The History Book

(Tina Sui) #1

254


IN MY HAND


I WIELD THE UNIVERSE


AND THE POWER


TO ATTACK AND KILL


THE SECOND OPIUM WAR (1856–1860)


O


n October 6, 1860, after
years of sporadic conflict
known as the Second
Opium War, an Anglo-French force
seized the imperial capital of Peking
(today Beijing), in China, to force
the Chinese to submit to trading
concessions. The point was
underlined when the Europeans

burned down the emperor’s
sumptuous Summer Palace. The
Chinese agreed to talks, and the
resulting Peking Convention not
only increased the number of Treaty
Ports open to Western trade, but
British and French zones of influence
were extended in south China and
along the fertile Yangtze River.

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Decline of imperial China

BEFORE
1793 Lord Macartney’s trade
mission to China is rebuffed.

c.1800 Opium is increasingly
used to pay for Chinese
goods, sparking a balance
of payments crisis.

1839–42 The First Opium
War ends with Hong Kong
ceded to Britain and five
Treaty Ports opened.

1850–64 The Taiping
Rebellion brings China close
to complete disintegration
and kills millions.

AFTER
1899 The anti-Western Boxer
Rebellion is put down by an
eight-nation foreign force. It
signals the effective end of
Chinese imperial authority.

Despite China’s great wealth, Western powers are
allowed very restricted access to Chinese ports.

Western merchants use opium to pay
for goods, damaging China’s economy.

The First Opium War is sparked by
Chinese attempts to stop the opium trade.

Unable to resist the West, China sees its status
diminished internally and externally.

The Second Opium War leads to further
crippling territorial and trading concessions.

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255


The port of Canton, in southern
China, was initially the only trading
port open to Western merchants. After
the two opium wars, Europe was given
exclusive access to many more.

See also: Stephenson’s Rocket enters service 220–25 ■ The construction of the Suez Canal 230–35 ■
The Siege of Lucknow 242 ■ The Meiji Restoration 252–53 ■ The Taiping Rebellion 265 ■ The Long March 304–05

CHANGING SOCIETIES


Less than 70 years before, Britain
had sent an embassy to China to
open trade talks, only to be rebuffed.
Late 18th-century Qing China was
the richest, most populous, and
most powerful country in the world,
and it could afford its complacency.
By the mid-19th century, however,
the nation was effectively bankrupt,
racked by famines and revolts,
and increasingly exploited and
humiliated by the West.

Uprisings and revolts
China’s problems were internal
as much as external. A swelling
population—100 million in 1650,
300 million in 1800, 450 million
in 1850—provoked recurring
famines. Between 1787 and 1813,
there were three major uprisings.
Its border provinces, conquered
at huge expense in the 17th and
18th centuries, were in a near-
permanent state of unrest.
In 1850, the Taiping Rebellion
erupted across central China,
resulting in the death of as many
as 20 million people. When it was
finally put down, in 1864, it was
only after Western intervention. The

Qing dynasty, its administration
increasingly ineffective, had
essentially lost control of China.

The West intrudes
It was this growing turmoil that
the West exploited, weakening
China further in the process. The
first, modest trading concessions
China had agreed to stipulated that
all Chinese goods be paid for in
silver. However, from the early
19th century, European traders,

mostly by bribing officials, were
increasingly able to use opium,
cheaply grown in India, to pay for
goods. By the 1820s, 5,000 chests of
opium a year were entering China.
The Chinese attempt to end
the opium trade and its debilitating
effects led to a crushing defeat in
the First Opium War of 1839–42,
with the European powers, Britain
above all, extracting substantial
trading concessions. It was
Western insistence in 1856 that
these concessions be extended
that led to the Second Opium War,
concluded in 1860 by the Peking
Convention. By 1900, a string
of Western trading ports were
scattered along the Chinese coast.
Britain, France, Japan, and Russia
now all controlled what had been
Chinese tributary states on its
borders. China, wracked by turmoil,
was effectively disintegrating. ■

The Boxer Rebellion


In the turmoil of late 19th-
century China, it was inevitable
that efforts would be mounted
to end the growing dominance
of the West. The imperial
government in Beijing made a
last-ditch attempt at reform on
Western lines, but the chaos
came to a head in 1899 with the
Boxer Rebellion, mounted by the
Militia United in Righteousness,
a semi-secret society composed
mostly of young men. Its goal,
to be achieved in part thanks to
their deluded belief that they

were invulnerable to Western
weapons, was the overthrow
of all Western interests.
The rebellion was variously
supported and opposed by
the imperial court, uncertain
whether it represented a means
of salvation or would merely
provoke Western reprisals.
The latter proved to be the
case. An eight-nation military
alliance, including Japan,
was sent into China against
the Boxers, and by September
1901 the rebellion had been
crushed, amid scenes of
indiscriminate violence.

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