Late Qing Crisis HI 168: Lecture 4 Dr. Howard Chiang.

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Late Qing Crisis HI 168: Lecture 4 Dr. Howard Chiang

Empress Dowager Cixi

Zongli Yamen

The Changing Context 1861: Zongli Yamen 1864: international law 1873: foreign audience no kowtow 1876: diplomatic missions Universal empire ( 天下 ) to nation-state ( 國家 ) Western perception – Mutiny of 1857 in India -> British policy in China changed to moderation (gradual decline)

Sino-French War ( )

Tributary Retraction Losing Vietnam: Sino-French War ( ) -realists (Li Hongzhang) vs. pro-war faction -afterward: final phase of the “self-strengthening movement” ( ) Losing Korea: Li-Ito Convention (1884) -after Japan annexed Okinawa in Each country promised to notify the other if it was planning to send forces in the future Losing Taiwan: First Sino-Japanese War ( ) -July 23, 1894, Japanese captured Seoul

Li Hongzhang

Sino-Japanese War ( )

Treaty of Shimonoseki April 17, 1895: China recognizes independence of Korea China cedes to Japan Taiwan and the Liaodong Peninsula - Triple Intervention (Russia, Germany, and France) million taels indemnity China is to grant Japan (replacing Britain) the most-favored-nation treatment

“Carving up the Chinese Mellon” Russian Interest: Russia monopolized special status in Beijing until the Treaty of Tianjin in 1860 – insisted that the Qing ceded a million square km of lands east and north of the Amur River to Russia (Maritime Province) Chinese Eastern Railway: cuts through Manchuria

“Carving up the Chinese Mellon” Germany: 99 yrs Qingdao & Jiaozhou Port (Mar 1898) Russia: 25 yrs Port Arthur & Dalian (Mar 1898) Russia: South Manchuria Railway Britain: 25 yrs Port of Weihai (Mar 1898) Britain: 99 yrs New Territories of Hong Kong (June 1898) France: 99 yrs Guangzhou Bay (Apr 1898)

Partitioning of China - Queen Victoria - William II (Germany) - Nicholas II (Russia) - French Marianne - Meiji Emperor

Kang Youwei The Book of Great Unity

Liang Qichao - ‘grouping’ - democracy - newspapers - modern intelligentsia

Guangxu Emperor

Yuan Shikai

Eight-Nation Force

The Boxer Catastrophe Context: late 19 th -c. resentment at foreign presence -gentry & local officials concerned with the rivalry of Christian missionaries -China’s economic downtown - the availability of foreign goods, the establishment of Western businesses and railways, and the circulation of foreign currency -heavy taxes levied Context: domestic natural disasters -Yellow River flooded 400 villages in Shandong -severe draught in north China -popular superstitions blamed foreign presence

The Boxer Catastrophe The Boxer movement: -a social explosion that emerged from a culture of poverty in north China -name taken from the martial arts “Boxing” -constituents: young farmers, laborers, unemployed drifters, and other socially marginalized individuals -3 main targets: foreigners, Chinese Christian converts, & others involved in foreign economic enterprises spread to Zhili, Henan, Shanxi, and Inner Mongolia and Manchuria -lacked central leadership (unlike Taiping rebellion) -The Empress Dowager Cixi supported the Boxers!!

Eight-Nation Force

The Boxer Protocol (Sept. 1901) -Execution and punishment of officials who had participated in the war -Suspended the civil service examinations for 5 years in 45 cities -Demanded over 2 dozen forts to be demolished -Expanded legation headquarters -2-year prohibition on China’s importation of arms -Most disastrous: 450 million taels indemnity (the Qing government’s annual revenue is million taels)