Forbidden FirstAnother unusual headline today reports the aerial bombardment of the Chinese Forbidden City (紫禁城) in Peking (now Beijing). While Europe remains entangled in total war, and Russia mired in revolution, China is currently in the middle of its short-lived Manchu Restoration. This royalist coup was an attempt to restore the Qing Dynasty by loyalist General Chang Hsun (Zhang Xun; 張勳), whose army seized the capital and briefly reinstalled the last emperor, Puyi.
One dramatic development was the aerial bombardment of the Imperial Palace at 10:30 in the morning of Saturday the 7th. "
...a Caudron Type D aircraft, piloted by Pan Shizhong (潘世忠) with bombardier Du Yuyuan (杜裕源) was dispatched from Nanyuan Airbase to drop three bombs over the Forbidden City, causing the death of a eunuch, but otherwise causing minor damage; other sources state that the Caudron aircraft was piloted by the principal of the Nanyuan Aviation School, Qin Guoyong (秦國鏞). This was the first recorded instance of aerial bombardment deployed by the early-republican era Chinese Air Force". (via wikipedia).
"
One {bomb} exploded outside the Gate of Heavenly Purity, injured a palace guard and a sedan bearer and killed a dog. The second one exploded in the Imperial Garden and injured a eunuch. The third one landed in a water drum in front of the Hall of Mental Cultivation, and thus did not explode. It is said that the Emperor was frightened into disease, and the elderly Palace concubines were so frightened by the incident that yesterday they were unable to eat any food” (via beijing-postcards.com). The Caudron, which was equipped with a six-cylinder Anzani radial was one of three delivered to China in 1912. As noted, the failed coup led to Chang Hsun's resignation. He retreated to civilian life and died in 1923.
(from the Cambria Daily Leader, 9 July 1917):



(image via beijing-postcards.com)