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The Impact of Imperialism 1840-1900. 帝国主义. Chinese Dynasties. Xia Dynasty About 1994 BCE - 1766 BCE Shang Dynasty 1766 BCE - 1027 BCE Zhou Dynasty 1122 BCE -256 BCE plus suppliment Qin Dynasty 221 BCE - 206 BCE Early Han Dynasty 206 BCE - 9 AD Later Han Dynasty 25 AD - 220 AD
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Chinese Dynasties • Xia Dynasty About 1994 BCE - 1766 BCE • Shang Dynasty 1766 BCE - 1027 BCE • Zhou Dynasty 1122 BCE -256 BCE plus suppliment • Qin Dynasty 221 BCE - 206 BCE • Early Han Dynasty 206 BCE - 9 AD • Later Han Dynasty 25 AD - 220 AD • Three Kingdoms - Period of Disunion 220 AD - 280 AD • Sui Dynasty 589 AD - 618 AD • Tang Dynasty 618 AD - 907 AD • Song Dynasty 969 AD - 1279 AD • Yuan Dyansty 1279 AD - 1368 AD • Ming Dynasty 1368 AD - 1644 AD • Qing Dynasty (Ch’ing) 1644 AD - 1911 AD
Qing World View • China at the centre of its formulation of the world. • Centuries of contacts with neighbouring states, most of which recognized the pre-eminence of the Qing emperor • A complex, pre-existing system of foreign affairs: tribute states • This is the lens through which the Qing view Western nations/empires
“Botanical Imperialism”: Opium and Tea • TEA= What the British Want • The tea trade grew exponentially—from 1719 to 1833—tonnage of foreign ships trading with China increased 13 times. • By the 1820s enough tea was imported into England to give every person 2 pounds a year. • Paying for it with Silver=trade imbalance
Lord George Macartney Send as British envoy to the Qing from 1792-1794 Sought to gain more “favorable” conditions of trade for British interests Fails to do so—famously refuses to bow to Qing emperor Macartney Mission
Opium Trade • It is ILLEGAL Under Qing Law • Foreign traders mount a massive smuggling operation to trade this illicit substance for tea • 1820- 5,000 chests (665,000 pounds) • 1830- 16,000 chests (2,000,000 pounds) • 1858- 70,000 chests (9,000,000 pounds)
The effects of the Opium War:Part (I)—The Unequal Treaties • The Treaty of Nanjing (1842): “Free Trade” • Opens a total of 5 “treaty ports”—coastal cities where foreigners could freely trade and reside • Grants “concession areas” within treaty ports to foreign powers—essentially micro-colonies • Gives Britain Hong Kong • Most Favored Nation clause for Britain • Forces Qing to pay 21 million ounces of silver • The Treaty of Tianjin (1858): • Opens 10 more ports • Allows Christian missionaries to move inland • Extraterritoriality for foreign subjects
Imperialism in China 1895-1900 • “Spheres of Influence” • Germany in Shandong—Qingdao • Russia in Manchuria • France in Yunnan • British in HK-New Territories