Civilizations in Crisis: Qing China

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Civilizations in Crisis: Qing China 1644-1911

The Qing (Manchu) Dynasty 1644-1912 Though foreign, the Qing continued most Ming policies, including isolationism. Civil Service system was expanded. Patronized the arts and sciences

Qing Expansion Added (but didn t assimilate) Mongolia, Tibet, and Xinjiang. Used local officials to run conquered regions like colonies. Deliberately prevented sinification.

The Qing impact Solidified the dominance of maritime trade over land based trade (Silk Road) Between Qing and Russian expansion, nomadic groups were reduced to irrelevancy. China s remained the place that merchants traveled to to trade bullion for luxury goods.

Chinese society under the Manchu Kept traditional social hierarchy Emphasized respect for rank Women continued to be dominated Daughters less wanted, female infanticide Lower-class women continued to work in fields or markets

Manchu Domestic Policy Focused on rural problems Lowered tax and labor burdens Repaired roads, dikes, and irrigation systems Limited land accumulation by the rich Population growth and a lack of available land severely limited the reforms

Qing culture, cont d Landlords bought up most of the land, widening the gap between rich and poor Commercial and urban expansion increased (until 1800 or so) Imported silver led to a huge trade surplus (until 1800 or so) The Rise of the Compradors-Chinese merchants permitted to trade with foreigners Grew rich and powerful Were China s outside connection

The Rot from Within By 1800, The exam system is undermined by cheating and favoritism Government positions were now about gaining influence and building family fortunes The loss of revenue led to a weakening of the military, the infrastructure, etc.

Still more Rot By 1850, The damaged dikes and canals couldn t work anymore, and millions of peasants were left homeless Mass migrations and banditry ensued Social unrest increased everywhere Neither their social nor economic systems could handle the changes brought by the Colombian Exchange

The Opium Wars The British relied on Opium to fix the trade imbalance The Chinese feared the impact of opium trade on their economy and social order. The issue came to a head in 1830

Lin Zexu A Chinese official ended trade in the 1830s. Quarantined trade areas Destroyed opium shipments The British East India company demanded military action, and the British government declared war in 1839

Impact of the Opium Wars A series of fights between 1839 and 1858. China lost. Badly. On both sea and land China gave Hong Kong to the British, allowed Shanghai to be a foreign port. By 1890, 90 ports were leased by foreign companies or governments Opium poured in. By 1850, foreign governments or merchants made nearly all of China s trade decisions,

The Taiping Rebellion A response to the social unrest of the previous century, as well as foreign incursions Led by Hong Xiuquan, the rebellion engulfed China for two decades

Goals of the Taiping Rebellion Radical equality Abolish private property Extreme land reform Gender equality No footbinding or prostitution Industrialize China Railroads, universal health care, public education, open media End opium use

Appeal of the Taiping Both modern and traditional: Denounced the Qing rulers as foreigners, and painted themselves as real Chinese. Rejected Buddhism, Daosim, and most importantly Confucianism Embraced a form of Christianity instead

The gist of the Rebellion Killed up to 30 million people Failed to unite with other rebellions United many enemies by attacking not only the government, but the regional landlords as well as religious groups. In the end, regional warlords came to dominate the interior and western militaries dominated the coast.

The impact of the Taiping Rebellion The central government is reduced to near-uselessness. China became politically dependent on European powers. The Dynastic cycle is broken. To what extent is the last half of the 19 th century another warring states period?

The Self-strengthening movements On the stay- Chinese end: Revamped civil service exam Renewed govt support for the regional landlords New relations with scholar-gentry Repair infrastructure On the copy the west end: Encouraged foreign investment Mild industrialization Military reforms Rise of the Compradors

Why did self-strengthening fail? Too little, too late, and with a profound under-appreciation of China s problems The landlord class resisted any real change How can foreign technology bring you independence? Like Russia, they wanted to preserve the existing order rather than transform it.

In the end Everyone knew a new China was needed. Nobody could agree on what the new China should be The Boxer rebellion tried to expel all foreigners Regional warlords envisioned leading a new dynasty The sons of the scholar-gentry combined with the compradors to envision a modern Chinese Republic. The only thing they shared was a new heightened sense of Chinese nationalism

The Final breaths The Dowager Empress Cixi repressed just about all reforms. Imperial corruption got continually worse In 1905, the civil service exam is abolished In 1912, Pu Yi is overthrown and Sun Yixian becomes the first President of the Republic of China.