Title: China: Internal Crises and Western Intrusion
1China Internal Crises and Western Intrusion
2I. The Opium War and the Taiping Rebellion
3The Opium War (1839-1841) and Its Causes
- Incompatibility of Chinese and Western Worldview
- Failure of Macartney (1793) Amherst (1816)
missions - British demand for Chinese Tea
- East India Company (Arm of British Imperialism)
- Tax on tea provides 1/10th British govt revenue
4How to Pay for Tea?
- Imbalance of Trade favored China
- Silver flows into China to pay for Tea
- Country Trade between India and China did not
produce balance of trade - British finally discovered a product that Chinese
bought in sufficient quantities to balance trade
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5Opium
6Opium Trade
- Reverses balance of trade
- Silver flows out of China
- 1834 East India Co. monopoly abolished
- Attempt to bypass Canton System
- Lord Napier represented British Crown violates
Canton System regulations - Chinese withdrawn food cut off trade stopped
- Napier finally backs down dies in Macao
7Lin Zexu (1785-1850)
- Lin Xexu appointed imperial commissioner to stamp
out drug trade - Appealed to Queen Victoria
- Demanded foreigners surrender all opium and sign
a pledge to refrain from selling opium - Elliot ordered British merchants to comply
British government responsible for compensation
8Opium War
- British firms exerted pressure for a military
response - British fired on a merchant ship that had signed
the pledge Chinese responded with 21 war junks - Jan 31, 1840 Governor General of India declares
war on China - August 29, 1842 Treaty of Nanjing ends the war
over vanquished Chinese
9Treaty of Nanjing and the Treaty System
- Set pattern for later treaties unequal treaties
- Canton System and Cohong monopoly abolished five
ports opened up to British trade Hong Kong ceded
to British - Established a Chinese tariff (ave. 5)
- Extraterritoriality
- Most-favored-nation
10The Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864)
- Hong Xiuquan (1814-1864)
- Hakka ethnicity
- Failed examination candidate
- Visions
- Association of God Worshippers and the Heavenly
Kingdom of Great Peace (Taiping tianguo)
11Taiping Ideology
- Strict, puritanical morality
- Opium, tobacco, gambling, prostitution, sexual
misconduct, foot binding prohibited - Economic and social egalitarianism
- Land redistribution equal allotment based on
soil productivity no private property - Political units of 25 families leaders combine
civil and military duties
12The Rebellion
- Rapid military advance captured Nanjing by 1853
- Well organized picked up strength as they went
- Incompetence of government forces
- Pause in Nanjing interrupted their momentum
- British adopts policy of neutrality
- Internal leadership disputes
13Rebellion Fails
- Failure of Taiping Leadership internal strife,
20,000 killed - Inadequate implementation of stated policies
- Practice did not fit theory e.g., Kings kept
concubines restricted to others. - Missed Opportunities
- Halted at Nanjing Momentum stalls
- Religious fanaticism makes it difficult to to
cooperate with secret societies, other
rebellions, and Westerners - Anti-Confucian rhetoric repelled Confucian
scholars who otherwise would have supported
anti-Manchu stance - Rule by civilized Manchu preferable to rule by
barabarized Chinese
14Regional Forces
- Zeng Guofan (1811-1872) Scholar-Official
- Organized a regional force Hunan Army
- Paternalistic attitude
- Generous pay scale
- Moral indoctrination
- Use of regional forces
- Li Hongzhang Anhu Army
- Ever Victorious Army
- Ultimately dangerous to the dynasty
15Defeat of Taipings
- Loyalist armies laid siege to Nanjing
- July 19, 1864 Nanjing falls
- Bloodbath 100,000 Taipings slaughtered by
Loyalist armies - Official line is they refused to surrender
- Loyalist armies quell other rebellions
16Significance of Taiping Rebellion
- Scale of Rebellion
- Geography
- Loss of Life
- Rise of Regional Authority
- Transfer of power from center to provinces
- Rise of Warlordism
- Transfer of real power back to Han Chinese
- Nationalist and Communist Revolutionaries claim
heritage from Taipings
17Taiping Map
18II. 1870-1894
19The Post-Taiping Revival
- Xianfeng Emperor dies in 1861
- His son ascends the throne at young age as the
Tongzhi Emperor - His mother Cixi shares power with Prince Gong as
co-regents. - Period known as the Tongzhi Restoration
(1862-1874)
20Tongzhi Restoration
- For the time being, we have to make use of
foreigners to train our soldiers, as a scheme for
self-strengthening.
21Self-Strengthening The First Phase
- Fortify the Qing through selective borrowing from
the West - Military, economic, diplomatic
22Zongli Yamen
- Special office to deal with foreign powers and
related matters. - Appeal to international law, using Henry
Wheatons Elements of International Law - Sponsored foreign language and other
nontraditional subjects in 1862
23Maritime Customs Service
- Horatio Nelson Lay
- Robert Hart
24Diplomatic Mission to West
- Anson Burlingame
- Traveled with a Manchu and Chinese official in
1867 - Toured Washington and European Capitals
25Tianjin Massacre, 1870
- Rumors spread regarding Catholic orphanage
- Erupted into mob violence
- French Consul killed along with 20 foreigners,
including 10 nuns - Mobilized gunboats, Qing investigates
- Frances defeat in the Franco-Prussian War
deprived France of Military power - Fatal blow to policy of cooperation
26The Empress Dowager and the Government
- Cixi, educated daughter of minor Manchu Official
- Brought into imperial harem as low ranking
concubine - Delivered the Xianfeng emperors only son
- Became co-regent with Prince Gong when her son
ascended the throne as the Tongzhi Emperor
27Education
- Overseas Education
- Between 1872-1881 120 young Chinese students sent
to United States - Assimilation to American Culture
- Abandoned when students denied admission to
Westpoint - Focused on domestic education
- Reform Civil Service Exam
28Economic Self-Strengthening
- Shipping, textile, telegraph, coal mines
- Government Supervision and Merchant Operation
- Failed to take off
- Limited to periphery
29Traditional Economic Sector
- Chinese tea growers unable to compete in world
market - Limited influence of world market on Chinese
economy cultivation of cotton - Agricultural Involution
30Missionary Efforts and Christian Influences
- Protestant Missions established after Treaty
Systems - Brought secular knowledge, established schools,
hospitals, orphanages. - Limited success
31Poor Showing of Christianity
- Difficulties in translation
- Christianity associated with Taiping Rebellion
and unequal treaties - Both caused resentment
- Rice Christians
- Scurrilous stories and rumors encouraged by elite
32III. Foreign Relations
33Continued Pressures
- Western powers begin encroaching on Chinas
neighbor and/or tributary states
34Vietnam and the Sino-French War of 1884-1885
- China served as model for Nguyen dynasty
(1802-1945) - Early French involvement in Vietnam
- Assisted Gia-long to seize the throne
- Catholicism made gains
- Cochin China
- 1859 France Seized Saigon
- Later gains control over three southern provinces
- Used as base to expand power
- Established protectorate over Cambodia, Central
and North Vietnam - 1882 France seized Hanoi
35Hanoi appeals to China
- Qing sends troops to protect its Tributary
- Peace agreement
- China abandons claim to suzerainty over Vietnam
- French sovereignty expands to include Vietnam,
Cambodia, and Laos known as French Indochina - British conquered Burma
- China ceded Macao to Portugal
36Korea and the Sino-Japanese War
37The Treaty of Shimonoseki