This is a decorative silver button modelled after the 1905-style dress uniform button used by officers of the Beiyang New Army in the late Qing Dynasty. At its centre is a five-clawed coiled dragon, symbolising the Qing Empire, with a flaming pearl in its mouth. The perimeter is adorned with a continuous triangular geometric pattern.
The Qing Empire’s adoption of Western-style military uniforms dates to the Taiping Rebellion, influenced by the “Ever Victorious Army” formed by the American Frederick Townsend Ward. This led to the hiring of foreign instructors to introduce Western drills, equipment, and uniforms. In AD 1885, Li Hongzhang established the Peiyang Military Academy, hiring German instructors and adopting German-style uniforms, which became the model for the Qing Empire’s army.
In December AD 1895, Yuan Shikai began the establishment of the “New Army” at Xiaozhan in Tianjin, significantly impacting modern Chinese politics with the emergence of the Beiyang Army. This new force was divided into five branches: infantry, cavalry, artillery, engineering, and logistics. In September AD 1904, based on the Beiyang Army, the Qing court formulated the “Military Uniform Regulations,” drawing on feedback from the Boer War and the Russo-Japanese War to introduce the “1905-style military uniform.”
The Beiyang military officers’ uniforms were categorized into three types: lounge suit, formal dress, and regular cloth. The black lounge suit was worn for court audiences and official visits, while the formal dress was in sky blue. The regular cloth uniforms varied with the seasons: dark blue for winter and earthy yellow for summer, always accompanied by a black forage cap.