
Print shows Japanese soldiers overrunning the Russian line at Fenshui Ling during the RussoJapanese war. 01/01/1904

Print shows Japanese soldiers of the Second Army overrunning the Russian line at ChinChou during the RussoJapanese war. 01/01/1904

Print shows three Russian soldiers and a rooster around a campfire with tents in the background. 01/01/1904

Print shows three sailors laughing at a Russian admiral standing in one large boot. 01/01/1904

Print shows frozen Russian soldiers melting away before the Japanese army represented by the Rising Sun. 01/01/1904

Print shows a string held by a Japanese man about to ensnare the hands of a Russian man reaching to grab a Chinese or Korean man lying on the ground smoking a pipe with a rooster nearby. 01/01/1904

Print shows a Russian general standing among ruined gabions dreaming of surrender to the Japanese and being disgraced. 01/01/1904

Print shows two figures wearing boxing gloves, one with a Japanese torpedo boat as its head punches the other figure with a Russian manofwar as its head, destroying the ship. 01/01/1904

Print shows two figures wearing boxing gloves, one with a Japanese torpedo boat as its head punches the other figure with a Russian manofwar as its head, destroying the ship. 01/01/1904

Utagawa Kunisada III (Japanese, 1848–1920)Meiji period (1868–1912) 1895

Print shows the Russian General A.N. Kuropatkin armed and waiting for an approaching Japanese soldier. 01/01/1904

A nagajuban is an informal robe often decorated with eyecatching designs. This piece may be a oneofakind commemorative garment related to Japan’s victory in the RussoJapanese War of 1904–5. The scene refers to the lengthy Japanese siege of Port Arthur, an engagement lasting from August 1, 1904 to January 2, 1905, when the Russian general, Anatoly Stessel, surrendered to General Nogi Maresuke. After the war, General Nogi was celebrated as a national hero. Some scholars see such commemorative clothing as precursors of the more overtly propagandistic Japanese garments of the 1930s and World War II years.Meiji period (1868–1912) 1900 - 1999

Print shows a large Japanese woman tossing beans to soldiers who are caricatured as ogres with horns, fangs, and claws. 01/01/1904

Print shows a Japanese soldier holding the Kinchow Castle with wall and gate in his arms and using his left foot to kick away Russian soldiers. 01/01/1904

Print shows Raijin, the Japanese God of Thunder, in upper left as Russian soldiers retreat outside the city walls at Tokuriji during the battle of Telissu, June 1415, 1904. 01/01/1904

Print shows Russian generals, possibly including Alekseĭ Nikolaevich Kuropatkin, surrendering to a group of Japanese soldiers. 01/01/1905

Print shows the Russian general A.N. Kuropatkin playing with toy soldiers while a woman sitting on the floor watches. 01/01/1904

Print shows a Japanese officer sitting on the head of an octopus which has captured ships disguised as fish in its tentacles. 01/01/1904

Print shows the Japanese citizens and soldiers during a night of revelry after major victories against the Russians during the RussoJapanese war. 01/01/1904

Print shows a Russian soldier seated at a table on which are tobacco products that he is trying to sell to Japanese soldiers. 01/01/1904