1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
East Asia
1893- 1976
1898- 1976
Southeast Asia
1908- 1985
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1898- 1975
1912- 1994
August 16, 1967
Mao Zedong discusses the Cultural Revolution with a delegation from Albania.
July 8, 1967
Enver Hoxha announces that China's Red Guards have "risen to defend the Communist Party, Chairman Mao Zedong, and socialist China."
February 3, 1967
Mao Zedong and Beqir Balluku discuss China's Cultural Revolution.
January 1972
The GDR Foreign Ministry outlines the current shifts in the PRC's foreign policy within the international community under the Mao group.
April 11, 1967
Kim Jae-seok reports on North Korea's stance regarding China's Cultural Revolution.
December 29, 1969
Ambassadors of Hungary, GDR, Czechoslovakia, the USSR, Bulgaria, Poland, and Mongolia discuss the development of socialism and Maoism in the PRC in relation to other countries in the socialist camp.
November 16, 1966
Lucien Paye, upon departing China, meets with Foreign Minister Chen Yi to discuss the Red Guard movement, Sino-French relations, and the Vietnam War, among other topics.
June 26, 1969
Crema outlines the current trends of Chinese foreign policy as Chinese mission leaders abroad gradually return and border tensions with the USSR arise.
October 6, 1969
Following the peak of the Cultural Revolution, the French Foreign Ministry concludes that Sino-French relations "have shown signs of détente, which, in the current context, represents important progress."
May 16, 1969
Pierre Cerles provides an assessment of Chinese foreign policy toward Eastern Europe during the 1960s within the context of the Sino-Soviet split, the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia, the Cultural Revolution, and China's own internal leadership divisions.