islands early in the First World War. This marked the end of the German Period (1899-1914). The League of Nations provided for Japanese administration of the islands through the South Seas Mandate. During the subsequent War in the Pacific (1941-1945), these strategically situated islands became the scenes of decisive naval and military operations.
Pages in category "Japanese Period (1914-1941)"
The following 142 pages are in this category, out of 142 total.
A
- A Copy of Japanese Records
- A Reporter in Micronesia
- A US Territory in Japan's South Sea Islands: the Japanese Occupation Administration Guam
- Advanced Base Operations in Micronesia
- Agriculture in the Japanese Mandated Islands (OPNAV 13-17)
- All and Nothing
- All Hands: the Bureau of Naval Personnel Information Bulletin
- Alternative Futures Following a Great Power War
- An Analysis on Historic Photographs Taken on Fais Island in Micronesia During the Japanese Period
- An Evaluation of Japanese Agricultural and Fishery Developments in Micronesia, During the Japanese Mandate, 1914 to 1941
- An Island in Agony
- Anglo-japanese Naval Cooperation 1914-1918
- Annual Report to the League of Nations on the Administration of the South Seas Islands Under Japanese Mandate for the Year 1924
- Archaeological Survey of Gachlaw Village, Gilmon Municipality, Yap, Federated States of Micronesia
- Archaeology and Oral Historyof the Japanese Lighthouse at Yap
- Armchair Occupation: American Wartime Planning for Postwar Japan, 1937-1945
B
C
- Civil Affairs Studies: Illustrative Cases from Military Occupations (OPNAV 50e-10)
- Civil Affairs Studies: the Languages of the Japanese Mandated Islands (OPNAV 50e-15)
- Colonial Development and Militarism: South Pacific Development Planning of Imperial Japan and Nanyo Takushoku Corporation
- Colonial Questions at the San Francisco Conference
- Cultures of Commemoration
- Cultures of Commemoration: the Politics of War, Memory and History in the Mariana Islands
E
F
I
J
- Japan Achieved Success in Micronesia Unlike Any Other
- Japan and the Birth of Takao's Fisheries in Nanyo, 1895–1945
- Japan and the League of Nations: Empire and World Order, 1914-1938
- Japan's Islands of Mystery
- Japan's Mandate in the Pacific
- Japan's Mandate in the South Seas
- Japan's Mandate in the Southwestern Pacific
- Japan's Pacific Mandate
- Japan's Southward Expansion
- Japanese Colonial Representations of the South Islands: Textual Hybridity, Transracial Love Plots, and Postcolonial Consciousness
- Japanese Period (1914-1941)
- Japanese Southward Expansion in the South Seas and Its Relations with Japanese Settlers in Papua and New Guinea, 1919-1940
- Japanese Surrender Woleai Atoll Uss Sloat De 245
M
- Mandates Under the League of Nations
- Mapping Economic Development: the South Seas Government and Sugar Production in Japan's South Pacific Mandate, 1919-1941
- Memorandum on Japanese Mandated Islands in the Pacific
- Micronesia and Strategic Trusteeship: a Case Study in American Politico-Military Relations
- Micronesia and the Postwar Remaking of the Asia Pacific: an American Lake
- Micronesian Experiences of the War in the Pacific
- Micronesia—a Changing Frontier
- Monstrous Projections and Paradisal Visions: Japanese Conceptualizations of South Seas (nan'yo) as a Supernatural Space from Ancient Times to the Contemporary Period
- Mysterious Micronesia: Yap, Map, and Other Islands Under Japanese Mandate Are Museums of Primitive Man
N
- Nan'yo South Seas: an Annotated Bibliography
- Nanshin‐ron: Its Turning Point in World War I
- Nanyo Colonialism Postcolonialism: a Comparative Literary and Cultural Study on Representations of the Pacific in Japanese and English Language Fiction
- Nanyō in the Rise of a Global Japan, 1919-1931
- Nanʻyō: the Rise and Fall of the Japanese in Micronesia, 1885-1945
P
- Pacific Island Nations
- Pacific Islands Studies in Japan
- Pacific Strife
- Palauan Children Under Japanese Rule: Their Oral Histories
- Policy Concerning Trusteeship and Other Methods of Disposition of Mandated Islands
- Population Dynamics of an Atoll Community
- Pre-war Japanese Fisheries in Micronesia: Focusing on Bonito and Tuna Fishing in the Northern Mariana Islands
- Prehistoric Marine Resource Use in the Indo-Pacific Regions
- Prelude to War? the United States, Japan, and the Yap Crisis, 1918-22
- Property Rights and Economic Development: the Legacy of Japanese Colonial Institutions
- Property Rights and Financial Development: the Legacy of Japanese Colonial Institutions
- Prototype Analyses of Emotion Terms in Palau, Micronesia
R
S
T
- Terraces of the South Sea Islands Under the Japanese Mandate
- The Administration of Japan's Pacific Mandate
- The American-Japanese Controversy Over the Island of Yap
- The Battlefield Experience of Japanese Soldiers in the Asia-pacific War
- The Clam Industry in the Marshalls
- The Coconut in Micronesia
- The Commercial Potential of Precious Corals in the Western Caroline Islands, Micronesia
- The Economics of Exploitation: the Japanese in the Mariana, Caroline and Marshall Islands, 1915–1940
- The Fishing Industry of the Japanese Mandated Islands (OPNAV p22-20)
- The Former Japanese Mandated Islands
- The Japanese Encounter with the South: Japanese Tourists in Palau
- The Japanese Regime
- The Japanese Schools for the Natives of Truk, Caroline Islands
- The Japanese Schools for the Natives of Truk, Caroline Islands
- The Jesuit Mission of Caroline Islands During World War II
- The Making of Karafuto Repatriates
- The Neglected War
- The Pacific Basin
- The Pacific Theater: Island Representations of World War II
- The Palauan and Yap Medicinal Plant Studies of Masayoshi Okabe, 1941-1943
- The Palauan Kirikomi-tai Suicide Bombers of World War II and the Siege of Babeldaob: a Reconsideration
- The Partition of the Marianas: a Diplomatic History, 1898-1919
- The Prints of Paul Jacoulet
- The Quiet Warrior Back in Newport—Admiral Spruance, the Return to the Naval War College, and the Lessons of the Pacific War, 1946–1947
- The South Sea Islands and Japanese Mandatory Rule Over Them
- The South Sea Islands Under Japanese Mandate
- The South Seas on Display in Japan: Yosano Tekkan's Nan'yōkan and South Seas Discourse of the Early Twentieth Century
- The Sugar Industry of the Japanese Mandated Islands (OPNAV-p22-103)
- The Surrender of the Japanese Garrison on Tobi, October 6, 1945
- The Treaty as to Yap and the Mandated North Pacific Islands
- The Use and Treatment of Micronesian Labor Under the Japanese Empire, 1922-1945
- The Use of Civil Administration Budgets by the Japanese Military Government of the Micronesia Territory from 1914 to 1922
- The Wilson Administration and the Mandate Question in the Pacific: Struggle Among the Powers Over the Disposition of Former German Colonies
- The Yap Controversy and Its Significance
- The Yap Island Controversy: How Japan Gained Submarine Cable Sovereignty in the Pacific
- Through the Looking Glass: Palauan Experiences of War and Reconstruction, 1944-1951
- Too Little, Too Late: the Fight for the Carolines, 1898
- Treaty Between the United States and Japan with Regard to the Former German Islands in the Pacific Ocean, in Particular the Island of Yap
- Treaty, North Pacific German Islands
- Tremors in the Western Pacific: Micronesian Freedom and US Security