Children lining the roadside with Japanese and Manchukuo flags in Hsinking, 1934 — part of orchestrated celebrations marking the enthronement of Henry Pu Yi under Japanese imperial auspices.
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Children lining the roadside with Japanese and Manchukuo flags in Hsinking, 1934 — part of orchestrated celebrations marking the enthronement of Henry Pu Yi under Japanese imperial auspices.

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Last Emperor Pu Yi, with visiting Indian poet and philosopher Rabindranath Tagore, in the Forbidden City, Peking, 1924.
The last emperor, 1987
L'ultimo imperatore (1987)

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Why did the Chinese government, Especially after the communist party took over, allow puyi to live following the end of WWII?
Mao was hoping for a political coup by converting Puyi publicly to Communism. In doing so, he hoped to kill any counter-revolutionary spirit as well as score a symbolic victory over the failure of the Soviet Union to convert Nicholas II. In Mao’s mind, this would prove the superiority of Chinese Communism over Russian Communism.
Thanks for the question, Anon.
SomethingLikeALawyer, Hand of the King