The European Powers in Asia 841
the Chinese market with
cheap textiles, bringing unem
ployment to the local popula
tion, and foreign soldiers, who
often mistreated the Chinese.
In 1900, the Boxers attacked
Europeans, Americans, and
Chinese Christians in Shan
dong Province, cutting the
railway line between Peking
(Beijing) and Tientsin (Tian
jin). These attacks spread
quickly to the imperial capital
and other parts of northern
China. After the Boxers killed
several hundred “foreign dev
ils,” British, Russian, German,
French, Japanese, and Ameri
can troops put down the
rebellion. Their governments
assessed the Chinese govern
ment a crushing indemnity of
67.5 million pounds.
The “scramble for conces
sions” went on. Russia’s com
petition with Japan for
Manchuria in northeastern
China led to its shocking
defeat in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905 (see Chapter 18). Follow
ing its victory, Japan took over and expanded the Manchurian railways.
This humiliation, and the subsequent disadvantageous railway concessions
granted to the European powers and Japan, intensified Chinese nationalist
sentiment and contributed to the overthrow of the Ch’ing dynasty in 1911.
In the meantime, Japan’s aggressive imperialism in East Asia was well
under way.
The United States in Asia
The United States, too, took colonies, believing that this was its right as an
emerging world power. However, the American imperial venture in the
Philippine Islands, an archipelago in the Pacific Ocean, was not all smooth
sailing. During the Spanish-American War of 1898, fought largely over the
Caribbean island of Cuba, the American admiral George Dewey (1837—
1917) sailed into Manila Bay and defeated the Spanish fleet, capturing
Manila. The United States had been helped by a Filipino nationalist,