China & the New Imperialism

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China & the New Imperialism 12/7/2018 1 China & the New Imperialism 2 The Opium War • During the late 1700s, British merchants began making huge profits by trading opium grown in India for Chinese tea • The Chinese government demanded that Britain stop selling opium, but the British refused, insisting on the right of free trade • In 1839, the Chinese tried to stop the opium trade, but the British responded with gunships 3 • The Chinese lost the Opium War against the British, & China was forced to accept the Treaty of Nanjing, opening Chinese ports to British trade & giving the island of Hong Kong to Britain 4 The Taiping Rebellion Weakens China • The rebellion lasted from 1850-1864 & almost toppled the Qing dynasty • The Qing government lost power to regional commanders 5 China Launched Reform Efforts • In the 1860s, reformers launched the “self-strengthening movement”, which imported Western technology to build shipyards, railroads, mining, industry, modern weapons, & streamline government • In 1894, China fought the Sino-Japanese War against Japan, which ended in disaster for China & Japan gaining the island of Taiwan 6 • The Sino-Japanese War showed that China remained backward, while Japan had modernized • Western powers, such as Britain, France, & Russia carved out spheres of influence along the Chinese coast • The Unite States proposed the Open Door Policy, allowing for equal access to Chinese trade for Western powers • Emperor Guang Xu launched the Hundred Days of Reform, which was an effort to modernize China, but was imprisoned by conservatives 7 The Qing Dynasty Falls • The Boxer Rebellion led to greater Westernization, which led to nationalism • Nationalism, discontent & a weak emperor led to the fall of the Qing Dynasty • Sun Yixian wanted to rebuild China on the “Three Principles of the People”, which were nationalism, democracy & livelihood or economic security 1 .
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