Japan's germ warfare database is open to the public free of charge. On September 2nd, the National Library released the Japanese Bacteriological Warfare Resource Database and the Japanese Bacteriological Warfare Archives Compilation. From now on, the database will be used free of charge for the whole society. Based on the Japanese germ warfare archives collected by the National Library from overseas, the Japanese germ warfare resource database indexes the original archives page by page. Click here to find more than 654.38+00000 pages of historical materials, including Japan's research and experiments on bacteriological weapons, Japan's germ warfare against China, Japan's human experiments on living people, Japan's atrocities against prisoners of war and civilians, the investigation of Japanese researchers and soldiers involved in germ warfare by the Allied Forces, and the organization of war crimes trials by the Allied Forces.
The archives also systematically reveal the inside story of the secret deal made by the United States with Japan in order to obtain the so-called "research results" of Japan's germ warfare during the trial of the Far East International Military Tribunal, which is an important first-hand historical material for studying Japanese germ warfare crimes. The database consists of eight sub-databases: Japanese germ warfare archives, people index, place name index, institution index, disease index, related reports, Boli trial records and related historical events, and a Chinese abstract is written for each file, which realizes the page-level depth index of the original file and the knowledge point retrieval and positioning of the whole database. From September 2, the database will be available to the whole society for free, showing historical facts, supporting academic research, and "let history speak, speak with historical facts".
Where can I see the website?
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The contents include Japan's research and experiments on bacteriological weapons, Japan's germ warfare against China, Japan's experiments on human beings using living people, Japanese atrocities against prisoners of war and civilians, the investigation of Japanese researchers and soldiers involved in germ warfare by the Allied Forces, and the war crimes trial organized by the Allied Forces. Historical materials 1000 pages.
In conjunction with the release of the Japanese Bacteriological Warfare Resource Library, the National Library also published the Japanese Bacteriological Warfare Archives, and photocopied these first-hand historical materials for the convenience of professional scholars. At the same time, more than 0/000 volumes of anti-Japanese war historical materials, such as War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression Literature Historical Materials Series, Trial of Japanese War Criminals Historical Materials Series and Modern Japanese Investigation Materials Series, were also displayed at the conference.
If you have time, you can go to this website to see the relevant information of the Japanese germ warfare resource library. Let's keep in mind the history, strive for strength and make our own contribution to the prosperity of the motherland!