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iviLizations in' Crisis: The Ottoman Empi îe,the Islamic Heartlands, and Qing China From Empire to Nation:Ottoman Retreat and the Birth of Turkey The Last Dynasty:The Rise and Fallof the Oing Empire in China THI NKING HISTORICALLY: Western Dominance DOCUMENT: Transforming lmperial China into a Nation and the Decline of Civilizations GLOBAL CONNECTIONS: Muslim and Chinese Decline and a Shifting Global Balance Western lntrusions and the Crisis in the Arab lslamic Heartlands VISUALIZING THE PAST: Mapping the Decline of Civilizations I I ong Xiuquan was a deeply troubled young man.One of þl tive children from a struggling peasant family living in the I I Guangdong region on China's southeast coast, Hong had worked hard to excel in school so that he could take the exams that would provide entry into the lower rungs of the scholar-gentry-dominated bureaucracy. Counting on Hong's demonstrated aptitude for book learning to improve the family fortunes, his parents and kinsfolk scrimped to find the money needed to send him to school and hire tutors to prepare him for the rigorous examination process. The pressure tense, of such life-defining testing is invariably inbut with the fate of his family in the balance Hong found his failures deeply humiliating. Mortification was increasingly laced with anger as he tried and failed four times to pass the exams that would earn him the lowest officialdegree, which carried with it a modest stipend from the state and the ríght to wear the robes of the scholar-gentry. Perhaps to escape the shame he felt in the company of family and friends who were well aware of his failures, Hong became an avid traveler. ln 1836, in Whampoa, which was close to the great port cìty of Canton, Hong first came into contact with Protestant missionaries from the United States. After taking up the serious study of the Bible, Hong came to believe that he was the younger son of Jesus and that God had given him a sword to rid the world of corrupt officials and other agents of the devil. Hong was well educated in a society where few went school. He was also a charismatic speakeç given to trances a speaking in tongues, and he was convinced that he had a mission. He began to preach in public and was soon ba hundreds, then thousands of converts to his growing ba "God worshipers." Often in very garbled renditions, Biblical ings and Christian rituals were widely deployed by a his sect, which became known as the Taipings (meaning Peace"), after one of the Chinese titles Hong claimed for hi As his following grew into the tens of thousands, Hong's ing became more strident and openly directed against the 0ing dynasty. Hong charged that the Oing rulers were the of all manner of earthly evils and responsible for China's defeats at the hands of the British. The Taiping revol agenda was also aimed at the scholar-gentry and other mental aspects of the Confucian order. ln rebel-con ancestral tablets were smashed, land was seized from gentry, and the imperial examination system was abol Taipings proclaimed that women were equal to men, Christian solar calendar, and sought to re5tore moral banning slavery, concubinage, arranged marriage, opium footbinding, judicial torture, and the worship of idols. sively defeating a Oing mi litary force sent to put an Taiping movement, Hong's followert la unched one of lived and most deadly rebellions of the 19th century. Both Hong's personal crisis and the revolutionary movement his teachings launched by the disintegration-beginning in the early 1800s-of Chinese civilization, which of the world's most advanced for thousands of years. At the other end of Asia, the Iast of the rival Muslim dynasties that had ruled the Middle East and south Asia in the era, had gone into decline even earlier. In both cases, the sheer size, complexiry and tary power of each of these empires, combined with the ongoing rivalries among powers, prevented them from being formally colonized like much of the rest of Asia' 602 I Pacifìc. follows sought see in the chapter that nd the civilizations they under repeated assault during The Taiping Rebellion was a violent, radi_ of a succession of movements in both China and the Middte East that sought either to reform or put an end to the existing so_ cal yariant cial and political order. The Taiping Rebeilion and its counterpart in the Muslim Middle East, the Mahdist upheaval that raged in the AngloEgyptian Sudan for most of the last two decades of the centur¡ were dedicated to bringing down ¿n existing social order in order to replace it a religiously inspired utopian society. At other end of the political spectrum, West-educated dissidents sought to build strong -states patterned after those of western The disruptions that resulted from the of Western industrial powers in dominated areas, such as China and Ottoman Empire, often contributed to the of these political movements. But internal divisions within the emPlres played a far greater role in precipithese political upheavals and determining impact on China and the Middle East in half of the 19th century. Empire to Nation: Retreat and the of Tlrrkey the Ottoman crisis was brought on bYu of weak rulers within a political and order that was centered on the sultan at Inactive or inept sultans opened the way struggles between rival ministers, reliand the commanders of the |anis- This,panoramic scene painted by a chinese witness to the Taiping rebeilion shows the rebel and burning an enemy town and a nearby estate house of a large randrirrd's family in Competition between elite factions eroded effective leadership within the empire, weakening its control over the population it claimed to rule. provincial officials colluded with the local land-owning classes, the 'cheat the sultan of a good portion of the taxes due him, and they skimmed all the revenue from the already impoverished peasantry in the countryside. same time, the position of the artisan workers in the towns deteriorated because of imported manufactures from Europe. Particularþ in the 18th anð. early 19th cenled to urban riots in which members of artisan guilds and young ment associations a leading role. Merchants within the emPrre, especially those who belonged to minority such.as the ]ews and Christians, grew more and more dependent on com- with their counterparts. This pattern accelerated the influx of Western goods that was steadily undermining handicraft industries within the empire.In this economic dependence on some of its most threatening European political rivals in- zr.^ \fta l/^\ \$ì.ßened by internal strife and unable to prevent European rivals from whittling away its territories, the 0ttoman Empire appeared near disintegration. But ín the late 18th century able Ottoman rulers and committed reformers devised strategies that slowed the decline of the empire and the ailvance of the European p0wers. ilå.,î::äålsTrandedcliteúat emuged in 603 604 PartV ' 1640 c.E. The Dawn of the Industrial Age, 1750-1914 1800 1850 c.E. 1875 c.E. c.E. 1900 c.E. 1905 Fatherland ParÇ 1644 Manchu nomads 1805-1849 Reign of 1850-1864 Taiping conquer China; Oing Muhammad Ali in Egypt Rebellion in China 1876 Constitution promulgated for dynasty rules 1807-1839 Reign of '1854-1856 Crimean War Ottoman Empire 1908 Young Turk seize 1662-1722 Reign of 1876-1908 Reign of power in lstanbul Kangxi emperor in China Ottoman Sultan Mahmud ll 1826 Ottoman Janissary 1722 Safavid dynasty falls corps destroyed in Persia 1727 First printing pres 1834 Postal system estab- set up in Ottoman Empire 1736-1799 Reign of Oianlong emperor in China 1768-177 4 lished in Ottoman Empire 1838 Ottoman treaty with British removing trade restrictions in the empire 1 856-l 860 Anglo-French war against China 1866 Fint railway begun Ottoman Sultan Abdul in Ottoman Empire '1869 Opening of the Suez 1877 Treaty ofSan Stefano; Ottomans driven from most of the Balkans 1882 British invasion and occupation of Egypt; failed Canal 1870 Ottoman legal code reformed 1839-1841 Opium War in ,Disastrous Ottoman defeat in war China with Rusia 1789-1807 Reign of 1839-1876 Tonzimst reforms in the Ottoman Ottoman Sultan Selim lll 1793 British embassy to Oianlong emperor in China 1798 French invasion of Egypt; Napoleon defeats Egypt's Mamluk rulen Empire 1839-1897 Life of lslamic thinker al-Afghani 1849-1905 Life of Egyptian reformer Muhammad Abduh established in Egypt Hamid Arabi revolt in Egypt 1883 Mahdist victory ove r British-led Egyptian expeditionary force at Shakyan 1889 Young Turks establish the Ottoman Society for Union and Progress in Paris 1898 British-Egyptian army defeats the Mahdist army at Omdurman 1898-1901 Boxer Rebellion and 100 Days of Reform in China the Past feature, p.6lQ.In the early 18th centur¡ the Austrian Habsburg dynasty was the beneficiary of Ottoman decadence. The long-standing threat to Vienna was forever the Ottomans were pushed out of Hungary and the northern Balkans. In the late 1700s the Russian Empire, strengthened by Peter the Great's forced (see Chapter 18), became the main threat to the Ottomans'survival. As military setbacks and the Russians advanced across the steppes toward warm-water ports on the Black Sea' tomans'weakness was underscored by their attempts to forge alliances with other Chrístian As the Russians gobbled up poorly defended Ottoman lands in the Caucasus and Crimea, ject Christian peoples of the Balkans grew more and more restive under Ottoman rule. In major uprising broke out in Serbia that was repressed only after years of difficult and costly campaigns. But military force could not quell the Greek revolt that broke out ig the earþ by 1830 the Greeks had regained their independence after centuries of Ottoman rule. In I also gained its freedom, and by the late 1870s the Ottomans had been driven from nearþ of the Balkans and thus most of the European provinces of their empire. In the decades lowed, Istanbul was repeatedly threatened by Russian armies or thðse of the newly Balkan states. Reform and Survival Southeast Europe and the 0ttoman Empire H Despite almost two centuries of unrelieved defeats on the battlefield and steady losses of the Ottoman Empire somehow managed to survive into the 20th century. Its survival part from divisions between the European powers, each ofwhich feared that the others more from the total dismemberment of the empire. In fact, the British concern to sians from controlling Istanbul-thus gaining direct access to and threatening British nance in the Mediterranean-led them to prop uP the tottering Ottoman regime last half of the 19th century. Ultimatel¡ the Ottomans' survival depended on reforms initiated by the sultans and their advisors at the top of the imperial system and cattied over most of the 19th century. At each stage, reform initiatives increased tensions within Chapter 26 ' Civilizations in Crisis: The Ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and eing China 605 elite' Some factions advocated far-reaching change along European lines, others argued for reforms on precedents from the early ottoman period, anã oth.i èlite groups had a iested interest in blocking change of any sort. based These deep divisions within the Ottoman elite made reform a dangerous enterprise. Although modest innovations, including the introduction of the first printing press in 1727, had been enacted in the 18th centur¡ Sultan Selim III (r. 1789-1g07) believed that bolder initiatives were needed if the dynasty and empire were to survive. But his reform efforts, airried at improving administrative effrcienc'¡ and building a new army and navy, angered powerfrrl factions within the bureaucracy. They were also seen by the fanissary corps, which had long been the dominant force in the Ottoman (see Chapter 2l), as a direct threat. Selim's modest initiatives cost him his throne-he was a fanissary revolt in 1807-and his life. Two decades later, a more skillful sultan, Mahmud II, succeeded where Selim III had failed. secretly building a small professional army with the help of European advisors, in lg26 MahII ordered his agents to incite a mutiny of the Janissaries. This beþan when the angry fanisoverturned the huge soup kettles in their mess area. With little thought given to planning next move, the ]anissaries poured into the streets of Istanbul, more a mob than a military Once on the streets, they were shocked to be confronted by the sultan's well trained new The confrontation ended in the slaughter of the )anissaries, their families, and the fanissaries, an Empire ing adminisarmy and an sultan; built a ed revolution of private army; their religious Empire on allies. After cowing the ayan into at least formal submission to the throne, Mahmud II launched a of much more far-reaching reforms than Selim III had attempted. Although thê ulama, or experts, and some of Mahmud's advisors argued for self.strengthening through a returir to and Islamic past, Mahmud II patterned his reform program on Western precedents. all, the Western powers had made a shambles of his empire. He established a diplomatic corps lines and exchanged ambassadors with the European powers (Figure 26.2). The westof the army was expanded from Mahmud's secret force to the whole military establish. European military advisors, both army and navy, were imported to supervise the oïerhaul of training, armament, and officers' education. In the decades that followed, western influences were pervasive at the upper levels of Otsociet¡ particularþ during the period of reforms between 1839 and 1876. education was reorganized on Western training in the European sciences and Tmzimat refor¡ns Series of reforms in Ottoman Empire between 1839 and 1876; estabtished Wesrern-style universit¡ state postal system, railwa)6, extensive legal reforms; resulted in creation of new @nstitution in 1876. Reform of the State as an lmperial Project: The Hatt-i Serif of Gülhane, November 3, 1 839 was introduced. State-run postal systems were established in the in the 1860s. News- major towns of the legal reforms were enacted, and based heavily on European was promulgated. These legal reforms the position of minority reliwhose role in the Ottoman econ- steadily. were adverseþ affected by opened the empire more Western influences. This was espe- artisans, whose position was by an 1838 treary with the irnport taxes and other bartrade that had protected indige- from competition from the West. gained little from the Tanziwas particularly true of women. woment education and an end to and veiling were debated in Figure 26.2 ln the courtyard of the Topkap¡ Palace in lstanbul, Sultan Selim lll receives dignitaries from throughout the Ottoman Empire in the midst of a splendidly attired imperial entourage. 606 Part V' The Dawn of the Industrial Age, 1750-1914 Women and Children Workers in an ottoman Textile Mill, 1 878 H Ottoman intellectual circles from the 1860s onward. But few improvements in the Position of women, even among the elite classes, were won until after the last Ottoman sultan was driven from power in 1908. Repression and Revolt Abdul Hmid Ottoman sultan who attempted to return to despotic absolutism during reign ftom 1878 to 1908; nullified constitution and restricted civil liberties; deposed in coup in 1908. The Decline of the ottoman Empire H Ottoman Societf for Union and Progress Organiation of political agitators in oPPosition to rule of Abdul Ha¡mid; also alled "Young Tula"; desired to restore 1876 constitution. Political 0ppression in the ottoman Empire Eil The reforms initiated by the sultans and their advisors improved the Ottomans' ability to fend off, or at least deflect, the assaults of fpreign aggressors. But they increasingly threatened the dynasty responsible for them. Western-educated bureaucrats, military offìcers, and professionals came in_ creasingly to view the sultanate as a maj,or barrier to even more radical reforms and the full formation of society. The new elites also clashed with conservative but powerful g{oups, such as ulama and the ayan, who had a vested interest in preserving as much as possible of the old order. The Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid responded to the growing threat from westernized cers and civilians by attempting a return to despotic absolutism during his long reign from 1878 1908. He nullified the constitution and restricted civil liberties, particularly the freedom of press. These measures deprived westernized elite groups of the power they had gained in imperial policies. Dissidents or even suspected troublemakers were imprisoned and sometimes tured and killed. But the deep impact of decades of reform was demonstrated by the fact that Abdul Hamid continued to push for westernization in certain areas. The military adopt European arms and techniques, increSsingly under the instruction of German advisors. addition, railways, including the famous line that linked Berlin to Baghdad, and telegraph were built between the main population centers. Western-style educational institutions grew, judicial reforms continued. The despotism of Abdul Hamid came to an abrupt end in the nearly bloodless coup of Resistance to his authoritarian rule had led exiled Turkish intellectuals and political found the Ottoman Society for Union and Progress in Paris in 1889. The Young Turks 26.3), as members of the society came to be known, professed their loyalty to the Ottoman and were determined to restore the 1876 constitution and resume far-reaching reforms I Figure 26.3 Taken afterTurkey's defeat in World War I and the successful struggles of the Turks to partition oftheir heartlands in Asia Minor, this photo features a group ofYoung Turks who had survived or challenges and grown a good deal older The man in the business suit in the center is Mustafa Kemal, of who emerged as a masterful military com mander in the war and went on to become the founder Chapter 26 ' Cívilizations in Crisis: The Ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and eing China 607 emPire' Clandestine printing presses operated by the Young Turks turned out tracts denouncing the regime and outlining further steps to be taken to modernize and. thus save the empire. AssasJinadons were attempted and coups plotted, but until 1908 all were undone by a combination of divisions within the ranks of the westernized dissidents and police countermeasures. much to do with i ultan's power, they restor inistration, and even the status of women. The sultan was retained as a political figurehead and the highest religious authority in Islam. Unfortunatel¡ the officers soon became embroiled in factional fights that took up much of the limited time remaining before the outbreak of World War L In addition, their hold on power shaken when they lost a new round of wars in the Balkans and a conflict against Italy over the Ottomans'last remaining possession in north Africa. lust as the sultans had before them, the Young Turk officers managed to stave off the collapse of thè empire by achieving lastmilitary victories and by playing the hostile European powers against each other. Although it is difûcult to know how the young Turks would have fared if it had not been for outbreak of World War I, their failure to resolve several critical issues did not bode well for the overthrew the sultan, but they could not bring themselves to give up the empire ruled Turks for over 600 years. The peoples most affected by their decision to salvage what was left of empire were the A¡abs of the Fertile Crescent and coastal Arabia, who still remained under Otcontrol. Arab leaders in Beirut and Damascus had initially favored the 1908 coup because believed it would bring about the end of their long domination by the Turks. To their dismay, .Arabs discovered that the Young Turks not only meant to continue their subjugation but were to enforce state control to a degree unthinkable to the later Ottoman sultans. The quarthe leaders of the Young Turk coalition and the growing resistance in the Arab porof what was left of the Ottoman Empire were suddenly cut short in August 1914. supporters n Young Turks H 0verthrow Abdul Hamid 1t,1908 Æf The Young Turk Revolution, '1908 Intrusions and the Crisis the Arab Islamic Heartlands earþ 1800s, the Arab peoples of the Fertile crescent, Egypt, coastal Arabia, and north A-frica lâ-:' centuries under Ottoman-Turkish rule. Although most Arabs resented Turkish domi@JrofornO crisis of confidence could identiffwith the Ottomans as fellow Muslims, who were both ardent defenders of brought on by successive reverses and and patrons of Islamic culture. Still, the steadily diminishing capacity of the Ottomans to the increasing strength of European Arab Islamic heartlands left them at risk of conquest by the aggressive European powers. rivals elicited a variety of responses in capture of outlying but highly developed Islamic states, from those in the Indonesian the lslamic world. lslamic thinkers and India to Algeria in north Africa, engendered a sense of crisis among the Islamic debated the best way to reverse the the Middle Eastern heartlands. From the most powerfrrl adversaries of Christendom, the decline and drive back the Europeans. had become the besieged. The Islamic world had been displaced by the West as the leading wide range of endeavors, from scientific inquiry to monumental architecture. Ali and the Failure of Westernizationin Egypt did not establish a permanent European presence in the Islamic heartlands, Napoleon's Egypt in 1798 sent shock waves across what remained of the independent Muslim Napoleons motives for launching the expedition had little to do with designs the Middle East. Rather, he saw the Eg¡ptian campaign as the prelude to destroying in India, where the French had come out on the short end of earlier wars for emprre. calculations, Napoleon managed to slip his fleet past the British blockade in the and put ashore his armies in |uly 1798 (see Visualizing rhe Past feature). There folthe most lopsided military clashes in modern history. As they advanced inland, were met by tens of thousands of cavaby bent on defending the Mamluk regime as a vassal of the Ottoman sultans. The term Mamluk literally meant slave, the Turkic orrgms of the regime in Egypt. Beginning as slaves who seryed Muslim Mamluks had centuries earlier risen in the ranks as military commanders and seized Western Dominance and the Decline of Civilizations in our examination of the forces that led to the breakup of the great civi- As we have seen lizations in human histor¡ each civilization has a unique history. But some general patterns have been associated with the decline of civilizations. Internal weaknesses and external pres- sures have acted over time to erode the institutions and break down the defenses of even the largest and most sophisticated clilizations. In the preindustrial era, slow and vulnerable communication systems were a major barrier to the long-term cohesion of the political systems that held civilizations together. Ethnic, religious, and regional differences, which were overridden by the confidence and energy of the founders of civilizations, reemerged. Selfserving corruption and the pursuit ofpleasure gradually eroded the sense of purpose of the elite groups that had played a pivotal role in civilized development. The resulting deterioration in governance and military strength increased social tensions and undermined fr agile preindustrial economies. Growing social unrest from within was paralleled by increasing tlrreats from without. A major factor in the fall of nearly every great civilization, from those of the Indus valley and Mesopotamia to Rome Murad (1790-1820) Head ofthe coalition of Mamluk ¡ulers in Egypt; opposed Napoleonic invasion ofEgypt and suffered devastating defeat; failure destroyed Mamluk government in Egfpt and revealed wlnerability of Muslim core. Ali,Muhamad Won powe¡ st¡uggle in Egypt following fall of Mamluls; established mastery of all Egypt by l8l 1; introduced effective armybased on Western tactics and supply and a variety of other reforms; by 1830s was able to challenge Ottoman government in Constmtinople; died in 1848. 608 and the civilizations of Mesoamerica, was an influx of nomadic peoples, whom sedentary peoples almost invariably saw as barbarians. Nomadic assaults revealed the weaknesses of the ruling elites and de_ stroyed their military base. Their raids also disrupted the agricultural routines and smashed the public works on whic[ all civilizations rested. Normall¡ the nomadic invaders stayed to rule the sedentary peoples thev had conquered, as has happened repeatedly ii China, Mesoamerica, and the Islamic world. Else_ where, as occurred after the disappearance ofthe Indus valley civilization in India and after the fall of Rome, the vanquished civilization was largely forgotten or lay dormant for cent-uries. But ove¡ time, the invading peoples living in its ruins managed to restore patterns of civilized life that were quite different from, though sometimes enced by, the civilization their incursions helped to destroy centuries earlier. Neighboring civilizations clashed in wars on their frontiers, but it was for one civilization to play a major part in the demise of another. areas such as Mesopotamia, where civilizations were crowded gether in space and time in the latter millennia n.c.t., olde¡ dominant civilizations were overthrown and absorbed by rivals. In most cases, howeve¡ a¡d often in Mesopotamia, threats to civilizations came from nomadic peoples. This was even of Islamic civilization, which proved the most expansive the emergence of Europe and whose rise and spread brought power in their own name. Murad, the head of the coalition of Mamluk households that power in Eglpt at the time of Napoleon's arrival, dismissed the invader as a donkey boy would soon drive from his lands. Murad's contempt for the talented young French commander was symptomatic of the found ignorance of events in Europe that was typical of the Islamic world at the time. This led to a series of crushing defeats, the most famous of which came in a battle fought beneath amids of the ancient Egyptian pharaohs (see Figure 26.4).ln that brief but bloody battle, the plined firepower of the French legions devastated the ranks of Mamluk cayahy, who were medieval armor and wielded spears against the artillery Nap rleon used with such'devastatíng Because the Mamlula had long been seen as fighters of great prowess in the Islamic their rout was traumatic. It revealed just how vulnerable even the Muslim core areas were pean aggression and how far the Muslims had fallen behind the Europçans in the capacity war. Ironicall¡ the successful invasion of Eg¡pt brought little advantage to Napoleon or the The British caught up with the French fleet and sank most of it at the Battle of Aboukir 1793. With his supply line cut off, Napoleon was forced to abandon his army and Paris, where his enemies were trying to use his reverses in Eg¡pt to put an end to his rise Thus, Egypt was spared European conquest for a time. But the reprieve brought little thoughtful Muslims because the British, not Egypt's Muslim defenders, had been French retreat. In the chaos that followed the French invasion and eventual withdrawal in 1801, a cer of Albanian origins named Muhammad Ali emerged as the effective ruler of Eg¡pt. pressed by the weapons and discipline of the French armies, the Albanian upstart energies and the resources ofthe land that he had brought under his rule to building an European-style military force. He introduced Western-style conscription among the antr¡ hired French officers to train his troops, imported Western arms, and adopted the collapse of several long_established c Arab explosion from Arabiã rhar felled Sa Egypt was nomadic. But the incursions fered from adic T A¡abiathat lizations. rated the order ones they assaults on neighboring civi_ in_ most of d a new religion with them-from ed indi_ f economic innation, proved conquer:.:"ff:H'åin**"ä:il- querors' the Arabs'borrowed heavily from the .irrilirutiorx overran. and of west ti.y War I, it appeared thar the materiallyadvanced A_frica, "".;i:*;.ï:11 s and the course of their future t deve QUESTTONS, do you think tages that the Napoleon's victory in the Battle of the pyramids led to a short_lived, but trânsformative, Ftench Egypt. 609 6f 0 Part V. The Dawn of the Industrial Age, 1750-1914 and modes of organization and supply. Within years he had put together the most effective fighting force in the Middle East. With it, he flouted the authority of his nominal overlord, the Ottoman sultan, by successfully invading Syria and building a modern war fleet that threatened Istanbul on ¿ khedives [kuh-DEEVs] Descendants of Muhammad Ali in Egypt after 1867; formal rulers of Egypt despite French and English intervention until overthrom by miìitary coup in 1952. number of occasions. Although Muhammad Ali's efforts to introduce reforms patterned after Western precedents were not confined to the militar¡ they fell far short of a fundamental transformation of Egyptian society. To shore up his economic base, he ordered the Egyptian peasantry to increase their production of cotton, hemp, indigo, and other crops that were in growing demand in industrial Europe. Efforts to improve Egyptian harbors, particularly Alexandria, and extend irrigation works met with some success and led to modest increases in the revenues that could be devoted to the continuing modernization of the military. Attempts to reform education were ambitious, but little was actually achieved. Numerous schemes to build up an Egyptian industrial sector by setting up cotton textile factories were frustrated by the opposition of the European powers and the intense competition from imported, Western-manufactured goods. The limited scope of Muhammad Ali's reforms ultimately checked his plans for territorial pansion and left Egypt open to inroads by the European powers. He died in 1848, embittered by European opposition that had prevented him from mastering the Ottoman sultans and well that his empire beyond Egypt was crumbling. Lacking Muhammad Ali's ambition and abilit¡ successors were content to confine their claims to Egypt and the Sudanic lands that stretched the banks of the upper Nile to the south. Intermarrying with Turkish families that had come to Egypt to govern in the name of the Ottoman sultans, Muhammad Ali's descendants vided a succession of rulers who were known as khedives (kuh-DEEVs) after 1867. The were the formal rulers of Egypt until they were overthrown by the military coup that Gamel Abdul Nasser to power in 1952. Bankruptcy, European Intervention, and Strategies of Resistance Muhammad Ali's successors made a muddle of his efforts to reform and revitalize Egyptian While cotton production increased and the landlord class grew fat, the great majority of the ants.went hungry. The long-term consequences of these developments were equally troubling. great expansion of cotton production at the expense of food grains and other crops rendered dependent on a single export. This meant that it was vulnerable to sharp fluctuations in (and thus price) on the European markets to which most of it was exported. Some further tional advances were made. But these were mainly at elite schools where French was the Disraeli Purchasing Controlling lnterest in the Suez Canal H Canal Built across Isthmus of Suez to connect Mediterranean Sea with Red Sea in 1869; fìnanced by European investors; with increasing indebtedness of khedives, permitted intervention of British into Eglptian politics to protect their in vestment. Suez instruction. Much of the revenue the khedives managed to collect, despite the resistance of the wasted on the extravagant pastimes of the mostly idle elite connected to the palace. Most was left was squandered on fruitless military campaigns to assert Egyptian authority over danic peoples along the upper Nile. The increasing inability of the khedives tb balance led in the mid-l9th century to their growing indebtedness to European financiers. The money to the khedives and members of the Turkish elite because the financiers wanted access to Egypt's cheap cotton. By the 1850s, they had a second motiç: a share in the crative schemes to build a canal across the isthmus of Suez that would connect the and Red seas. The completion of the Suez Canal in 1869, depicted under 26.5, transformed Egypt into one of the most strategic places on earth. The canal vital commercial and military link betvveen the European powers and their colonial and east Africa. Controlling it became one of the key objectives of their peaceful wartime operations through the first half of the 20th century. The ineptitude of the khedival regime and the Ottoman sultans, who were overlords, prompted discussion among Muslim intellectuals and political activists ward off the growing European menace. In the mid-l9th centur¡ Egypt, and ancient Muslim University of al-Azhar, became key meeting places of these thinkers out the Islamic world. Some prominent Islamic scholars called for a jihad to drive the Muslim lands. They also argued that the Muslim world could be saved only by a terns of religious observance and social interaction that they believed had existed in of Muhammad. Chapter 26 ' Civt\zations in Crisis: The Ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and eing China 6l I Figure 26.5 Building a canal across the desert isthmus of Suez was a remarkable engineering feat. A massive investment in up-to-date technology was needed. By creating a water route between the Mediterranean and Red seas, the canal greatly shortened the travel t¡me between Europe and maritime Asia as well as the east coast of Africa. Combined with the growing predominance of steamships, it hefped to expand global commerce as well as tourism, which became a major middle-class activity in the late 19th century. Other thinkers, such as famal al-Din al-Afghani (1S39-1892) and his disciple Muhammad (1849-1905), stressed the need for Muslims to borrow scientific learning and technology the West and to revive their earlier capacity to innovate. They argued that Islamic civilization the Europeans much in the sciences and mathematics, including such critical conas the Indian numerals. Thus, it was fitting that Muslims learn from the advances the Eurohad made with the help of Islamic borrowings. Those who advocated this approach also the importance of the tradition of rational inquiry in Islamic history. They strongly disthe views of retgious scholars who contended that the Qur'an was the source of all truth and be interpreted literally. both religious revivalists and those who stressed the need for imports from the on the need for Muslim unity in the face of the grbwing European threat, they could their very different approaches to Islamic renewal. Their differences, and the uncerinjected into Islamic efforts to cope with the challenges of the West, remain central in the Muslim world today. rnounting debts of the khedival regime and the strategic importance of the canal gave the powers, particularly Britain and France, a growing stake in the stability and accessibility French and British bankers, who had bought up a good portion ofthe khedives'shares in governments to intervene militarily when the khedives proved unable to meet In the early 1880s, a major challenge to the influence of foreign interests was suPporters of a charismatic young Egyptian officer named AhmadArabi. The son in lower Egypt, Arabi had attended Qur'anic school and studied under the reMuhammad Abduh at al-Azhar. Though a native Egyptian, Arabi had risen in the khedival army and had become increasingly critical of the fact that the ofñcer corPs with strong ties to the khedival regime. An attempt by the khedive to save Egyptian regiments and dismissing Eglptian officers sparked a revolt led by of 1882. Riots in the city of Alexandria, associated with mutinies in the Egwtthe frightened khedive to seek British assistance. After bombarding the coastal up by Arabi's troops, the British sent ashore an expeditionary force that crushed Arabi's secured the position ofthe khedive. al-Afghmi Muslim thinker at the end of the lgth century; stressed Deed for adoption ofWestern scientific learning and technology; recognized importance of tradition ofrational inquiry. Abduh,Muhammad Discipleofal-Afghmi; Muslim thinker at end of 19th century; stressed need for adoption ofWestern scientific learning and technology, recognized importance of tradl tion of rational inquiry. Religious Æil and Secular 0pposition Within the Middle East AlmadÁ,rabi (1841-191 1) Egyptim milìtæy officer who led a revolt against Turkic dominance in the army ir 1882, which forced the Khedival regime to call in British forces for support, -t 612 Part V' The Dawn of the Industrial Age, 1750-1914 Khartoum lkahrTOOM] River to\vn tlìirl \vas administrarive center of [SyPtian authority in Sudan. oIl SudanicSufi brotherhood; claimed desccnt fronr prophet Muhammacl; proclaimed both Egyptians and B¡itish as infidels; launchcd revolt to purge [slan of impurities; look Khartoun in 1883; also knowu as the Mahdi. Ahmad,Mrrhammad Head Although Egypt was not formally colonized, the British intervention began clecades of dominance both by British consuls, who rulecl through the puppet khedives, and by British aclvisors to all high-ranking Egyptian aclministrators. British officials controlled Egypt's finances and foreign affairs; British troops ensured that their clirectives were heeded by Egyptian administrators. Direct European control over the Islamic heartlands had begun. Jihad:The Mahdist Revolt in the Suclan As Egypt fell under British contt'ol, the invaders were drawn into the turrnoil and conflict that Mahdi In Sufì bclief system, a pronised delive rer; gripped the Sudanic region to the south. Egyptian efforts to conquer ancl rule the Suclan, beginalso name given to Muhamrnad Achmad, Ieader o[ ning in the 1820s, were resisted fiercely. The opposition forces were led by the camel- and cattlelale l9th-century revolt agaiDst Egyptians and British in the Sudan. herding nomacls who occupied the vast, arid plains that stretched west and east from the upper Nile. The sedentary peoples who worked the narrow strip of fertile land along the river were more easily dominated. Thus, Egyptian authority, TIILES insofar as it existed, was concentrated in these areas and in river towns lm KtLoltrFks such as Khartoum (kahr-TOOM), which was the center of Egyptian administration in the Sudan. A lcxn ndria¡.-. '-- :_\ ) Even in the riverine areas, Egyptian rule was greaÍly resented. The ì1 Ls c: \, Egyptian regime was notoriously corrupt, and its taxes placed a heavy C¡ tl Ca¡ro. burden on the peasants compelled to pay them. The Egyptians were ARABIA clearly outsiders, and the favoritism they showed some of the Sudanic tribes alienated the others. In addition, nearly all groups in the Muslim BRITISH areas in the northern Sudan were angered by Egyptian attempts in the LIBYA EGYPT 1870s to eradicate the slave trade. The trade had long been a source of profit for both the merchants of the Nile towns and the â mads, who attacked non-Muslim peoples, such as the Dinka in 7 south, to capture slaves. Bythe late 1870s, Egyptian oppression and British intervention aroused deep resentment and hostility. But a leacler was needed to the cliverse ancl often divided peoples of the region and to provide .Dongola icleology that would give focus and meaning to rebellion. \' t' Ahmed proved to be that leader. He was the son of a boat builder, and hacl been educated by the head of a local Sufi brotherhoocl. The fact ANG his family claimed descent from Muhammad and that he had the Eritrea signs-a cleft between his teeth and a mole on his right cheek-that Q SUDAN local people associated with the promised deliverer, or Mahdi, ú tEi his reputation. The visions he began to experience, after he had El Obc¡d . Gondar (Mohdìst capital) Fl with his Sufi master and established his own sectarlan following, also gested that a remarkable future was in store. V\{hat was seen to be a ú ulous escape from a bungled Egyptian effort to capture and o t'r Muhammad Ahmed soon led to his widespread acceptance as a Adaba. Ð appointed leader of revolt against the foreign intruders. f¡l The jihad that Muhammad Ahmed, who carne to be known ETHIOPIA followers as the Mahdi, proclaimed against both the Egyptnn and British infidels was one of a number of such movements swept through sub-Saharan Africa since the l8th century. It the most extreme and violent Islamic resPonse to what was the dilution of Islam in the African environment and the Fullest extent oI the Mahdist State of Europe. Muhammad Ahmed promised to purge Islanr of what under tl¡e Khalifa Abdallahi as superstitious beliefs and degrading practices that had built the centuries, thus returning the faith to what he claimed was Map 26.1 British Egypt and the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan Although nal purity. He led his followers in a violent assault on the British control over Egypt was quite secure from the time of the whom he believed professed a corrupt version of Islam' and defeat of the Arabi revolt in 1BB2 until World War l, the Mahdist ropean infidels. At one point, his successors dreamed of movement in the Sudan delayed the conquest of that vast region Ottoman sultans and invading Europe. along the upper Nile Rive r until 1898. o Chapter 26 ' Civiltzations in Crisis: The ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and eing China The Mahdi's skillful use of guerrilla tactics and the confidence his followers placed in his blessings and magical charms earned his forces several stunning victories over the Egyptians. Within a few years the Mahdist forces were in control of an area corresponding roughly to the present-day nation of Sudan. At the peak of his powe¡ the Mahdi fell ill with typhus and died. In contrast to many movements of this frpe, which collapsed rapidly after the death of their prophetic leaders, the Mahdists found a capable successor for Muhammad Ahmed. The Khalifa Abdallahi had been one of the Mahdi's most skillful military commanders. Under Abdallahi, the Mahdists built a strong, expansive state. They also sought to build a closely controlled society in which smokdancing, and alcoholic drink were forbidden, and theft, prostitution, and adultery were severely punished. Islamic religious and ritual practices were enforced rigorously. In addition, most foreigners were imprisoned or expelled, and the ban on slavery was lifted. For nearly a decade, Mahdist armies attacked or threatened neighboring states on all sides, inthe Eg¡rptians to the north. But in the fall of 1896, the famous British General Kitchener sent with an expeditionary force to put an end to one of the most serious threats to European in Africa. The spears and magical garments of the Mahdist forces proved no match for machine guns and artillery of Kitchener,s columns. At the battle of 613 Khalifa Successor of Muhammad Achmad as leader of Mahdists in Sudm; established state in Sudan; defeated by British Gene¡al Kitchener in 1598. Abdallahi, Omdurman in 1898, thou- of the Mahdist cavalry were slaughtered. Within a year the Mahdist state collapsed, and power advanced yet again into the interior of Africa. The l9th century was a time of severe reverses for the peoples of the Islamic world. By the end, it was clear that neither the religious revivalists, who called for a return to a purified free of Western influences, nor the reformers, who argued that some borrowing from the was essential for survival, had come up with a successful formula for dealing with the powerposed by the industrial West. Failing to fi¡d adequate responses and deeply divided, community grew increasingly arxious over the dangers that lay ahead. Islamic civibzawas by no means defeated. But its continued viability clearly was threatened by its powerful neighbor, which had become master of the world. Æil The Middle East Ente¡.s the World Economy Last Dynasty: The Rise and Fall Empire in China the Manchu nomads had been building an expansive state of their own north of the Great decades, their conquest of China was both unexpected and sudden. A local leader named (1559-1626) was the architect of unity among the quarrelsome Manchu tribes. He com_ cavalry of each tribe into extremely cohesive fighting units within eight banner armies, the flags that identified each.In the first decades ofthe 17th centur¡ Nurhaci brought Manchuria, including a number of non- Manchu peoples, under his rule (see Visualizing Although he remained the nominal vassal of the Chinese Ming emperor, Nurhacit harassed the Chinese who lived north of the Great Wall. During this period, the adoption of Chinese ways, which had begun much earlier, was greatþ accelerated. bureaucracy was organized along Chinese lines, Chinese court ceremonies were Chinese scholar-officials found lucrative employment in the growing barbarian state GreatWall. of the declining Ming regime, rather than the Manchus'own strength, gave the opportunity to seize control in China. Their entry into China resulted from a bit of an ofificial of the Ming government in charge of the northern defenses called in the him put down widespread rebellion in the region near the Great Wall. Having alto pass beyond the wall, the official found that they were an even greater threat the political divisions and social unrest that were destroying what was the Manchus boldly advanced on the Ming capital at Beijing, which they year. It took nearþ two decades before centers of Ming and rebel resistance in were destroyed by the banner armies, but the Manchus soon found themselves p"1*1 that they were up to the challenge of ruling the largest empire in the rorced submission by nomadic peoples far to the west andiompelied tribute 4.. llr^\ century China, a long period of strong rule by the Oing dynasty and a high degree of social stability gave way \$àtr-18th to rampant official corruption, severe economic dislocations, and social unrest. Over the course of the 1 9th century the Western powers took advantage of these weaknesses to force open China's markets and reduce its Manchu rulers to little more than puppets. Nurhaci (1559-1626) Architect of Mmchu unity; created distinctive Manchu banner armies; controlled most of Manchuia; adopted Chinese bureaucracy and most ceremonies in Manchuria; entered China and successfully captured Ming capital at Beijing. bmer umies Eight armies of the Manchu tritíes identiâed by sepaate flags; created by Nurhaci in early 17th century; utilized to defeat Ming emperor and establish Qing d¡nasry by the maps included here, which trace the advance of rival powers ancl the rise of internal resistance. Mapping the Decline of Civilizations Throughout much of human histor¡ the size of the empires associated with major civilizations was usually a pretty good gauge of the extent of the political power, economic prosperit¡ and cultural influence they enjoyed. Civilizations on the rise were expansive and compelled even neighboring peoples who were not directly ruled to acknowledge their dominance. By contrast, civilizations in decline lost control of their borderlands to rival empires or suffered invasions-often by nomadic peoples-into the heart of the vast domains that their ruling dynasties continued to claim long after they could effectively govern them. In the 18th and 19th centuries, two of the largest and most enduring empires in human histor¡ the Ottoman and Qing, spiraled into decline. The plight of each of these empires is illustrated QUESTIONS Which of the empires would have defend? Compare the timing and nature oF posed for each of the empires by rival enemies in the late 18th and l9th centuriesr fected somewhat later? Why were the Qing so spond to the outside threat compared to the the Chinese more reluctant than the weapons and methods of their enemies? more threatened by internal rebellions? CA A U ,J, ¿8 PERSIÀ cA.e:¿ -. t.eJt¿oD CREIE .t CYPRUS (a ARABIA 0 0 ffi El lE .. - 0ÀltE {æ l9l4 t0loMlms ntury to World War I The vast territories of the Ottoman of more than two centuries to external enemies and the assertion of independence by ambitious vassals. Map 26.2 Ottoman Empire from Late 1 Bth Ce Em pire were lost over a period as Vietnam and Burma to the south. Within decades, the Manchu which had taken the dynastic name Qing (chihng) before its conquest of China, ruled an than any previous Chinese dynasty with the exception of the Tang. To reconcile the ethnic Chinese who made up the vast majority of their subjects' rulers shrewdly retained much of the political system of their Ming predecessors. TheY it court calendar whatever Confucian rituals they did not already observe. They made they wanted the scholar-officials who had served the Ming to continue in office. The pardoned many who had been instrumental in prolonging resistance to their conquest' the first century of the dynasty, Chinese and Manchu offìcials aI of the highest posts of the imperial bureaucrac¡ and Chinese from kingdoms such Qing [chihng] Manchu dynasty that seized control of China in mid- lTth century after decline oI Ming; forced submission of nomadic peoples far to the west and compelled tribute f¡om Vietnam and Burma to the south. 6t4 Ottomm Empire, l-osses, 1683-1878 l.osses 1879-1914 Muimum exlent of Ottoman EmPire, 1683 EMPIRD l9tx)45 r905 After Sen Of Japan Japan 1895) a (Japan 1895) (Br. 1842) a I 1842) PACIFIC OCEAN Japan 1895) Kong (Br. l) F f-i-l Qing Empirc, ca. 1890 Major lreaty ports with dates ofopening Mâin area of Boxer Rebellion, 190Èr901 Area of rebellion Oing Empire from OpiumWarof 1839-1841 toWorldWarl Thoughmuchof thetraditional Chineseterritoriesremainedintact, later the government of the Republic of China lost control of regions distant from their capitals in the 1 9th and the first half of ry. Manchus, who made up less than 2 percent of the population of the Qing Empire, number of the highest political positions. But there were few limits as talented ethnic Chinese could rise in the imperial bureaucracy. the Mongol conquerors who had abolished it, the Manchus retained the examination their own sons educated in the Chinese classics. The Manchu emperors styled Sons of Heaven and rooted their claims to be the legitimate rulers of China in their traditional Confucian virtues. The earþ Manchu rulers were generous patrons of the and at least one, Kangxi (kohng-see) (1661-1722), was a significant Confucian own right. Kangxi and other Manchu rulers employed thousands of scholars to comof Chinese learning. Kmgxi [kohng+ee] Confucian scholar and Mmchu emperor of Qing dynasty from 1661 to 1722; stablished high degree ofSinifietion among the Mmchus, 61s 616 Part V' The Dawn of the Industrial Age, 1750-1914 Economy and Society in the Early Centuries of Qing Rule The Manchu determination to preserve much of the Chinese political system was paralleled by a¡ equally conservative approach to Chinese society as a whole. In the early centuries of their reign, the *iititrgr of Zhtxi, which had been so influential in the preceding dynastic eras, continued to dominate o=ffìcial thinking. Thus, long-nurtured valu:s such as respect for rank and acceptance ofhierarchy-that is, old over young, male over female, scholar-bureaucrat over commonet-çs¡q emphasized in education and imperial edicts. Among the elite classes, the extended family remained the core unit of the social order, and the state grew increasingly suspicious of any forms of social organization, such as guilds and especially secret societies, that rivaled it. The lives of women at all social levels remained centered on or wholly confìned to the household. There the dominance of elder men was upheld by familial Pressures and the state' Male trol was enhanced by the Practice of choosing brides from families slightly lower in social than those of the grooms. Because they were a loss to their parents'household at marriage and ally needed a sizeable dowr¡ daughters continued to be much less desirable than sons. Despite poor quality of the statistics relating to the practice, there are indications that the incidence of male infanticide rose in this period. In the population as a whole, males considerably females, the reverse of the balance between the two in contemporary industrial societies' Beyond the family compound, the world pretty much belonged to men, although from lower-class families continued to work in the fields and sell produce in the local markets. best a married woman could hope for was strong backing from her father and brother after she gone to her husband's home, as well as the good luck in the first place to be chosen as the iather than as a second or third partner in the form of a concubine. If they bore sons and lived enough, wives took charge of running the household. In elite families they exercised control Wealthy new group of Chinese merchants under the Qing dynasry; specialized in the import-export trade on China's south coast; one of the major linls between China and the outside compradors world. other women and even Younger men. Some of the strongest measures the Manchus took after conquering China were aimed at viating the rural distress and unrest that had become so pronounced in the last years of Ming Taxes and state labor demands were lowered' Incentives such as tax-free tenure were those willing to resettle lands that had been abandoned in the turmoil of the preceding was sizeable chunk of the imperial budget (up to l0 percent in the early years of the dynasty) works. irrigation voted to repairing existing dikes, canals, and roadways and extending were encouraged to plant new crops, including those for which there was market demand, grow tlvo or even three crops Per year on their holdings Given the growing population Pressure on the cultivable aüeage and the near in most areas of open lands that could be settled, the regime had very little success in its control the landlord classes. After several decades ofholding stead¡ the landlord classes out' they could add to their estates by calling in loans to Peasants or simply by buying them surplus of workers, tenants had less and less bargaining power in their dealings land they objected to the share of the crop the landlords offered, they were turned off the gentrY placed by those willing to accept even less' As a result, the gap between the rural rural nary peasants and laborers increased. One could not miss the old and new rich in the calls social they rode or were carried in sedan chairs, decked out in silks and fu¡s, to make let class peers. To further display their superior social standing, many -".t åf th. gentry grow long to demonstrate that they did not have to engage in physical labor. The sector of Chinese society over which the Qing exercised the least control era most dynamic. The commercial and urban expansion that had begun in the Song strength in the long peace China enjoyed during the first century and a half of gional diversification in croPs such as tea was matched by the develoPment of new agricultural and artisan production' Until the end of the 18th centur¡ both the state cantile classes profited enormously ftom the great influx of silver that poured into ment for its exports of tea, porcelain, and silk textiles. European and other foreign Canton, and Chinese merchants, freed from the restrictions against overseas travel a found lucrative market outlets overseas. Profits from overseas trade gave rise to on group of merchants, the compradors, who specialized in the import-export trade coast. In the 19th centur¡ these merchants proved to be one of the major links the outside world. Chapter 26 Rot from ' Civtlizations in Crisis: The Ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and eing China within: Bureaucratic Breakdown and social Disintegration at like so many Chinese dynasties of the past, the eing was ervasive and familiar. The bureaucratic foundations of the thin. The exam system, which had done well in selecting able and honest bureaucrats in the early decades of the dynast¡ had become riddled with cheating and favoritism. Despite formal restrictions, s in the ever-growing bureaucracy. Even more enough money could buy a post for sons or b take the exams for poorly educated or not-so-b prove weak credentials or look the other way wh ing their exams. In one of the most notorious cases of cheating, a merchant's son won high honors despite the fact that he had spent the days of testing in a biothel hundreds the examination site. of miles from Cheating had become so blatant by the early lgth century that in l71l students who had failed the exams at Yangzhou held a public demonstration to protest bribes given to the exam by wealthy salt merchants. The growing influx of merchants' and poorly educated land'sons into the bureaucracy was particularly troubling because few of them had received the Confucian education that stressed the responsibilities of the educated ruling classes their obligation to serve the people. Increasingl¡ the wealthy saw positions in the bureau_ as a means of influencing local o fficials and judges and enhancing family fortunes. Less less concern was expressed for the effects of bureaucratic decisions on the peasantry and laborers. Over several decades, the diversion of revenue from state projects to enrich individual devastated Chinese society. For example, funds needed to maintain the armies and that defended the huge empire fell off sharpÌy. Not surprisingl¡ this reóulted in a noticedrop in the training and armament of the military. Even more critical for the masses were in spending on public works projects. Of these, the most vital were the great dikes confined the Yellow River in northern China. Over the millennia, because of the silting of river bottom and the constânt repair of and additions to the dikes, the river and dikes were high above the densely populated farmlands through which they passed. Thus, when great public works were neglected for lack of funds and proper official supervision of releaking dikes and the rampaging waters of the great river meant catastrophe for much of China. Nowhere was this disaster more apparent than in the region ,of the Shandong peninsula (see the Past feature). Before the mid- 19th centur¡ the Yellow River emptied into the sea the peninsula. By the 1850s, however, the neglected dikes had broken down over much of and the river had flooded hundreds of square miles of heavily cultivated farmland. By the main channel of the river flowed north of the peninsula. The lands in between had been the farms wiped out. Millions of peasaats were left without livestock or land to cultihundreds-of thousands of peasants died of famine and disease. condition of the peasantry deteriorated in many parts of the empire, further signs of appeared. Food shortages and landlord demands prompted mass migrations. bands clogged the roads, and beggars crowded the city streets. Banditr¡ long seen by the one of the surest signs of dynastic decline, became a major problem in many districts. As verse from a popular ditty of the 1g60s illustrates, the government's inability to deal was seen as a further sign of eing weakness: bandits arrive, where are the troops? troops come, the bandits have vanished. will the bandits and troops meet? then widely held by Chinese thinkers-that the dynastic cycle would again and the Manchus would be replaced by a new and vigorous dynasty-was belied by of the problems confronting the leaders of China. The belief that China's future from the patterns of its past ignored the fact that there were no precedents for 617 618 PartV ' The Dawn of the IndustrialAge, 1750-1914 the critical changes that had occurred in China under Manchu rule. Some of these changes had their roots in the preceding Ming era (see Chapter 22),inwhich, for example, food crops from the Americas, suçf¡ as corn and potatoes, had set in motion a population explosion. China desperately needed innovations in technology and organization that Beijing. Ycllort S.! would increase its productivity to support its rapidly increasing population at a reasonable level. The corrupt and highly conservative late a Manchu regime was increasingly an obstacle to, rather than a source of, these desperately needed changes. I Ettst Chint Seo :) { Barbarians at the Southern Gates: The OpiumWar andAfter Another major difference between the forces sapPing the strength the Manchus and those that had brought down earlier dynasties the nature of the "barbarians" who threatened the empire from out side. Out of ignorance, the Manchu rulers and their Chinese R. trators treated the Europeans much like the nomads and other they saw as barbarians. But the Europeans presented a very O . frKILOMETERS sort of challenge. They came from a civilization that was China's in sophistication and complexity. In fact, although European states such as Great Britain were much smaller in population (in early lgth centurf England had 7 million people to China's 400 lion), the scientific and industrial revolutions allowed them to :l British âttacks 1839-1842 pensate for their smaller numbers with better organization superior technology. These advantages proved critical in the wars tween China and Britain and the other European powers that Map 26.4 Coastal China and lts Hinterland in the 19th Century out in the mid-19th century. By the early 1 800s, China's seaports and river deltas had become the The issue that was responsible for the initial hostilities main focus of European expansionist efforts. By the end of the China and the British did little credit to the latter. For centuries, century, China's southern coastal regions had alsò become seedbeds domination. merchants had eagerly exported silks, fine porcelains, tea, and for nationalist res¡stance to Manchu rule and European products from the Chinese empire. Finding that they had little way of manufactured goods or raw materials that the Chinese were willing to take in these products, the British were forced to trade growing amounts of silver bullion' Unhappy the unfavorable terms of trade in China, British merchants hit on a possible solution in the opium, which was grown in the hills of eastern India. Although opium was also grown in Indian variety was far more potent and was soon in great demand in the Middle Kingdom. early 19th century an annual average of 4500 chests of opium, each weighing 133 sold, either legally or illegally, to merchants on the south China coast' By 1839, on the eve' Opium War Fought between the British and Opium War, nearly 40,000 chests were imported by the Chinese. Qing China beginning in 1839; fought to protect Although the British had found a way to reverse the trade balance in their favoS the British trade in opium; resulted in resounding British victor¡ opening of Hong Kong as British soon realized that the opium traffic was a major threat to their ..otfo*y and social order' port oftrade. years, China's favorable trade balance with the outside world was reversed, and silver in large quantities out of the country. As sources of capital for public works and trade decreased, agricultural productivity stagnated or declined, and unemployment spread, the hinterlands of the coastal trading areas. Wealtþ Chinese, who could best afford it' rncreasrng amounts of China's wealth to support their opium habits. Opium dens towns and villages of the empire at an alarming rate. It has been estimated that by 1838, I China's more than 400 million people were addicted to the drug. Strung-out officials their administrative responsibilities, the sons of prominent scholar-gentry families lost tion, and even laborers and peasants abandoned their work for the debilitating 0 l----------, : --.-1 ' 5mMl6 opium dens. From the early 18th century Qing emperors had issued edicts forbidding the but little had been done to enforce them. By the beginning of the 19th centur¡ it was chapter 26 ' civilizations in crisis: The ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and eing china to be stopped. When serious efforts were finally from Canton to nearby islands the late 1830s, the emperor sent one of the most e opium dealers JiïÎ]lir' in his attempts to win the co available to stamp out the trade. Lin, ously. After beinjrebuffed *n" offìcers in putting an end to the trade, Lin ordered the European trading areas aded, their warehouses searched, and all the opium confiscated and destroyed. 619 Ef ift'ï\;.,,,, everv means ltlTåï:ï; in canton block- no match for British gunboats. Then they were ditionary force the British sent ashore. With B the Yangzi River region, the eing emperor was remote province of the empire. Their victories in the Opium War and a second conflict, which erupted in the late lg50s, al_ the European powers to force China to open trade and diplomatic exchanges. After the first Hong Kong was established as an additional center of British commerce. European trade was permitted at five other ports, where the Europeans were given land to build more warehouses quarters. By the 1890s, 90 ports of call were available to more than 300,000 European and traders, missionaries, and diplomats. Britain, France, German¡ and Russia had won leases of several ports and the surrounding territory (Figure 26.6) Although the rreaty of 1842 made no reference to the opium trade, after China,s defeat the poured unchecked into China. By the mid-t9th centur)¡, Chinat foreign trade and customs overseen by British officials. They were careful to ensure that European nationals had favored to Chinat markets and that no protective tarifß, such as those the Americans were using at to protect their young industries, were established by the Chinese. Most humiliating of all Chinese was the fact that they were forced to accept European ambassadors at the eing Not only were ambassadors traditionally (and usually quite rightly) seen as spies, but the exof diplomatic missions was a concession that European nations were equal il stature to Given the deeply entrenched Chinese conviction that their Middle Kingdom was the civicenter of the earth and that all other peoples were barbarians, this was a very difÊcult concesmake. European battleships and firepower gave them little choice. at H T¡'eaty Ports and the Boxer Rebellion in China The Treaty of Naniing Risk Rebellion and Failed Reforms' Taiping Rebellion Broke out in sourh China in a gentry, H NineteenthCentury China HongXiuquan [hohng sloo-gmhn] (1812-1864) Leader ofthe Taiping rebellion; converted to specifically Chinese form of Christimity; attacked traditional Confucim teachings ofChinese elite. Qing dynasty tottering on the verge of collapse, the northward drive lost its mo_ over the next half decade it imploded. With Nanjing and a number of other Prospertheir hinterlands under Taiping control, the rebel leaders, including Hong, began to 620 PartV . The Dawn of the IndustrialAge, 1750-1914 FigUfe 26.6 ln the late 19th century, the Chinese were forced to concede port and warehouse areas, such as the one in this painting, to rival imperialist powers. areas were¡ in effect, colonial enclaves. They were guarded by foreign troops, flew foreign flags, and were run by Western or Japanese merchant councils. (lllustration of Colonial Flags Flying Over a Chinese Port. Gift of Lincoln Kirstein, 1 959 (JP3346). lmage copyriqht c The l\4etropolitan lVuseum of Art/Art Resource, NY) plot and quarrel among themselves. As some were killed and others deserted the cause' the of the military commanders and the training of the God Worshipers' fightels declined tously. Taiping policies also alienated some of their own followers and increased the the enemies arrayed against them. None of their utopian measures to Provide better lives followers were actually implemented, and their puritanical regulations were increasinglY by their often hostile subjects. The ban on opio- smoking and Hong's bizarue Christian teachings alienated the Europeans, who threw their supPort behind the Guofan Qing official who raised effective military forces against the Taiping assault on Northern China. Zeng iled Qing dynasty. Of all of the rebellions that threatened to topple the Qing dynasty in the 19th Taiping movement posed the most serious alternative-not only to the Qing dynastY cian civilization as a whole. The Taipings not only offered land redistribution, and the liberation of women, but they elite and the learning on which its claims to authority rested. In addition to tablets and shrines, the Taipings sought to develop a simplifÌed script and mass would have undermined some of the scholar-gentry's chief sources of power. Their attack on the scholar-gentry *"rì.r. of the main causes of the Taipings' feat. Left no option but to rally to the Manchu regime, the provincial focus of resistance to the Taipings. Honest and able Qing officials, such as Zeng chapter 26 ' civilizations in crisis: The ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and eing china 62t t in time to fend off the Taiping assault.on north_ ent also carried out much needed reforms to root the stagnating Chinese economy. In the late lgth movement, which was aimed at countering the ern investment in railways and factories ii the armies. Combined wi ment that could not suppression ofthe Late Ì9th_century the challenge from ers. Ta Nanjing was retaken. in mass fires. Despite their clearly desperate situation by the late 19th centurF including a shocking loss in war with /apan in 1894 and 1g95, the Manchu rulers stubbornly resisted the far- reaching rethat were the only hope of saving the regime and, as it turned out, Chinese civilization. rulers o ccasionally supported offìcials who pushed for extensive political and social re_ some of which were inspired by the example of the West. But their efforts were repeatedly by the backlash of members of the imperial household and their allies among the who were determined to preserye the old order with only minor changes and to no concessions to the West. The last decades of the dynasty were dominated by the ultraconservative dowager empress American (shur-shee), who became the power behind Cartoon on the throne. In lggg she and her faction crushed Western most serious move toward reform. Her nephew, the emperor, was imprisoned in the Forbidden Powers and leading advocates for reform were executed Carving or driven from China. On one occasion it was Up China reported that Cixi defied the Westernizers by rechanneling funds that had been raised to modern warships into the building of a huge marble boat in one of the lakes in the imperial Cixi [s With genuine reform blocked by Cixi and her em_ faction, the Manchus relied on divisions press wh the provincial officials and among the European powers to maintain their position. Mem- dynastr it means of dtiving out Westerners. the Qing household also secretly backed popular outbursts aimed at expelling the foreigners China, such as the Boxer Rebellion (Figure 26.7). The Boxer uprising broke out in lggg and BoxerRebellion Popular outburst in l8gg aimed down only through the intervention of the imperialist powers in 1901. Its failure led to greater control over China,s internal affairs by the Europeans and a further devolution of to provincial officials H of the Qing and the Rise of a chinese NationalistAlternative beginning of the 20th century, the days of the Manchus were numbered. With the defeat of resrstance to the eing came to be centered in rival sécret societies such as the Triads ofElders and Brothers. These underground organizations inspired numerous local against the dynasty in rhe late 19th century. All of these efforts failed because of lack of and sufÊcient resources. But some of the secret society cells became a valuable trainprepared the way for a new sort of resistance to the Manchus. end of the lgth centur¡ the sons of some of the scholar_ gentry and especially of in the port cities were becoming more and more involved in secret society operaactivities aimed at overthrowing the regime. Because many of these young men educations, their resistance was aimed at more than just getting rid . They envisioned power passing to Western-educated, reformist leaders who a new, strong nation-state in China patterned after those of the West, rather than yet another imperial dynasty. For aspiring revolutionaries such as Sun yatas one of their most articulate advocates, serzlng Power was also seen as a way needed social programs to relieve the misery of the p easants and urban drew heavily on the West for ideas and organizational models, the revolution_ middle classes were deeply hostile ro the inyolvement of the imperialist powers They also condemned the Manchus for failing to control the foreigners. Like the red Nationalist party of China (Guomindang) in t919; died in 1925. Transforming Imperial China into a Nation Faced with mounting intrusions by the Western powers into China, which the Manchu dynasty appeared powerless to resist, Chinese political leaders and intellectuals debated the ways by which China could renew itself and thus survive the challenges posed by the industrialized West, As the following passages from his iournal A People Møde Neø (published from 1902 to 1905) illustrate, Liang Qichao, one of the main advocates of major reforms in Chinese societ¡ recognized the need for significant borrowing from Europe and the United States. At the same time, late 19th- and early 20thcentury champions of renewal such as Liang wanted to preserve the basic features of Chinese society as they had developed over two millennia of history. If we wish to make our nation strong, we must investigate extensively the methods followed by other nations in becoming independent. We should select their superior points and appropriate them to make up our own shortcomings. Now with regard to politics, academic learning, and techniques, our critics know how to take the superior points of others to make up for our own weakness; but they do not know that the people's virtue, the people's wisdom, and the people's vitality are the great basis ofpolitics, academic learning, and techniques. [Those who are for "renovation"] are worried about the situation and try hard to develop the nation and to promote well-being. But when asked about their methods, they would begin with diplomac¡ training of troops, purchase of arms and manufacture of instruments; then they would proceed to commerce, mining, and railways; and finally they would come, as they did recentl¡ to officers'training, police, and education. Are these not the most important and necessary things for modern civilized nations? Yes. But can we attain the level of mode¡n civi-lization and place our nation in an invincible position by adopting a little of this and that, or taking a small step now and then? I know we cannot. . . . Puyi as [poo-yee] Last emperor of China; deposed emperor while still a small boy in 1912. 622 Let me illustrate this by commerce. Economic competition is It is the method whereby the powers attempt to conquer us. It is also the method whereby we should fight for ou¡ existence. The importance of irnproving our foreign trade has been recognized by all. But in order to promote foreign trade, it is necessary to protect the rights ofour domestic trade and industry; and in order to protect these rights, ¡¡ is necessary to issue a set of commercial laws. Commercial laws, however, cannot stand by themselves, and so it is necessary to co¡¡- one of the big problems of the world today. plement them with other laws. A law which is not carried out is tantamount to no law; it is therefo¡e necessary to define the powers of the judiciary. Bad legislation is worse than no legislation, and so it is necessary to decide where the legislative power should belong. If those who violate the law are not punished, laws become void as soon as they are proclaimed; therefore, the of the judiciary must be defined. When all these are carried the logical conclusion, it wi-ll be seen that foreign trade cannot promoted without a constitution, a parliament, and a government, . . . What, then, is the way to effect our salvation and to progress? The answer is that we must shatter at a blow the and confused governmental system of some thousands of years; must sweep away the corrupt and sycophantic learning of thousands ofyears. QUESTIONS What strength? What does Europe and the as specifìc enough you were the emperorls recommend, perhaps copying Taipings, the young rebels cut off their queues (braided ponytails) in defiance of the that all ethnic Chinese wear their hair in this fashion. They joined in uprisinþs fomented cret societies or plotted assassinations and acts of sabotage on their own. Attempts to all-China rising failed on several occasions because of personal animosities or late 1911, opposition to the government's reliance on the WesternBowers for railway secret society uprisings, student demonstrations, and mutinies on the part of When key provincial ofñcials refused to put down the spreading rebellion, choice but to abdicate. In February 1912, the last emperor of China, a small boy named yee), was deposed, and one of the more powerful provincial lords was asked to establish can government in china. The revolution of 191 I toppled the Qing dynast¡ but in many ways a more ing point for Chinese civilization was reached in 1905. In that year, the civil service given for the last time. Reluctantl¡ even the ultraconservative advisors of the empress cluded that solutions to China's predicament could no longer be found in the the exams tested. In fact, the abandonment of the exams signaled the end of a Iife the Chinese had nurtured for nearly 2500 years. The mix of philosophies come to be known as the Confucian system, the massive civil bureaucrac¡ rule by an , Chapter 26 ' Civílizations in Crisis: The Ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and Qing China 623 Figure 26.7 Chína's peril in the aftermath ofthe Boxer Rebellion and the military interventions by the imperialist powers that it prompted are brilliantly captured in this contemporary cartoon showing the aggressive and mutually hostile great powers circling the carcass ofthe 0ing Empire. scholar-gentry elite, and even the artistic accomplishments of the old order came under criticism in the early 20th century. Many of these hallmarks of the most enduring civithat has ever existed were violently destroyed. ^(.,)-(c.)- bal Connections and Chinese Decline and a Shifting Balance and Islamic civilizations were severely weakened by disruptions during the 18th and 19th centuries, and each into prolonged crisis by the growing challenges posed Several key differences in the interaction between and the West do much to explain why Islam, shaken, survived, whereas Chinese civilization colthe burden of domestic upheavals and foreign agthe Muslims, who had been warring and trading Europe since the Middle Ages, the Western threat What was new was the much greater strength of in the ongoing contest, which resulted from their and their scientific and industrial revolutions. from the West came suddenly and bruChinese had to revise their image of the center of the world and the source of civilizarnto account severe defeats at the hands ofpeoas barbarians. The Muslims could also take comfort from the fact that, in the Judeo-Christian and Greek traditions, they shared much with the ascendant Europeans. As a result, elements of their own civilization had played critical roles in the rise of the West. This made it easier to justiff Muslim borrowing from the West, which in any case could be set in a long tradition of exchanges with other civilizations. Although some Chinese technology had passed to the West, Chinese and Western leaders were largely unaware of earþ exchanges and deeply impressed by the profound differences between thei¡ societies. For the Chinese, borrowing from the barbarians required a painful reassessment of their place in the world-a reassessment many were unwilling to make. In countering the thrusts from the West, the Muslims gained from the fact that they had many centers to defend; the fall of a single dynasty or regime did not mean the end of Islamic independence. The Muslims also gained from the more gradual nature of the Western advance. They had time to learn from earlier mistakes and try out different responses to the Western challenges. For the Chinese, the defense of their civilization came to be equated with the survival of the Qing dynast¡ a line of thinking that the Manchus did all they could to promote. When the dynasty collapsed in the early 20th centur¡ the Chinese lost faith in the 624 PartV . The Dawn of the IndustrialAge, 1750-1914 formula for civilization they had successfully followed for more than two millennia. Again, timing was critical. The crisis in China seemed to come without warning. Within decades, the Qing went from being the arrogant controller ofthe barbarians to being a defeated and humbled pawn of the European powers. When the dynasty failed and it became clear that the "barbarians" had outdone the Chinese in so many fields of civilized endeavor, the Chinese had little to fall back on. Like the Europeans, they had excelled in social and political organization and in mastery of the material world. Unlike the Hindus or the Muslims, they had no great religious tradition with which to counter the European conceit that worldly dominance could be equated with inherent superiority. In the depths of their crisis, Muslim peoples clung to the conviction that theirs was the true faith, the last and fullest of God's revelations to humankind. That faith became the basis of their resistance and their strategies for renewal, the key to the survival of Islamic civilization and its continuing efforts to meet the challenges of the West in the 20th and 21st centuries. Both China and the Islamic lands of the Middle East and north Africa faced common challenges through the unavoidable intrusion of Western-dominated globalism. While their resPonses differed, both civilizations were only partially colonized (in contrast to Africa). Their situation also differed from that of Latin America, where connections to the West ran deeper amid an older pattern of economic dependency. They differed, finall¡ from two other societies, near neighbors, who retained fuller independence amid the same global pressures: Russia and |apan. Further Readings The more readable general introductions to the Ottoman decline and the origins of Turke¡ include Elisabeth Özdalga, editor, Late Ottoman Society: The Intellectual Legacy (2005), and Caroline Finkel, Osmøn's Dream: The Story of the Onomøns (2006), and the chapter on "The Later Ottoman Empire" by Halil Inalcik in The Cømbridge History of Isløm, vol. I (1973). The fall of the dynasty and the development of the Turkish republic are treated in world historical perspective in Meliha Benli Altuni-stk, Turkey: ChøIlenges of Continuity øn d Ch ange ( ( 2005 ) and Hur-I Islamo- glu-lnan, The Onoman Empire and theWoild Economy (2004). Other recent studies on specific aspects of this process include C, V. Findley's studies of Ottoman bureaucratic reform and the development of a modern civil service in what is today Turkey; Ernest Ramsaur, The YoungTurks (1957); Stanford Shaw, Between Old ønd New (L971); and David Kusher, The Rise of Turkish Nationalism (1977). On Egypt and the Islamic heartlands in this period, see P. M. }Jolt, Egypt and the Fertile Crescent, 1516-1922 (1965), or P. ]. Vatikiotis, TheHistory of Egypt (1985). On the Mahdist movement in the Sudan, see P. M. Holt, The Mahdist State in the Sudan (1958), or the fine summary by L. Carl Brown in Robert Rotberg and Ali Mazrui, eds., Protest and Power in Black Africø (1970). The latter also includes many informative articles on African resistance to European conquest and rule. On women and changes in the family in the Ottoman realm, see Nermin Abadan-Unat, Wonen in Turkish Society (1931); in the Arab world, see Nawal el Saadara¡1, The Hidden Face of Eve ( 1980). On the Manchu takeover in China, see Frederic Wakeman The Greøt Enterprise (1985), and lonathan Spence and John lr., E. Willis, eds., Ming to Ch'ing (1979). On Qing rule, among the most readable and useful works are Spence's Emperor of China: Portrait of K'ang-hsi (I974) and the relevant sections in his The Search for Modern China (1990); Susan Naquin and Evel¡r Rawski, Chinese Society in the 18th Century (1987); and the essays in |ohn Fairbank, ed., The Cambridge History of China: Late Ch'ing 1800-1911 (1978). The early decades of Qing and Chinese decline are perceptively surveyed in F.W. Mofe, Imperial Chinø" 900-1800 (1999). A good survey of the causes and course of Opium War is provided in Hsin-pao Chang, Commissioner and the Opium War (1964). The Taiping Rebellion is covered Jen Yu-wen, The Taiping Revolutionary Movement (1973), Jonathan D. Spence, God's Chinese Son: Taiping Heavenly dom of Hong Xiuquan (1996). The rebellion heralding the stage of Qing decline is examined in I. W Esherick, Tlre of the Boxer Uprising (1987) The first stages of the Chinese nationalist movement are amined in the essays in Mary Wright, ed., China in Revolution: First Phase (1963). The early sections of Elisabeth Croll, and Socialism in China (1980), provide an excellent the status and condition of women in the Qing era. On the Web Links exploring the Ming dynasty can be found at stockton.edu/- gilmorew/consorti/2feasia.htm and http wikipedia.orglwiki/Ming-Dynasty. The decline of the Qing library.thinkq uesÍ.or gl 26469lhistory/ I 900.html) was the failure of a reform effort which climaxed in the 103 June l1 to September 21, 1898 (http://www-chaos' history/modern3.html). This failure came on top of the (http://wwwwsu.edu/-dee/CHING/OPIUM.HTM and .ryber.law.harvard.edr-L/ChinaDragon/opiumwar.html). A site html sion of Chinese Opium Commissigner Lin Zexu's letter Victoria. web. jj ay. cuny. edu/ - j obrien/reference/ob29. The Taiping Rebellion (http://www.chaos.unr modern2.html) gravelyweakened 2000 years of government. The Boxer Rebellion (http:/ imperialism/fists.html) provided the coup de gtàce. Major General Charles "Chinese" Gordon took part in the suppression of the anti-foreign, anti Rebellion, also had to address another indigenous led by Muhammad Ahmed, the Mahdi (http://en' wiki/Muhammad-Ahmed). Unlike the Mahdi, who sought the path of ism, Mohammad Abduh and )amal al-din Afghani chapter 26 ' civilizations in crisis: The ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and eing The decline of the Ottornan Empire in the lgth century can to all ofthese reasons EXCEPT be traced (A) frequent defeats of the Ottoman army and foreign an_ nexations of its land. (B) (C) (D) religious divisions within Islam. china 5. Although they were nomadic tribesmen from beyond the Great Wall, the Manchus (eing), when they conquered China, (A) tightly regulated merchant activities and overseas in_ vestments. the spread ofnationalism in southeastern Europe. restive Christian and non-Turkish populations who (B) redistributed land to the peasants. (c) resented Turkish rule. (D) retained the Ming emperors as nominal leaders. retained the Confucian gentry-scholars and much the political system. The groups that opposed most internal Ottoman reforms were the 6. (,{) university-educatedstudents. (C) merchants. (D) peasants. (E) ruling religious, political, and social elites. (C) (D) attempted to modernize Turkey without westernizing. sought Muslim solutions to internal problems. emphasized westernization and copied Western models openly. were opposed by most members of Turkish society. Napoleon's invasion in 179g. the khedive's conquest of the Middle East and defeat ue Ottoman Empire. building the Suez Canal. successful industrialization under Muhammad Question Ottoman and Qing Empires under the pressure of the two empires responded. Korea was ceded to Japan, and the British took Siam. China was forced to open its ports to European trade and grant European extraterritoriality. Rebellion such a serious threat to the Qing dynasty? (A) (B) (D) of the beginning of a powerful reform movement to strengthen China. 7. Why was the Taiping (C) strategic importance of Eglpt to Europeans was of The most immediate result of the Opium War was (A) the collapse of the eing dynasty and its replacement. (B) under the late Ottoman sultans and young Turk 62s The rebels were allied with Western Europeans. The rebels had a sweeping series of social, political and religious reforms. The rebels captured the Dowager Empress Cixi and the heir. The rebels demanded extreme westernization and an end to the scholar-gentry privileges.