Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGwendoline Clara Lawrence Modified over 9 years ago
1
China Resists Outside Influence Ch.28 section 1
2
China and the West Chinese looked down on all foreigners because of pride in their own culture 1793- an ambassador from England met with the Chinese They were unimpressed with the goods England had to offer and rejected trade China was self-sufficient and didn’t need to trade Rice, corn, sweet potatoes, and peanuts fed their large population Mining and manufacturing industries in salt, tin, silver, iron Production of cotton, silk, and porcelain The British were buying large quantities of Chinese tea in exchange for silver
3
First Opium War (1839-1842) The British attempted to open trade in the 1700s by smuggling in opium for non-medical uses Addicting the population would increase demand By 1835 about 12 million Chinese were addicted to opium The emperor of China protested to Queen Victoria, who ignored him His argument was that since the drug was illegal in England, England should not sell it to another country A primarily naval war ensued with China suffering defeat and Britain gaining Hong Kong and extraterritorial rights
7
Taiping Rebellion Hong Xuiquan recruited followers during the 1830s to build a “Heavenly Kingdom of Great Peace” Taiping means “great peace” in Chinese All would share in China’s wealth and no one would live in poverty By 1850, Hong had an army of 1 million Nanjing was captured and declared Hong’s capital Internal feuding and defeats by Chinese imperial troops, British, and French forces ended the rebellion At least 20 million died in the rebellion
9
Boxer Rebellion Poor peasants and workers in China resented special privileges given to foreigners They also hated Chinese Christians for adopting a foreign faith Some peasants and workers soon formed a secret society called the Society of Righteous and Harmonious Fists (Boxers) In 1900, Boxers surrounded the European section of Beijing and kept it under siege until a combination of foreign troops defeated them Many Chinese still felt they needed to rid their country of foreign influence
13
Beginnings of Reform In 1905 members of the royal court took a world tour to study different governments They recommended that China restructure its government after Japans and become a constitutional monarchy Changes were slow and China continued to experience civil unrest for the next four decades
14
Homework Read Ch.28 section 1 and answer questions 3-7: Due Friday
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.