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Qing Dynasty 1644 - 1911
The Qing Dynasty, which was founded by the Jurchen
(Manchu) people, was the second ethnic group to rule the whole of
China. It is also the last feudal dynasty in Chinese history. It was
during this period that imperial China reached its zenith of power
and influence.
The Jurchen people, believed to be the ancestors of the Manchus, had
been a nomadic tribe that lived adjacent to the present Heilongjiang
region. In the closing years of the Ming Dynasty (1368 - 1644), a
great leader named Nurhachi, emerged from the Jurchen tribe. Under
his leadership, the Jurchen people rapidly united and in 1616,
established the Later Jin State which was independent from the Ming.
In 1636, Nurhachi's son Abahai, renamed the dynasty as Qing in
Shenyang while formally declaring war on the Ming.
In 1644, when the peasant army led by Li Zicheng conquered Beijing,
Emperor Chongzhen committed suicide. Wu Sangui, a Ming commander
stationed in Shanhaiguan Pass, led the Qing army through the pass.
With the assistance of Dorgan, one of his chancellors, Fulin, son of
Abahai, captured Beijing in the same year and four months later,
moved his capital there. This marked the beginning of the Qing reign
over China. For the next decade or so the Manchu continued to
suppress native resistance, finally destroying the last Ming
pretender in 1659 and gradually unified the whole country.
The Qing Dynasty was very successful as a ethnic group reign in
China. It lasted for almost 300 years and the duration of the regime
was divided into two periods by the Opium War occurred of 1840.
In its early years, the Qing Dynasty witnessed a flourishing that
was unprecedented by any other age. In order to mitigate class
conflicts, the Qing pursued a policy of rewarding land cultivation
coupled with a reduction or exemption from taxation. These policies
promoted economic growth in the hinterland and on the frontiers of
the country. During the reigns of Emperors Kangxi (1622-1723),
Yongzheng (1723-1736) and Qianlong (1736-1796) saw the Qing at its
heyday. By the mid-18th century economic development reached a new
height. With this new prosperity power became more centralized,
national strength increased, a well-maintained social order and a
population that amounted to some 300 million by the end of the
century. During the reign of Emperor Kangxi, Taiwan became part of
the country and the Sino-Russian Treaty of Nerchinsk was signed
determining the border between the two countries. During the reign
of Emperor Qianlong, Xinjiang was incorporated into China after the
Junggars and Uigurs were defeated. The early Qing emperors not only
resolved the long conflict between nomads and peasants that had
plagued China throughout history, but also took a series of measures
to develop the economy, culture and transportation in the frontier
areas. As a result, they consolidated national unification and laid
the foundation for modern China's territorial boundaries.
In the realm of literature, during the reigns of Emperors Kangxi and
Qianlong, several large works such as the Encyclopedia of Chinese
Writings (Confucian classics, history, philosophy and
belles-lettres), Kangxi Dictionary, and A Collection of Books
Ancient and Modern, were compiled; which with other works made an
important contribution to Chinese history and culture.
In spite of these noticeable achievements, the Qing rulers were
autocratic and despotic. The national economy was still based on
agriculture. In the culture and practiced ideology, feudal ethics
and rites continued to dominate society. Worse still, the Qing
rulers persecuted many intellectuals, banning and destroying works
that did not meet with their approval. The foreign policy of the
Qing Empire was one of isolationism. The government was conservative
and arrogant. It failed to join the industrial revolution that was
spreading across the countries in the West. Sadly, these factors led
to China falling more and more behind the developing world and the
gap between it and Western nations inevitably widened.
After the mid-Qing period, the dynasty failed to adjust as new
problems arose. Rampant corruption, a steady decentralization of
power, warfare, rebellions, overpopulation and economic disasters
plagued the once glorious empire. Rebellions sprouted like mushrooms
after a rain, one of which, the uprising by the White Lotus Sect,
that lasted for nine years, put an end to the golden age of the Qing.
In 1840, the 20th year of the Daoguang reign, the Opium War, an
armed invasion of China by foreign capitalists, broke out. The Qing
government was forced to sign a series of unreasonable treaties,
which demanded China to cede territories, pay indemnities and/or
open trading ports. Eventually China became a semi-feudal and
semi-colonized country.
At that time, the attitude of the Western powers towards China was
strangely ambivalent. On the one hand, they did their best to
undermine what they considered to be restrictive trading and
governmental regulations. On the other hand, they did do their best
to prop up the ailing Qing, the most notable example being the
crushing of the Boxer Rebellion in 1900 by foreign troops. What the
Western powers were interested in was the carving up of China for
their own purposes, and that, paradoxically, required keeping China
together.
Through its corrupt politics and conservatism, the Qing Dynasty
rapidly declined. As its legitimacy waned almost daily, the Qing
government imposed more taxes in order to pay both the expenses of
war and the indemnities they had to bear. This action placed an
unbearable burden on the people, especially the peasants. External
aggression and domestic oppression sparked off a series of
anti-feudal and anti-imperialist movements such as the Taiping
Rebellion and the Nian Army Uprising. Under these circumstances, the
Qing government was forced to introduce reforms, such as the
Self-strengthening Movement and the Hundred-Day Reform, in effort to
save and revitalize China. All measures that were doomed to fail. In
the end the Revolution of 1911, led by Dr. Sun Yat-sen, enabled the
Chinese people to overthrow the Qing imperialists who had ruled
China for 268 years.
The Qing Dynasty which from 1644 had lasted 268, with a total of ten
emperors when collapsed. With its demise feudalism, which had lasted
for more than two thousand years, was brought to a close. The nation
had entered a new era - Republic of China (1911 - 1949).
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