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Chapter 12 The New Imperialism. Section 5 China and the New Imperialism. Setting the Scene:
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Chapter 12The New Imperialism Section 5 China and the New Imperialism
Setting the Scene: By the 1830s, British merchant ships were arriving in China loaded with opium to sell to the Chinese. One Chinese official complained bitterly to Britain's Queen Victoria. "I have heard that smoking opium is strictly forbidden in your country” he wrote. "Why do you let this evil drug be sent to harm people in other countries?“ For centuries, Chinese regulations had ensured that China had a favorable balance of trade with other nations. By the 1800s, however, western nations were using their growing power to gain more influence over East Asia.
I. The Trade Issue Prior to the 1800s, Chinese rulers placed strict limits on foreign traders and China enjoyed a trade surplus
I. The Trade Issue Two developments occurred - China entered a period of decline and the Industrial Revolution created a need for expanded markets
A. The Opium War British merchants made huge profits by trading opium grown in India for Chinese tea
A. The Opium War The Chinese outlawed opium and executed Chinese drug dealers, but Britain refused to stop the trade Chinese couple smoking opium in 1887
A. The Opium War In 1839, Chinese warships clashed with British merchants but the Chinese were defeated
B. Unequal Treaties In 1842, Britain made China accept the Treaty of Nanjing and gained the island of Hong Kong
B. Unequal Treaties The treaty required China to pay an indemnity and gave British citizens in China extraterritoriality
B. Unequal Treaties During the mid-1800s, Western powers forced China to open more ports and to let missionaries preach in China
II. The Taiping Rebellion The Taiping Rebellion (1850 to 1864) almost toppled the Qing dynasty and killed between 20 million and 30 million Chinese
II. The Taiping Rebellion The Qing government survived, but it had to share power with regional commanders
III. Reform Efforts In the 1860s, reformers launched the "self-strengthening movement” and imported western technology, industry, and science
III. Reform Efforts The movement made limited progress because the empress Ci Xi was committed to Confucian traditions Empress Dowager Tzu His (Ci Xi) (1835-1908)
III. Reform Efforts When China was defeated by Japan in 1894, Western powers carved out spheres of influence along the Chinese coast
III. Reform Efforts In 1898 emperor Guang Xu launched the Hundred Days of Reform to modernize China, but was imprisoned by the conservatives Emperor Guang Xu
IV. The Qing Dynasty Falls Anger against Christian missionaries, foreign troops, and extraterritoriality resulted in the Boxer Uprising in 1900 Boxer rebels, 1900 photograph
IV. The Qing Dynasty Falls The goal of the Righteous Harmonious Fists, or Boxers, was to drive out the "foreign devils" who were polluting China United States Marines fighting the Boxer rebels
IV. The Qing Dynasty Falls The Boxer Uprising failed but Chinese reformers gained a constitutional monarchy and called for a republic
IV. The Qing Dynasty Falls "Nationalism" involved the overthrow of the emperor and the ending of international hegemony over China "democracy" meant a republican, elected form of government "people's livelihood" called for extensive land reform based on socialism. In 1911, Sun Yixian became president based on the “Three Principles of the People” - nationalism, democracy, and livelihood Sun Yat-sen 1866–1925