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  • It’s not for nothing that the period stretching around 100 years from the 1840s to the 1940s

  • is known as China’s century of humiliation.

  • During this time, the country suffered huge internal fragmentation,

  • embarrassing loss of territory, and invasion from powers that had,

  • for thousands of years, been subordinate to China.

  • Maybe it was nostalgia, maybe it was ignorance,

  • but Chinese rulers should have seen it coming.

  • Hello and welcome to It’s History.

  • My name’s Guy, and this episode in our story of China

  • takes you through a series of invasions, uprisings and revolutions

  • that led to the foundation of the Republic of China,

  • a hastily contrived state that emerged from the inglorious end

  • to thousands of years of regnal rule.

  • In the wake of the First Opium War, which resulted from confiscation of British opium shipments,

  • a series of treaties would swing the balance of power from China to the colonial states.

  • Having prevented just such a loss of influence through strict measures such as the Canton port system,

  • which allowed a state monopoly to keep a firm grip on all international trade,

  • China now lost Hong Kong to Great Britain,

  • and had to pay punishing indemnities to compensate for trade losses.

  • These were theunequal treaties”, so-called because Britain had no obligations to China in return.

  • Meanwhile, the first major incidence of anti-Manchu sentiment was just round the corner.

  • In 1851, Hong Xiuquan established the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom.

  • It was a Christian revolt -- evidence that colonial missionaries had been successfully spreading the Gospel --

  • but also evidence of a severely deluded gentleman.

  • Hong had failed the Imperial Examinations, and then became very ill.

  • As he recovered from his fever, he claimed to have a vision --

  • that he we was the younger brother of Jesus. Either mother Mary had been in a time warp,

  • or Hong had been on something very strong.

  • In spite of the rather whacky justification for the uprising,

  • Hong’s newly declared kingdom could at least claim to hold high moral standing.

  • Slavery, prostitution, opium, footbinding and torture were all banned,

  • leaving only sex for evening entertainment --

  • or letter-writing, which was Hong’s main pastime.

  • In fact, he withdrew from frontline leadership and ruled exclusively by written decree.

  • His notes became increasingly cryptic, and then took on the form of sermons.

  • It did not take long to crush the revolt. In fact, Qing forces were backed up by colonial armies.

  • Hong and his associates had tried expressly to seal alliances with European powers

  • and the middle classes who’d had enough of Qing heavy-handedness.

  • The colonistsreligious sympathies might have lain with Hong and his followers,

  • but the threat they posed to internal stability was too great.

  • Nanjing, the seat of the fated new holy empire,

  • fell in 1864, but Hong had gained cult status

  • and there were still several hundred thousand loyal followers championing his cause.

  • Both Sun Yat-sen, China’s prized revolutionary,

  • and Chairman Mao cited Hong as an inspiration.

  • The Taiping Rebellion was a major wake-up call for the authorities,

  • and ushered in a period known as the Tongzhi Restoration starting in the 1860s.

  • This aimed to reestablish Confucian order and ethics as part of a self-strengthening movement.

  • The authorities turned back to old times and old thinking to try to avert a crisis,

  • but it was a policy that was never going to work.

  • The revolutionary spirit was rife, and there was abject failure to see that the theories

  • and practices that had governed China since prehistory could now only form the backdrop

  • to a much revised approach to politics, trade and international relations.

  • Empress Dowager Cixi did not help progress.

  • This was her heyday; while well-intentioned rulers tried to introduce changes

  • that might have restored some faith in Manchu rule,

  • Cixi stubbornly and, rather ignorantly, meddled to divert the course of modernisation.

  • The first phase of self-strengthening, in the 1860s, focussed on military prowess and foreign relations.

  • Western firearms, machines and scientific knowledge and training were the focus of imperial policy.

  • A strong indication of diplomatic progress was the foundation

  • of the Imperial Maritime Customs Service, led by diplomat Horatio Nelson Lay

  • (no relation to the great Lord Nelson, Britain’s naval hero):

  • The Service was designed to collect tariffs equitably, and generate new revenues for the Manchu court.

  • It was successful in its task,

  • increasing takings from 8.5m taels of silver annually in 1865 to 14.5m in 1885.

  • A tael, by the way, was a unit of measurement.

  • The second phase focussed on industrial development.

  • Shipping was commercialised, as were railways and mines.

  • This was less than successful, as core industries were now plagued by nepotism and corruption.

  • The Second Opium War, which resulted from an unjustified Chinese attack on a British vessel,

  • led to the 1858 Tientsin Treaty, which dealt a heavy blow to China.

  • All official documentation was now to be written in English,

  • and Britain was to be granted unrestricted access to all Chinese waterways.

  • By now, colonial powers were becoming nervous about the uprisings that were targeting religious groups.

  • Conservatives in the Qing court wanted in turn to distance themselves from foreign influence,

  • and Prince Gong, who had been instrumental in negotiating diplomatic relations,

  • was quietly quashed.

  • The first Sino-Japanese War ending in 1895 came as another huge blow to China.

  • Over the centuries, this comparatively small collection of islands had been a Chinese puppet.

  • But Japan had seen change on the horizon, and had opened up to foreign trade in the 1850s.

  • She sent delegations of students all over the world to study the makings of western governance and progress.

  • 20 years of education paid off in subduing Korea in 1894,

  • which led to her independence and a large bounty to Japan that equalled over six times her GDP.

  • Japan’s interference led indirectly to the formation of the short-lived Republic of Taiwan in 1895,

  • and she entered into a series of new alliances with western powers

  • that began to encircle China.

  • Emperor Guangxu was on the throne after China’s heavy losses both to neighbouring and far-away powers.

  • He was shocked by Japan’s rampant progress, and feared the scramble for privileges in China

  • from German and Russian imperial prospectors.

  • He initiated the Hundred DaysReform,

  • where he intended to introduce widespread modernisation to China’s administration

  • and defence structures.

  • Guangxu wanted rapid industrialisation throughout China, and to inspire the capitalist ethic.

  • But China had no tradition of any of these things, and a decree from an emperor

  • was not going to change the status quo overnight.

  • Moreover, Empress Dowager Cixi loosened her grasp on the ultra-nationalist and fierce Boxers.

  • Both she and they resented the increasingly suffocating influence

  • that foreign powers had over China, and it led to war.

  • The damage Japan dealt to China during the first half of the Century of Humiliation

  • is evidence enough of how imperial China had lost its way, and how the colonial powers

  • had worked to wrest power from imperial hands. Japan’s rapprochement with the west

  • had been initiated by the US, and led to alliances with Great Britain in 1902.

  • She had precipitated Korea’s independence, and Taiwan’s too.

  • Though the colonial powers had been dragged into war to suppress the Taiping uprising,

  • and been the targets themselves of insurrection at the hands of the Boxers,

  • they had succeeded in taking advantage of a brief period of reform during the 1860s and 1870s.

  • But by now, the Qing dynasty’s demise was inevitable. Revolutionary fervour was rife,

  • and China’s declaration of independence was just a few years away.

  • One of the main events of this serious of uprisings was the Boxer Rebellion.

  • If you'd like to know more about this event in Chinese history click up here!

  • "Adapt or Die" so said Charles Darwin at a time where most of the world was doing just that.

  • The Qing dynasty would have been wise to take note of the edict.

  • But can the imperial leaders themselves be blamed for mismanaging the transition to a free-market world?

  • They certainly did not do much to help necessary changes on their way.

  • But could the imperial powers have been kinder, perhaps helping to introduce reforms

  • that would have left Chinese rule and order in a stronger position leading into the twentieth century?

  • And why did nobody assassinate Cixi?!

  • Leave your comments and queries in the section below.

  • We love the fact that so many of you are inspired by our videos, and were equally happy to engage in debate with you!

  • My name’s Guy, thanks for popping by see you next time.

It’s not for nothing that the period stretching around 100 years from the 1840s to the 1940s

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世紀的屈辱--第一部分 l 中國歷史沿革 (The Century of Humiliation - Part 1 l HISTORY OF CHINA)

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    Pedroli Li 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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