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Warm Up • What did imperialism look like in Africa? • What did imperialism look like in India? • How were the results similar…different? New Imperialism in Asia Indochina • French Colony • Natural resources particularly rubber • Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia Thailand/Siam • Independent • “Buffer” between British India and French Indochina China - Internal Problems • By the 1800s, the Qing dynasty was in decline • A population explosion put stress on the government • An extravagant court, tax evasion, official corruption, and bribery in the civil service system led to an increased burden on the peasant class. • Emperors refused to change and industrialize. Trade Issue • Prior to the 1800s, China placed strict restrictions on trade • European merchants and traders were limited to a small area in southern China • China sold the Europeans silk, porcelain, and tea in exchange for gold and silver • China enjoyed a trade surplus, exporting more than it imported • Westerners had a trade deficit, buying more from the Chinese than they sold to them Fixing the Trade Imbalance • During the 1700s, British merchants introduced • • • • Indian opium to China The opium was traded for Chinese tea, which had become extremely popular in England Many Chinese citizens became addicted to the drug Silver flowed out of China in payment for opium This disrupted the Chinese economy and depleted the Chinese treasury The Opium War • The Chinese government outlawed opium and • • • • • executed drug dealers They called on Britain to stop the opium trade The British refused , calling for free trade In 1839, Chinese warships clashed with British merchants, triggering the Opium War British gunboats bombarded Chinese coastal and river ports The British used their superior weapons and tactics to defeat Chinese forces Unequal Treaties • • • • • • In 1842, Treaty of Nanjing ends Opium Wars. The British gained the island of Hong Kong China had to open five ports to foreign trade British citizens were granted extraterritoriality, the right to live under their own laws and be tried in their own courts This was the first in a series of “unequal treaties” that forced China to make concessions to western powers During the mid-1800s, under pressure from the West, China opened up more ports to foreign trade and let Christian missionaries into China The Taiping Rebellion 18501864 • As peasant misery increased, a rebellion broke • • • • out The rebellion was led by Hong Xiuquan, a village school teacher who thought he was brother of Jesus Christ. He wanted to establish a “Heavenly Kingdom of Great Peace”- the Taiping Hong’s ideas were considered radical by Chinese leaders He supported land reform, community ownership of property, and equality for women and men Effects • The rebellion almost toppled the Qing dynasty • The rebellion caused an estimated 20-30 million deaths • The dynasty survived but was weakened • During the rebellion, the Europeans kept the pressure on China • Russia seized lands in northern China Self-Strengthening Government • In the 1860s, reformers launched the “self-strengthening movement” • They imported western technologymodern factories, shipyards, railroads, mining, and light industry • The movement made little progress because the government did not support it Spheres of Influence • The western powers carved out spheres of influence along the Chinese coast (areas where Europeans had influence over trade and government, not the Chinese) • Britain, France, Germany, and Russia all claimed a sphere of influence in China • The United States did not claim a sphere, but was worried that the European powers would close trade to U.S. merchants U.S. Open Door Policy • In 1899, the United States called for an “Open Door policy” in China • No colonies but China remain open to trading with all countries. • The European powers accepted the policy The Qing Dynasty Falls • As the 19th century ended, the Qing dynasty was in decline • However, the Chinese did not like having foreign troops in their country • They also resented Christian missionaries Boxer Uprising • In 1899, the situation exploded • A secret organization, the Righteous Harmonious Fists, wanted to expel all foreigners from China • In 1900, the Boxers attacked foreigners across China • The western powers and Japan sent in troops to put down the uprising. Three Principles of the People • The Boxer Rebellion led to increased nationalism • In 1900, a constitutional monarchy was introduced • Some began pushing for a republic Sun Yixian • Sun Yixian (also known as Sun Yatsen) wanted to rebuild China on “Three Principles of the People” 1. Nationalism- drive out the foreigners 2. Democracyrepresentative democracy 3. Livelihoodeconomic security for all Chinese Birth of a Republic • The Qing dynasty fell in 1911 • Sun Yixian was named president of the new Chinese republic • However, for the next 37 years, China faced constant warfare (foreign and domestic)