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Chapter Introduction Section 1 The Decline of the Qing Dynasty Section 2 Revolution in China Section 3 Rise of Modern Japan Chinese Emperors Chapter Assessment. The Decline of the Qing Dynasty. Main Ideas. Why does the Qing dynasty declined? .
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Chapter Introduction Section 1The Decline of the Qing Dynasty Section 2Revolution in China Section 3Rise of Modern Japan Chinese Emperors Chapter Assessment
The Decline of the Qing Dynasty Main Ideas • Why does the Qing dynasty declined? • Why do Western nations increased their economic involvement with China? • extraterritoriality • sphere of influence • indemnity • self-strengthening
Causes of Decline • In 1800 the Qing dynasty of the Manchus was at the height of its power. • After more than a century of Western humiliation and harassment, the Qing dynasty collapsed in the early 1900s. • Internal changes also played a role in the downfall of the Qing dynasty. (pages 465–466)
Causes of Decline (cont.) • It began to suffer from corruption, peasant unrest, and incompetence. • Rapid population growth–400 million by 1900– • The ships, guns, and ideas of foreigners probably hastened the end of the Qing Era. (pages 465–466)
The Opium War • In 1800 European merchants in China were restricted to a trading outlet at Guangzhou, or Canton. • The British were not happy with the arrangement. (pages 466–467)
The Opium War (cont.) • Negotiations to address the trade imbalance failed, and Britain turned to trading opium to address their economic concerns. • Soon silver was flowing out of China to Britain. (pages 466–467)
The Opium War (cont.) • The Chinese makes Opium illegal. • China appeals to Britain to stop. Britain refused to stop. • The Chinese government blockaded Guangzhou to force the traders to surrender their opium, and Britain responded by starting the Opium War (1839–1842).
The Opium War (cont.) • The Treaty of Nanjing(1842) opened five coastal ports in China to British trade, limited taxes on imported British goods, and gave the British the island of Hong Kong. • The Chinese also agreed to pay for the war. • The treaty did not mention opium. (pages 466–467)
The Opium War (cont.) • extraterritoriality • China now has an open door. (pages 466–467)
The Tai Ping Rebellion • Chinese government failed to handle its economic problems, the Tai Ping Rebellion, a peasant revolt, occurred from 1850 to 1864. • Hong Xiuquan, who saw himself as the younger brother of Jesus Christ. • He was convinced God had given him the mission of destroying the Qing dynasty. (pages 467–468)
The Tai Ping Rebellion (cont.) • The rebellion called for social reforms that included giving land to all peasants and treating women as the equals of men.
The Tai Ping Rebellion (cont.) • Hong’s rebellion called for people to give up private possessions. • Land was to be held in common, and food and money were to be shared equally. • Hong outlawed alcohol, tobacco, and foot binding.
The Tai Ping Rebellion (cont.) • The Tai Ping Rebellion was one of history’s most devastating civil wars. • As many as twenty million people died in the 14-year struggle. Traditional Chinese Music Link
Efforts at Reform (cont.) • Reformers called for a new policy of “self-strengthening” for the Qing dynasty. • This policy guided China for the next 25 years. (pages 468–469)
Efforts at Reform (cont.) • Some reformers wanted to introduce democracy, but such an idea was too radical for most. • Rather, China tried to modernize its military and industrialize while retaining the basic elements of Chinese civilization and values. (pages 468–469)
The Advance of Imperialism (cont.) • European states began to create spheres of influence inside China. • In 1894 another matter weakened the Qing. • China went to war with Japan over Japanese inroads into Korea, and Japan soundly defeated the Chinese. (pages 469–470)
Opening the Door to China • Great Britain and the United States feared other nations would overrun China should its government collapse. • In 1899 the U.S. secretary of state John Hay proposed the Open Door Policy. (pages 470–471)
The Boxer Rebellion • The Open Door policy did not stop the Boxer Rebellion, however. • Who are the • Boxers? • “destory the foreigners” (page 471)
The Advance of Imperialism (cont.) • The Empress Dowager Ci Xi • She ruled China for almost 50 years. (pages 469–470)
The Fall of the Qing • After the Boxer Rebellion, China desperately tried to reform. • Even the Empress Dowager now embraced educational, administrative, and legal reforms.
The Fall of the Qing • After the Boxer Rebellion, China desperately tried to reform. • Even the Empress Dowager now embraced educational, administrative, and legal reforms.
The Fall of the Qing (cont.) • Sun Yat-sen and his Revive China Society, founded in the 1890s. • Long term goal democracy (pages 473–475)
The Fall of the Qing (cont.) (pages 473–475)
The Fall of the Qing (cont.) • The infant Henry Pu Yi now occupied the throne. • In 1911… major turning point
The Fall of the Qing (cont.) • The events of 1911 did not produce a new social and political order. (pages 473–475)
Chinese Society in Transition (cont.) • Chinese society was already changing in the mid-1800s. • commodities– • Transportation was improving, and new crops from abroad increased food production. (pages 476–477)
An End to Isolation • By 1800, the Tokugawa shogunate had ruled the Japanese islands for two hundred years. • The country was virtually isolated from foreigners. • Foreign ships were driven away, and the little foreign trading was done only through Nagasaki. (pages 479–480)
An End to Isolation (cont.) • Western powers approached Japan in the hope of opening it up to their economic interests. • The United States was the first foreign country to succeed with Japan. • In 1853, four warships under Commodore Matthew Perry arrived in Edo Bay (now Tokyo Bay). (pages 479–480)
An End to Isolation (cont.) • Perry carried a letter from President Millard Fillmore, asking to open relations between the two countries. • Some shogunate officials argued against contact and others recommended concessions, or political compromises. • The shogunate’s response was ultimately dictated by the guns of Perry’s ships when he returned for an answer with a larger fleet. (pages 479–480)
An End to Isolation (cont.) • Under military pressure Japan agreed to the Treaty of Kanagawa. • It provided for the return of American shipwrecked sailors, who previously were treated as criminals, the opening of two ports to Western traders, and the establishment of a U.S. consulate in Japan. (pages 479–480)
Resistance to the New Order • Resistance to this change in relations with the West was especially strong among the samurai warriors in the territories of Satsuma and Choshu. • In 1863, the Sat-Cho alliance forced the shogun to promise to end relations with the West. (page 480)
Resistance to the New Order (cont.) • The Sat-Cho rebels were convinced they needed to strengthen their military after losing an exchange with Western ships. • They also demanded that the shogun resign and restore the power of the emperor. • Sat-Cho armies attacked the shogun’s palace in Kyoto in 1868. • They declared the emperor restored. • The shogun’s forces and the shogunate soon collapsed. (page 480)
The Meiji Restoration (cont.) • The young emperor Mutsuhito called his reign the Meiji, or “Enlightened Rule.” • This period is known as the Meiji Restoration. • Mutsuhito was controlled by the Sat-Cho leaders, and the capital was moved to their location, Edo (now Tokyo). (pages 480–484)
The Meiji Restoration (cont.) • The Meiji reformers set out to create a Western-style political system. • A commission under Ito Hirobumi traveled to Great Britain, France, Germany, and the United States to study their governments. (pages 480–484)
The Meiji Restoration (cont.) • Real executive authority lay not with the emperor but with the prime minister and his cabinet ministers, handpicked by the Meiji leaders. • Further, the upper house included royal appointments and elected nobles. • The government was democratic in form but authoritarian in practice. • The traditional ruling class kept its influence and economic power. (pages 480–484)
The Meiji Restoration (cont.) • The Meiji reformers transformed other institutions, especially the military. • In 1871, a new army based on compulsory military service was formed. • All men served for three years. (pages 480–484)