The
Qing Dynasty ( ; Manchu: 
,
Von Möllendorff: Daicing
gurun), also known as the
Manchu Dynasty, was the
last ruling
dynasty of
China
, ruling from 1644 to 1912 (with a brief,
abortive restoration in 1917).
It was
preceded by the Ming
Dynasty
and followed by the Republic of China
.
The dynasty was founded by the
Manchu clan
Aisin Gioro in what is today
northeast China (also known as
Manchuria). Starting in 1644 it expanded into
China proper and its surrounding
territories, establishing the
Empire of the Great
Qing ( , or ). Complete pacification of China was
accomplished around 1683 under the
Kangxi
Emperor.
Originally established as the
Later Jin Dynasty (
)
Amaga Aisin Gurun (

), in 1616, it changed its name to
"Qing", meaning "clear" or "pellucid", in 1636 and captured
Beijing in 1644.
During its reign, the Qing Dynasty became highly integrated with
Chinese culture. However, its
military power weakened during the 1800s, and faced with
international pressure, massive
rebellions
and defeats in
wars, the Qing Dynasty declined
after the mid-19th century. The Qing Dynasty was overthrown
following the
Xinhai Revolution,
when the
Empress Dowager
Longyu abdicated on behalf of the last emperor,
Puyi, on February 12, 1912.
History
Formation of the Manchu State
The
Dynasty was founded not by the Han who
form the majority of the Chinese population, but the Manchus, who are today an ethnic minority of China
.
The
Manchus are descended from Jurchens (Ch: 女真,
Man:
Jušen), a
Tungusic people who lived around the region
now comprising the
Chinese
provinces of
Heilongjiang
,
Jilin
and
Liaoning
and the
Russian
province of
Primorsky Krai
. What was to become the
Manchu state was founded by
Nurhaci, the chieftain of a minor Jurchen tribe in
Jianzhou, in the early 17th century.
Originally a vassal of the Ming emperors, Nurhaci in 1582 embarked
on an inter-tribal feud that escalated into a campaign to unify the
Jianzhou Jurchen tribes. By 1616 he had sufficiently
consolidated
Jianzhou region to proclaim himself
Khan of "Great Jin" in reference to the
previous Jurchen dynasty. Historians refer to this pre-Qing entity
as "Later Jin" to distinguish it from the first
Jin Dynasty. Two years later
Nurhaci announced
Seven Grievances
and openly renounced the sovereignty of Ming overlordship in order
to complete the unification of those Jurchen tribes still allied
with the Ming emperor.
After a series of successful battles he
relocated his capital from Hetu Ala to successively bigger
captured Ming cities in the province of Liaodong
, first
Liaoyang
(Man: dergi
hecen) in 1621 and again in 1625 to Shenyang
(later renamed Shengjing; Ch: 盛京; Man:
Mukden).
Relocating
his court from Jianzhou to Liaodong
provided
Nurhaci a bigger power base in terms of human and material
resources; geographically it also brought him in close contact with
the Mongol domains on the plains of
Mongolia. Although by this time the once-united Mongol
nation under
Genghis Khan had long
fragmented into individual and at times hostile tribes, these
disunited tribes still presented a serious security threat to the
Ming borders. Nurhaci's policy towards the Mongols was to seek
their friendship and cooperation, thus securing the Jurchens'
western front from a potential enemy. Furthermore, the Mongols
proved a useful ally in the war, lending the Jurchens their
traditional expertise as cavalry archers. To cement this new
alliance Nurhaci initiated a policy of inter-marriages between
Jurchen and those Mongolian nobility compliant to Jurchen
leadership, while those who resisted were met with military action.
This is a typical example of Nurhaci's many initiatives that
eventually became official Qing government policy. Some of
Nurhaci's other important contributions include ordering the
creation of a written
Manchu script
based on
Mongolian script (Their
ancestral
Jurchen language already
had a
Jurchen script, which was
derived from
Khitan script which was
derived from
Chinese), and the
creation of the civil and military administrative system that
eventually evolved into the
Manchu Banners the defining element of Manchu
identity, thus laying foundation for transforming the loosely
knitted Jurchen tribes into a nation.

Qing Dynasty era brush container
Nurhaci's unbroken series of military successes came to an end in
January 1626 when he was dealt his first major military defeat by
general
Yuan Chonghuan while laying
siege to the Ming city of
Ningyuan. He died a few months later and
was succeeded by his eighth son
Hung
Taiji who emerged after a short political struggle amongst
other potential contenders as the new Khan. Although he was an
experienced general and the commander of two Banners at the time of
his succession, Hung Taiji's reign did not start well on the
military front. The Jurchens suffered yet another defeat in 1627 at
the hands of Yuan Chonghuan. As before, this defeat was the result
of the superior firepower of the Ming forces' newly acquired
Portuguese cannons. To redress the technological and numerical
disparity Hung Taiji in 1634 created his own artillery corps
(
Ch: 重军,
Man:
ujen chooha) from amongst his
existing Han troops who cast their own cannons from European design
with the help of captured Chinese artisans. In 1635 the Manchu's
Mongolian allies were fully incorporated into a separate Banner
hierarchy under direct Manchu command. Hong Taiji then proceeded in
1636 to
invade Korea
for the second time. This was followed by the creation of the first
(two) Han Banners in 1637 (which eventually increased to eight in
1642). Together these military reforms enabled Hung Taiji to
resoundingly defeat Ming forces in a series of battles from 1640 to
1642 for the territories of Songshan (松山) and Jingzhou (锦州). This
final victory resulted in the surrender of many of the Mings' most
battle hardened troops and the complete permanent withdrawal of
remaining Ming forces from lands north of the Great Wall.
On the civil front, Hung Taiji, on the advice of surrendered Ming
officials, set up a rudimentary bureaucratic system based on the
Ming model of government. Hung Taiji's bureaucracy was staffed with
an unprecedented number of Han Chinese, many of them newly
surrendered Ming officials. However, the Jurchens' continued
dominance in government was ensured by an ethnic quota for top
bureaucratic appointments. Hung Taiji's reign also saw a
fundamental change of policy towards his Han Chinese subjects.
Whereas
under Nurhaci all captured Han Chinese were seen as a potential
fifth column for the Ming Dynasty
and treated as chattel— including those who
eventually held important government posts– Hung Taiji in contrast
incorporated them into the Jurchen "nation" as full if not first
class citizens, who were also obligated to provide military service
and by 1648 less than one-sixth of the bannermen were of Manchu
ancestry. This change of policy not only increased Hung
Taiji's power base and reduced his military dependence on those
banners not under his personal control, it also greatly encouraged
other Han Chinese subjects of the Ming Dynasty to surrender and
accept Jurchen rule when they were defeated militarily. Through
these and other measures Hung Taiji was able to centralize power
unto the office of the Khan, which in the long run prevented the
Jurchen federation from fragmenting after his death.
One of the defining events of Hung Taiji's reign was the official
adoption of the name "Manchu" (
Ch:
滿州;
Man: Manju

) for all Jurchen people in November
1635.
And
when the imperial seal of the Yuan
emperors was
presented to Hung Taiji by Ejei Khan the
son of Lingdan Khan, the last
grand-Khan of the Mongols, Hung Taiji in 1636 renamed the state
from "Later Jin" to "Great Qing" and elevated his position from
Khan to Emperor, suggesting imperial
ambitions beyond unifying Manchu territories. Some sources
suggested that the name "Qing" was chosen in reaction to that of
the Ming Dynasty (明) which consists of the
Chinese characters for sun (日) and moon
(月), which are associated with the fire element. The character Qing
(清) is composed of the water (水) radical and the character for
blue-green (青), which are both associated with the water element.
Others suggested that the name change went a long way to
rehabilitate the Manchu state in the eyes of the Ming-era Han
Chinese, who, being heavily influenced by a Neo-Confucian education
system, had regarded the former
Jurchen Jin dynasty as foreign
invaders.
Claiming the Mandate of Heaven
Hung Taiji died suddenly in September 1643 without a designated
heir. Because Jurchens had traditionally "elected" their leader
through a council of nobles, the Qing state did not have in place a
clear succession system until the reign of
Emperor Kangxi. The leading contenders for
power at this time were Hung Taiji’s eldest son
Hooge and Hung Taiji’s
agnate half brother
Dorgon. In the ensuing political impasse between two
bitter political rivals a compromise candidate in the person of
Hung Taiji’s five-year-old son
Fulin
was installed as
Emperor Shunzhi,
with Dorgon as regent and
de facto
leader of the Manchu nation. The Manchus' nemesis, the Ming
Dynasty, was fighting for its own survival against a long peasant
rebellion and was unable to capitalise on the Qing court’s
political uncertainty over the succession dispute and installation
of a minor as Emperor. The Ming Dynasty's internal crisis came to a
head in April 1644, when the capital at modern day
Beijing was sacked by a coalition of rebel forces
led by
Li Zicheng, a minor Ming official
turned leader of the peasant revolt. The last Ming, Emperor
Chongzhen committed
suicide when the city fell, marking the official end of the
dynasty.
After
easily taking Beijing, Li Zicheng led a coalition of rebel forces
numbering 200,000 to confront Wu Sangui,
the general commanding the Ming garrison at
Shanhaiguan
. Shanhaiguan is a pivotal
pass of the
Great Wall of China located fifty miles
northeast of Beijing, and for years its
defenses were what kept the Manchus from
directly raiding the Ming capital. Wu, caught between a rebel army
twice his size and a foreign enemy he had fought for years, decided
to cast his lot with the Manchus with whom he was familiar, and
made an alliance with Dorgon to fight the rebels. Some sources
suggested that Wu's actions were influenced by news of mistreatment
of his family and his concubine
Chen
Yuanyuan at the hands of the rebels when the capital fell.
Regardless of the actual reasons for his decision, this awkward and
some would say cynical alliance between Wu and his former sworn
enemy was ironically made in the name of avenging the death of
Emperor
Chongzhen.
Together, the two former enemies met and defeated Li Zicheng's
rebel forces in battle on May 27, 1644. After routing
Li's forces, the
Manchus
captured
Beijing on June 6, where
Emperor Shunzhi was installed as the
"Son of Heaven" on October 30.
The
Manchus who had positioned themselves as
political heir to the Ming
Emperor by
defeating Li Zicheng, completed the
symbolic act of transition by holding a formal funeral for Emperor Chongzhen. However
the process of conquering the rest of China took another seventeen
years of battling Ming loyalists,
pretenders and rebels. It also involved huge loss
of life, including the infamous
Yangzhou massacre of 1645, when a ten-day
rampage by troops in the city with the permission of
Prince Dodo resulted in an estimated 800,000
deaths.
The last Ming pretender, Prince Gui, sought refuge with the King of
Burma
, a vassal of the Ming Dynasty, but was turned over
to a Qing expeditionary army commanded by Wu, who had him brought
back to Yunnan
province and
executed in early 1662.
The first seven years of
Shunzhi’s
reign were dominated by the regent prince Dorgon, who, because of
his own political insecurity within the Manchu power structure,
followed Hung Taiji’s example of centralizing power under his own
control in the name of the Emperor at the expense of other
contending Manchu princes, many of whom eventually were demoted or
imprisoned under one pretext or another. Although the period of his
regency was relatively short, Dorgon cast a long shadow over the
Qing Dynasty. Firstly the Manchus were able to enter "China Proper"
only because of Dorgon’s timely decision to act on Wu Sangui’s
appeal for military assistance. After capturing Beijing instead of
sacking the city as the rebels had done before them, Dorgon
insisted over the protests of other Manchu princes on making it
Qing’s capital and largely reappointed Ming officials to their
posts. Setting the Qing capital in Beijing may seem a
straightforward move in hindsight, but it was then an act of
innovation because historically no major Chinese dynasty had ever
"inherited" its immediate predecessor’s capital. Keeping the Ming
capital and bureaucracy intact helped quickly stabilize the country
and greatly sped up the Manchu process of conquest. However, not
all of Dorgon’s policies were equally popular nor easily
implemented.
One of Dorgon's most controversial decisions was his July 1645
edict (the "
haircutting order") that
forced all Han Chinese men to shave the front of their heads and
comb the remaining hair into a queue, on pain of death. To the
Manchus, this policy was a test of loyalty and an aid in telling
friend from foe. For the Han Chinese, however, it was a
"humiliating act of degradation" that went against their
traditional Confucian values. The order was so deeply unpopular
that it triggered strong resistance to Qing rule in Jiangnan until
at least the late 1640s. Twenty-five million people were killed
before all of China was brought into compliance.
On December 31, 1650, Dorgon suddenly died during a hunting
expedition, marking the official start of the Shunzhi Emperor’s
personal rule. However, because the Emperor was only twelve years
old at that time, most decisions were made on his behalf by his
mother, the
Empress Dowager Xiaozhuang, who turned out to be
a skilled political operator. Although Dorgon's support had been
essential to Shunzhi's ascent, Dorgon had through the years
centralised so much power in his hands as to become a direct threat
to the throne, so much so that upon his death he was
extraordinarily bestowed the posthumous title of Emperor Yi
(
Ch: 義皇帝), the only instance in
Qing history in which a Manchu "
prince of
the blood" (
Ch: 亲王) was so
honored. However two months into Shunzhi’s personal rule Dorgon was
not only stripped of his titles, but his corpse was disinterred and
mutilated to atone for multiple "crimes"—one of which was
persecuting to death Shunzhi’s agnate eldest brother,
Hooge. More importantly, Dorgon’s symbolic
fall from grace also signalled a political purge of his family and
associates at court, thus reverting power back to the person of the
Emperor. However, after a promising start, Shunzhi’s reign was cut
short by his early death in 1661 at the age of twenty-four from
smallpox. He was succeeded by his third son
Xuanye, who reigned as the
Kangxi
Emperor.
Manchu methods of maintaining control
Queue Order
Manchu as a minority ruling class imposed
Queue Order to force other ethnicities into
submission.
Before
capturing Beijing, the Later Jin government
implemented a mandatory shaving of the hair in Liaodong
in the early 1620s, which led to a rebellion of the
Han Chinese of this area in 1622 and 1625. Nevertheless, the
Later Jin government responded swiftly to this rebellion by killing
the educated elite and plain folks, resulting in more than 500,000
people dead, and instituting a stricter separation between Han
Chinese and Manchus by prohibiting intermarriage between
them.
After capturing Beijing in the previous year, Qing Prince Dorgon
issued another decree in 1645 that any man who did not adopt the
Manchu hairstyle within ten days would be executed. The slogan of
the Queue Order is: "To keep the hair, you lose the head; To keep
your head, you cut the hair." Han Chinese's revolt against this
rule was wide spread, resulting in massive killing of Han ethnic
throughout the country. One well documented massacre was the triple
massacres at
Jiading, in which General Li
Chengdong, a Han Chinese general who previously served the Ming
Dynasty but later surrendered to the Qing, ordered troops to carry
out three separate massacres on the Jiading inhabitants within a
month, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths. At the end of the
third massacre, there was hardly any living person left in this
city.
Literary inquisition and censorship
The Manchu rulers used
literary
inquisition to silence opposition. The accusation of
individuals began with the authority's own interpretation of the
true meaning of the corresponding words. Single characters and the
neutrality of the sentence were judged by authorities. If the
authority decided these were derogatory or cynical towards the
rulers, persecution would begin.
Literary inquisition began with isolated cases in Shunzhi and
Kangxi times, then evolved into a pattern. There were 53 cases of
literary persecution during Qianlong's reign.
Kangxi emperor and consolidation
At sixty one years,
Kangxi had the
longest reign of any
Chinese
Emperor. But more importantly, apart from its length,
Kangxi’s reign is also celebrated as the
beginning of an era called “Kang-Qian Golden Age” (
Ch: 康乾盛世) during which the Qing Dynasty
reached the zenith of its social, economic and military power.
Kangxi’s long reign started when he
was eight years old upon the untimely demise of his father. In
order to prevent a repeat of
Dorgon's
dictatorial monopolizing of imperial powers during the period of
regency,
Emperor Shunzhi on his
deathbed hastily appointed four senior cabinet ministers to govern
on behalf of his young son. The four ministers—
Sonin,
Ebilun,
Suksaha, and
Oboi—were chosen
for their long service to the emperor, but also to counteract each
others' influences. Most importantly, the four were not closely
related to the imperial family and laid no claim to the throne.
However as time passed, through chance and machination,
Oboi—the most junior of the four ministers—was able to
achieve political dominance to such an extent as to become a
potential threat to the crown. Even though
Oboi's loyalty was never an issue, his personal
arrogance and political conservatism led him to come into ever
escalating conflict with the young
Emperor. In 1669
Kangxi, through trickery, disarmed and
imprisoned
Oboi—a not insignificant victory for
the fifteen-year-old
Emperor, as
Oboi was not only a wily old politician but
also an experienced military commander.
The Manchus found controlling the "
Mandate of Heaven" a daunting task. The
vastness of China's territory meant that there were only enough
banner troops to garrison key cities forming the backbone of a
defence network that relied heavily on surrendered Ming soldiers.
In addition, three surrendered Ming generals were singled out for
their contributions to the establishment of the Qing dynasty,
ennobled as feudal princes (藩王), and given governorships over vast
territories in Southern China.
The chief of these was Wu Sangui (吳三桂), who was given the provinces of
Yunnan
and Guizhou
, while generals Shang
Kexi (尚可喜) and Geng Zhongming
(耿仲明) were given the Guangdong
and Fujian
provinces,
respectively.
As the years went by, the three feudal lords and their territories
inevitably became increasingly autonomous. Finally, in 1673, Shang
Kexi petitioned Kangxi Emperor, stating his desire to retire to his
hometown in Liaodong (遼東) province and nominating his son as his
successor. The young emperor granted his retirement, but denied the
heredity of his fief. In reaction, the two other generals decided
to petition for their own retirements to test Kangxi's resolve,
thinking that he would not risk offending them. The move backfired
as the young emperor called their bluff by accepting their requests
and ordering all three fiefdoms to be reverted back to the
crown.
Faced with the stripping of their powers, Wu Sangui felt he had no
choice but to rise up in revolt. He was joined by Geng Zhongming
and by Shang Kexi's son Shang Zhixin (尚之信). The ensuing rebellion
lasted for eight years. At the peak of the rebels' fortunes, they
managed to extend their control as far north as the Yangtze River
(長江). Ultimately, though, the Qing government was able to put down
the rebellion and exert control over all of southern China. The
rebellion would be known in Chinese history as the
Revolt of the Three
Feudatories.
To
consolidate the empire, Kangxi
Emperor personally led a series of military campaigns against
Tibet, the Dzungars,
and later Russia
. He
arranged the marriage of his daughter to the Mongol Khan
Gordhun to avoid a military conflict. Gordhun's
military campaign against the Qing failed, further strengthening
the Empire.
Taiwan
was also
conquered by Qing Empire forces in 1683 from Zheng Keshuang, grandson of Koxinga. Koxinga had conquered Taiwan from the
Dutch
colonists to use it as a base against the Qing
Dynasty. By the end of the 17th century, China was at
its greatest height of power since the Ming Dynasty
.
Kangxi Emperor also handled many
Jesuit missionaries that came to China. A
series of missionaries, including
Tomás
Pereira,
Matteo Ricci,
Martino Martini,
Johann Adam Schall von Bell,
Ferdinand Verbiest and
Antoine Thomas, also held significant
positions as mathematicians, astronomers and advisers to the
Emperor. Together they played a significant role in correcting the
Chinese calendar and advancing knowledge of astronomy, science, and
the geography of the Chinese empire.
Yongzheng and Qianlong emperors
The reigns of the
Yongzheng
Emperor (r. 1723–1735) and his son the
Qianlong Emperor (r. 1735–1796) marked the
height of Qing's power. During this period, the Qing Dynasty ruled
over 13 million square kilometres of territory.
After the Kangxi Emperor's death in the winter of 1722, his fourth
son Prince Yong (雍親王) succeeded him as the
Yongzheng Emperor. Yongzheng remained a
controversial character because of rumours about him usurping the
throne, and in the late Kangxi years, he was involved in great
political struggles with his brothers. Yongzheng was a hardworking
administrator who ruled with an iron hand. His first big step
towards a stronger regime came when he brought the
State Examination System back to its
original standards. In 1724, he cracked down on illegal exchange
rates of coins, which was being manipulated by officials to fit
their financial needs. Those who were found in violation of new
laws on finances were removed from office, or in extreme cases,
executed.
Yongzheng showed a great amount of trust in
Han officials, and appointed many of his
proteges to prestigious positions.
Nian Gengyao
was appointed to lead a military campaign in place of his brother
Yinti in Qinghai
. Nian's arrogant actions,however, led to his
downfall in 1726. Yongzheng's reign saw consolidation of imperial
power at its height in Chinese history.
More territory was incorporated in the Northwest. A toughened
stance was directed towards corrupt officials, and Yongzheng led
the creation of a
Grand Council, which
grew to become the de facto Cabinet for the rest of the
dynasty.
The Yongzheng Emperor died in 1735. This was followed by the
succession of his son Prince Bao (寶親王) as the
Qianlong Emperor. Qianlong was known as an
able general.
Succeeding the throne at the age of 24,
Qianlong personally led the military in campaigns near Xinjiang and Mongolia
. Revolts and uprisings in Sichuan
and parts of southern China were successfully put
down.
Around forty years into Qianlong's reign, the Qing government saw a
return of rampant corruption. The official
Heshen was arguably one of the most corrupt in the
entire Qing Dynasty. He was eventually forced into committing
suicide by Qianlong's son, the
Jiaqing
Emperor (r. 1796–1820).
In 1796 open rebellion by the
White Lotus
Society against the Qing government broke out. The
White Lotus Rebellion continued for
eight years, until 1804, and shattered the myth of the military
invincibility of the Manchus.
Rebellion, unrest and external pressure
A common view of 19th century China is that it was an era in which
Qing control weakened and prosperity diminished. Indeed, China
suffered massive social strife, economic stagnation, and explosive
population growth which placed an increasing strain on the food
supply. Historians offer various explanations for these events, but
the basic idea is that Qing power was, over the course of the
century, faced with internal problems and natural disasters which
were simply too much for the antiquated Chinese government,
bureaucracy, and economy to deal with.

Flag of Qing Dynasty, 1862–1890
The
Taiping Rebellion in the
mid-19th century was the first major instance of anti-Manchu
sentiment threatening the stability of the Qing dynasty, a
phenomenon that would only increase in the following years.
Hong Xiuquan, a failed civil service
candidate, led the
Taiping
Rebellion, amid widespread social unrest and worsening famine.
In 1851 Hong Xiuquan and others launched an uprising in Guizhou
Province, established the Heavenly Kingdom of Great Peace with
himself as king, claiming he often had visions of God and was the
brother of Christ. Slavery, concubinage, arranged marriage, opium
smoking, footbinding, judicial torture, and the worship of idols
were all banned. However, success and subsequent authority and
power led to internal feuds, defections and corruption. When
British and French answered the Manchu rulers' call for help by
sending troops equipped with modern weapons, the fate of the
Taiping Rebellion was sealed.The rebellion not only posed the most
serious threat towards the Manchu rulers; it was also "the
costliest (human life) civil war in history and second bloodiest
war of any kind, being only exceeded in casualities by WW II.
Between 20 and 30 million people died during its fourteen-year
course from 1850 to 1864."However, the horrific number of
casualties of this rebellion and the complete devastation of a huge
area in the south of the country have to a large extent been
overshadowed by another significant conflict. Although not nearly
as bloody, the outside world and its ideas and technologies had a
tremendous and ultimately revolutionary impact on an increasingly
weak and uncertain Qing state.
There
were revolts by the Muslims and the Miao people of China
against the
Qing Dynasty, most notably in the Dungan
revolt (1862-1877) in the northwest and the Panthay rebellion (1856-1873) in Yunnan
.
One of the major issues affecting nineteenth-century China was the
question of how to deal with other countries. Prior to the
nineteenth-century, the
Chinese
empire was the hegemonic power in East Asia. Under its imperial
theory, the Chinese emperor had the rights to rule "
all under heaven". Depending on the period
and dynasty, it either ruled territories directly or neighbors fell
under its hierarchical tributary system. Historians often refer to
the underlying concept of the Chinese empire as "an empire with no
boundary". However, the 18th century saw the European empires
gradually expand across the world, as European states developed
stronger economies built on
maritime
trade.
European colonies had been established in
nearby India
and on the
islands that are now part of Indonesia
, whilst the Russian Empire
had annexed the areas north of China.
In 1793,
Great
Britain
attempted to forge an alliance with China, sending
the Macartney Embassy to Hong Kong
with gifts for the Emperor, including examples of
the latest European technologies and art. When the British
delegation received a letter from
Beijing
explaining that China was unimpressed with European achievements,
and that
George III
was welcome to pay homage to the Chinese court, the deeply offended
British government aborted all further attempts to reconcile
relations with the Qing regime.
When the
Napoleonic Wars ended in
1815, world trade rapidly increased, and as China's vast population
offered limitless markets for European goods, trade between Chinese
and European merchants expanded during the early years of the 19th
century. This increased trade, though, led to increasing hostility
between European governments and the Qing regime.
In 1793, the Qianlong Emperor stated to the British Ambassador
Lord Macartney
that China had no use for European manufactured products.
Consequently, leading Chinese merchants only accepted bar
silver as payment for their goods. The huge demand in
Europe for Chinese goods such as
silk,
tea, and
ceramics could
only be met if European companies funnelled their limited supplies
of silver into China.
By the late 1830s, the governments of
Great
Britain
and France
were deeply
concerned about their stockpiles of precious metals and sought
alternate trading schemes with China—the foremost of which was
addicting China to opium. When the Qing regime tried to ban
the Opium Trade in 1838, Great Britain declared war on China.
The
First Opium War revealed the
outdated state of the Chinese military. The Qing navy, composed
entirely of wooden sailing
junks, was
severely outclassed by the modern tactics and firepower of the
Royal Navy. British soldiers, using
modern
rifles and
artillery, easily outmaneuvered and outgunned Qing
forces in ground battles. The Qing surrender in 1842 marked a
decisive, humiliating blow to China. The
Treaty of Nanking, which demanded
reparation payments, allowed unrestricted
European access to Chinese ports, and ceded the
island of Hong Kong to Great Britain. It
revealed many inadequacies in the Qing government and provoked
widespread rebellions against the already hugely unpopular
regime.
The Western powers, largely unsatisfied with the Treaty of Nanking,
only gave grudging support to the Qing government during the
Taiping and
Nien Rebellions. China's income fell sharply
during the wars as vast areas of farmland were destroyed, millions
of lives lost, and countless armies raised and equipped to fight
the rebels. In 1854, Great Britain tried to re-negotiate the Treaty
of Nanking, inserting clauses allowing British commercial access to
Chinese rivers and the creation of a permanent British embassy at
Peking. This last clause outraged the Qing
regime, who refused to sign, provoking another war with Britain.
The
Second Opium War ended in
another crushing Chinese defeat, whilst the
Treaty of Tianjin contained clauses deeply
insulting to the Chinese, such as a demand that all official
Chinese documents be written in
English and a proviso granting British
warships unlimited access to all navigable Chinese rivers.
Rule of Empress Dowager Cixi

Political map of Asia in 1890, showing
late-Qing China (
centre, in light brown).
The
Empress Dowager Cixi
(
Tsu hsi),
concubine to the
Xianfeng Emperor (r. 1850–1861)
came to power in 1861 during the Xinyou coup, when, with the help
of
Prince Gong, she ousted eight
regents (led by
Sushun) whom the Xianfeng
emperor had appointed on his deathbed to rule for the child emperor
Tongzhi, Cixi's son. For 47
years in the Tongzhi era (1862-1874) and during the reign of her
nephew the
Guangxu Emperor
(1875-1908), Cixi was the de facto ruler of China and the Qing
empire. She was known for "ruling from behind the curtain"
(垂簾聽政).
By the 1860s, the Qing dynasty had put down the
rebellions with the help
of
militia organized by the gentry. The Qing
government then proceeded to deal with the problem of
modernization, which it attempted with the
Self-Strengthening Movement.
Several modernized armies were formed, including the much renowned
Beiyang Army; however, the fleets of
"Beiyang" were annihilated in the
Sino-Japanese War , which
produced calls for greater and more extensive reform. After the
start of the 20th century, the Qing Dynasty was in a dilemma. It
could proceed with reform and thereby alienate the conservative
Manchu faction at court and the conservative gentry, or stagnate
and alienate reformers as well as an increasingly large number of
people opposed to Qing or Manchu rule.
Ten years into the reign of
Guangxu (r. 1875–1908), western
pressure on China was so great that she forcefully gave up all
sorts of power. In 1898 Guangxu attempted the
Hundred Days' Reform, in which new laws
were put in place and some old rules were abolished. Newer, more
progressive-minded thinkers like
Kang
Youwei were trusted and recognized conservative-minded people
like
Li Hongzhang were removed from
high positions. But the ideals were stifled by Cixi and Guangxu was
jailed in his own palace. Cixi concentrated on centralizing her own
power base. On her sixtieth birthday, she spent over 30 million
taels of silver for the decorations &
events, funds that were originally to improve the weaponry of the
Beiyang Navy.
In 1900, during the
Boxer Rebellion,
following the murder of the German Ambassador by the
Righteous Harmony Society, the
Eight-Nation Alliance entered
China as a united military force for the second time. Cixi reacted
by declaring war on all eight nations, only to lose
Beijing under their control within a short period of
time.
Along with the Guangxu Emperor, she fled to
Xi'an
. As a military compensation, the Alliance
listed scores of demands on the Qing Government, including an
initial hit list which had Cixi as No. 1.
Li Hongzhang was sent to negotiate and the
Alliance backed down from several of the demands.
Dowager Cixi, the dragon lady
Many historians described Dowager Cixi as one of "the most
formidable women in modern history", who could become a terrible
enemy if she was antagonized. She was described to be "power
hungry, ruthless and profoundly skilled in court politics".
The
Boxer Rebellion's rebels'
initial objectives were to overthrow the Manchu Imperial court and
expel all "foreign devils" from China. Dowager Cixi had decided to
remotely control and, at the same time, intensify the Boxer
movement through her ministers. Not long after, the Boxers' banner
had a new slogan: "Support the Qing; destroy the foreigner!". In
early 1900, an imperial edict released by the Dowager stated that
'secret societies were part of Chinese culture and were not
criminal'.
From 1889 to 1898, the Dowager lived in the summer palace in
semi-retirement. After losing to Japan in the first Sino-Japanese
War (1894–95), the young Emperor Guangxu initiated the 'Hundred
Days Reform'. The Dowager then returned to the Imperial Court to
call off the emperor's reform, and at the same time put him under
house arrest and ordered eunuchs faithful to her to keep
watch.
In 1899 she supported the
Boxer
Rebellion, during which thousands of Catholic and Protestant
missionaries were killed; some were beheaded or skinned alive. Tens
of thousands of Chinese Christian converts were killed too.
When the troops of the
Eight-Nation Alliance marched into
Peking, she fled the capital only to accept peace terms by paying
the foreign powers huge amounts of silver. Before her death, on
November 15, 1908, she allegedly ordered her trusted eunuchs to
poison the emperor. In a different version,
Yuan Shikai was alleged to have executed both
the emperor and dowager using a pistol.
Fall of the dynasty
By the early twentieth century, mass civil disorder had begun and
continuously grown.
Empress Dowager
Cixi and the Guangxu emperor both died in 1908, leaving a
relatively powerless and unstable central authority.
Puyi, the eldest son of
Zaifeng, Prince Chun, was appointed
successor at age two, leaving Zaifeng with the regency. This was
followed by the dismissal of General
Yuan
Shikai from his former positions of power. In mid 1911 Zaifeng
created the "Imperial Family Cabinet", a ruling council of the
Imperial Government almost entirely consisting of
Aisin Gioro relatives. This brought a wide range
of negative opinions from senior officials like
Zhang Zhidong.
The
Wuchang Uprising succeeded on
October 10, 1911, and was followed by a proclamation of a separate
central government, the Republic of China
, in Nanjing
with Sun Yat-sen as its
provisional head. Numerous provinces began "separating" from
Qing control. Seeing a desperate situation unfold, the Qing
government brought an unwilling
Yuan
Shikai back to military power, taking control of his
Beiyang Army, with the initial goal of crushing
the revolutionaries. After taking the position of
Prime Minister (內閣總理大臣) and creating his own
cabinet, Yuan went as far as to ask for the removal of Zaifeng from
the regency. This removal later proceeded with directions from
Empress Dowager Longyu.
With Zaifeng gone, Yuan Shi-kai and his Beiyang commanders
effectively dominated Qing politics. He reasoned that going to war
would be unreasonable and costly, especially when noting that the
Qing Government had a goal for constitutional monarchy. Similarly,
Sun Yat-sen's government wanted a Republican constitutional reform,
both aiming for the benefit of China's economy and populace. With
permission from Empress Dowager Longyu, Yuan began negotiating with
Sun Yat-sen, who decided that his goal had been achieved in forming
a republic, and that therefore he could allow Yuan to step into the
position of President of the Republic. In 1912, after rounds of
negotiations, Longyu issued the
Imperial
Edict bringing about the abdication of the child emperor
Puyi.
The collapse of the Qing dynasty in 1912 brought an end to over
2,000 years of imperial China and began an extended period of
instability of warlord factionalism. Obvious political and economic
backwardness combined with widespread criticism of Chinese culture
led to questioning and doubt about the future. China's turbulent
history since the overthrow of the Qing may be understood at least
in part as an attempt to understand and recover significant aspects
of historic Chinese culture and integrate them with influential new
ideas that have emerged within the last century.
In the 1930s,
Imperial
Japan
invaded Manchuria
(Manchu's homeland) and founded Manchukuo
in 1934, with Puyi, as the nominal regent and emperor.
After the
invasion by the Soviet
Union
, Manchukuo collapsed in 1945.
Qing government and society
Administrative divisions
- Outer Mongolia - 4 aimags
- Inner Mongolia - 6 leagues
- Dariganga - special region designated as Emperor's pasture
- Köbsgöl

- Tannu Urianha
- Köke Nuur
league
- Alshaa khoshuu-league (League-level khoshuu)
- Ejine khoshuu-league
- Kobdo league

- Tianshanbei
- Tianshannan
- Eighteen provinces (China
proper provinces)
- Zhili
- Henan

- Shandong

- Shanxi

- Shaanxi

- Gansu

- Hubei

- Hunan

- Guangdong

- Guangxi
- Sichuan

- Yunnan

- Guizhou

- Jiangsu

- Jiangxi

- Zhejiang

- Fujian
(incl. Taiwan until 1887)
- Anhui

Qing dyarchy
The Qing dynasty was characterized by a system of dual appointments
by which each position in the central government had a
Manchu and a
Han assigned
to it. The Han Chinese appointee was required to do the substantive
work and the Manchu to ensure Han loyalty to Qing rule. The
distinction between Han and Manchus extended to their court
costumes. During the
Qianlong
Emperor's reign, for example, members of his family were
distinguished by garments with a small circular emblem on the back,
whereas Han officials wore clothing with a square emblem; this
meant that any guard in the court could immediately distinguish
members of the imperial family from the back view alone.
With respect to Mongolia, Tibet, Chinese Turkestan and
Dzungaria (Zungaria) the
Qing maintained imperial control, with the emperor acting as Mongol
khan, patron of Tibetan Buddhism and protector of Muslims. However,
Qing policy changed with the establishment of
Xinjiang province in 1884. In response to British
and Russian military action in Xinjiang and Tibet, the Qing sent
Army units to respond.

Qing Dynasty vases, in the Calouste
Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon
Central government agencies
The Qing
Dynasty inherited many important institutions from the preceding
Ming
dynasty
. The formal structure of the Qing government
centered around the Emperor as the absolute ruler, who presided
over six Ministries (or Boards) (Ch.: Liubu 六部), each headed by two
presidents (
Ch:
Shàngshū,
尚書;
Ma:
Aliha amban) and assisted by
four vice presidents (Ch:
Shìláng, 侍郎; Ma:
Ashan i amban). In contrast
to the Ming system, however, Qing ethnic policy dictated that
appointments were split between Manchu noblemen and Han officials
who had passed the highest levels of the
state examinations. The Grand
Secretariat (Ch:
Nèigé 內閣; Ma:
Dorgi yamun), which had been
an important policy-making body under the Ming, lost its importance
during the Qing and evolved into an imperial chancery. The
institutions which had been inherited from the Ming dynasty formed
the core of the Qing "outer court," which handled routine matters
and was located in the southern part of the Forbidden City.
In order
not to let the routine administration take over the running of the
empire, the Qing emperors made sure that all important matters were
decided in the "Inner Court," which was dominated by the imperial
family and Manchu nobility and which was located in the northern
part of the Forbidden
City
. The core institution of the inner court was
the
Grand Council. It
emerged in the 1720s under the reign of the
Yongzheng emperor as a body charged with handling
Qing military campaigns against the
Dzungar
Mongols, but it soon took over other
military and administrative duties and served to centralize
authority under the crown. The Grand councillors (Ch.: Junji dachen
軍機大臣) served as a sort of
Privy
Council to the emperor. However, the Manchu nobility continued
to exercise considerable influence over the political and military
affairs of the Qing government well into the reign of the Qianlong
emperor.
The Six Ministries and their respective areas of responsibilities
were as follows:
- Board of Civil Appointments (Ch: Lìbù, 吏部; Ma:
Hafan i jurgan)
- The personnel administration of all civil officials - including
evaluation, promotion, and dismissal. It was also in charge of the
'honours list'.
- Board of Finance (Ch: Hùbù, 户部; Ma:
Boigon i jurgan)
- The literal translation of the Chinese word 'hù'(户) is
'household'. For much of the Qing Dynasty's history, the
government's main source of revenue came from taxation on
landownership supplemented by official monopolies on essential
household items such as salt and tea. Thus, in the predominantly
agrarian Qing dynasty, the 'household' was the basis of imperial
finance. The department was charged with revenue collection and the
financial management of the government.
- Board of Rites (Ch: Lǐbù, 禮部; Ma:
Dorolon i jurgan)
- This Board was responsible for all matters concerning court
protocol. It organized the periodic worship of ancestors and
various gods by the Emperor, managed relations with tributary
nations, and oversaw the nationwide civil examination system.
- Board of War (Ch: Bīngbù, 兵部; Ma:
Coohai jurgan)
- Unlike its Ming Dynasty
predecessor, which had full control over all
military matters, the Qing Dynasty Board of War had very limited
powers. First, the Eight
Banners were under the direct control of the Emperor and
hereditary Manchu and Mongolian princes, leaving the ministry only
with authority over the Green
Standard Armies. Furthermore, the ministry's functions were
purely administrative—campaigns and troop movements were monitored
and directed by the Emperor, first through the Manchu ruling
council, and later through the Grand Council.
- Board of Punishments (Ch: Xíngbù, 刑部; Ma:
Beidere jurgan)
- The Board of Punishments handled all legal matters, including
the supervision of various law courts and prisons. The Qing legal framework was relatively
weak compared to modern day legal systems, as there was no
separation of executive and legislative branches of government. The
legal system could be inconsistent, and, at times, arbitrary,
because the emperor ruled by decree and had final say on all
judicial outcomes. Emperors could (and did) overturn judgements of
lower courts from time to time. Fairness of treatment was also an
issue under the apartheid system practised by the Manchu government
over the Han Chinese majority. To counter these inadequacies and
keep the population in line, the Qing maintained a very harsh penal
code towards the Han populace, but it was no more severe than
previous Chinese dynasties.
- Board of Works (Ch: Gōngbù, 工部; Ma:
Weilere jurgan)
- The Board of Works handled all governmental building projects,
including palaces, temples and the repairs of waterways and flood
canals. It was also in charge of minting coinage.
In addition to the six boards, there was a
Lifan Yuan unique to the Qing government. This
institution was established to supervise the administration of
Tibet and the Mongolian lands. As the empire expanded, it took over
administrative responsibility of all minority ethnic groups living
in and around the empire, including early contacts with Russia—then
seen as a tribute nation. The office had the status of a full
ministry and was headed by officials of equal rank. However,
appointees were at first restricted only to candidates of
Manchurian and Mongolian ethnicity. To the south,
Manchuria was separated from China proper by the
Inner
Willow Palisade, a ditch and
embankment planted with willows intended to restrict the movement
of the Han Chinese into Manchuria, as the area was off-limits to
the Han until the Qing started colonizing the area with them later
on in the dynasty's rule.
Even though the Board of Rites and Lifan Yuan performed some duties
of a foreign office, they fell short of developing into a
professional foreign service. This stemmed from the traditional
imperial world view of seeing China as the centre of the world and
viewing all foreigners as uncivilized barbarians unworthy of equal
diplomatic status. It was not until 1861—a year after losing the
Second Opium War to the
Anglo-French coalition—that the Qing government bowed to foreign
pressure and created a proper foreign affairs office known as the
Zongli Yamen. The
office was originally intended to be temporary and was staffed by
officials seconded from the Grand Council. However, as dealings
with foreigners became increasingly complicated and frequent, the
office grew in size and importance, aided by revenue from customs
duties which came under its direct jurisdiction.
Imperial Household Department
The
Imperial Household
Department was unique to the Qing dynasty. It was established
before the Qing defeat of the Ming, but it became mature only after
1661, following the death of the
Shunzhi
emperor and the accession of his son
Kangxi.
The Department's primary purpose was to manage the internal affairs
of the
Qing imperial family and the
activities of the
inner
palace (in which tasks it largely replaced
eunuchs), but it also played
an important role in Qing relations with
Tibet and
Mongolia, engaged in trading
activities (jade,
ginseng, salt, furs,
etc.), managed textile factories in the
Jiangnan region, and even published books. The
Department was manned by
booi (Chinese:
baoyi
包衣), or "bondservants," from the Upper Three
Banners. By the nineteenth century, it managed
the activities of at least 56 subagencies.
Military
Beginnings and early development
The development of Qing military system can be divided into two
broad periods separated by the Taiping rebellion (1850–1864). The
early Qing military was rooted in the
Eight Banners first developed by Nurhachi as a
way to organize Jurchen society beyond petty clan affiliations.
There are eight banners in all, differentiated by colours. The
banners in their order of precedence were as follows: yellow,
bordered yellow (i.e yellow banner with red border), white, red,
bordered white, bordered red, blue, and bordered blue. The yellow,
bordered yellow, and white banners were collectively known as the
'Upper Three Banners' (
Zh:
shang san qi 上三旗) and were under the direct command of the
Emperor. Only Manchus belonging to the Upper Three Banners, and
selected Han Chinese who had passed the highest level of martial
exams were qualified to serve as the Emperor's personal bodyguards.
The remaining Banners were known as "The Lower Five Banners" (Zh:
xia wu qi 下五旗) and were commanded by hereditary Manchu
princes descended from Nurhachi's immediate family, known
informally as the "Iron Cap Princes" (Zh:
tie maozi wang
鐵帽子王). Together they formed the ruling council of the Manchu nation
as well as high command of the army.
As Qing power expanded north of the Great Wall in the last years of
the Ming Dynasty, the Banner system was expanded by Nurhachi's son
and successor Hung Taiji to include mirrored Mongolian and Han
Banners. After capturing Beijing in 1644 and as the Manchu rapidly
gained control of large tracts of former Ming Dynasty territory,
the relatively small Banner armies were further augmented by the
Green Standard Army (Zh: 綠營兵) which eventually outnumbered Banner
troops three to one. The Green Standard Army so-named after the
colour of their battle standards was made up of those Ming troops
who had surrendered to the Qing. They maintained their Ming era
organization and were led by a mix of Banner and Green Standard
officers. The Banners and Green Standard troops were standing
armies, paid for by central government. In addition, regional
governors from provincial down to village level maintained their
own irregular local militias for police duties and disaster relief.
These militias were usually granted small annual stipends from
regional coffers for part-time service obligations. They received
very limited military drill if at all and were not considered
combat troops.
Peace and stagnation
Banner Armies were broadly divided along ethnic lines, namely
Manchurian and Mongolian. Although it must be pointed out that the
ethnic composition of Manchurian Banners was far from homogeneous
as they include non-Manchu bondservants registered under the
household of their Manchu masters.
As the war with Ming Dynasty
progressed and the Han Chinese population under
Manchu rule increased, Hung Taiji created a separate branch of Han
Banners to draw on this new source of manpower. However
these Han bannermen were never regarded by the government as equal
to the other two branches due to their relatively late addition to
the Manchu cause as well as their Han Chinese ancestry. The nature
of their service—mainly as infantry, artillery and sappers, was
also alien to the Manchurian nomadic traditions of fighting as
cavalry. Furthermore, after the conquest the military roles played
by Han Bannermen were quickly subsumed by the Green Standard Army.
The Han Banners ceased to exist altogether after Emperor
Yongzheng's Banner registration reforms aimed at cutting down
imperial expenditures.
The socio-military origins of the
Banner system meant that population within
each branch and their sub-divisions were hereditary and rigid. Only
under special circumstances sanctioned by imperial edict were
social movements between banners permitted. In contrast, the Green
Standard Army was originally intended to be a professional
force.
After
defeating the remnants of the Ming
forces, the
Manchu Banner Army of approximately 200,000
strong at the time was evenly divided; half was designated the
Forbidden Eight Banner Army (禁旅八旗 Jìnlǚ Bāqí) and was
stationed in Beijing. It served both as the capital's
garrison and Qing government's main strike force. The remainder of
the Banner troops was distributed to guard key cities in China.
These were known as the Territorial Eight Banner Army (駐防八旗
Zhùfáng Bāqí). The
Manchu court
keenly aware its own minority status reinforced a strict policy of
racial segregation between the Manchus and Mongols from Han Chinese
for fear of being sinitized by the latter. This policy applied
directly to the Banner garrisons, most of which occupied a separate
walled zone within the cities they were stationed in. In cities
where there were limitation of space such as in Qingzhou (青州), a
new fortified town would be purposely erected to house the Banner
garrison and their families. Beijing being the imperial seat, the
Regent Dorgon had the entire Chinese population forcibly relocated
to the southern suburbs which became known as the "Outer Citadel"
(外城
wàichéng).
The northern walled city called "Inner
Citadel" (內城 nèichéng) was portioned out to the remaining
Manchu eight Banners, each responsibled for guarding a section of
the Inner Citadel surrounding the Forbidden City
palace complex (Zh:
紫禁城 Zǐjìnchéng; Ma:
Dabkūri dorgi
hoton).
The policy of posting Banner troops as territorial garrison was not
to protect but to inspire awe in the subjugated populace at the
expense of their expertise as cavalry. As a result, after a century
of peace and lack of field training the Manchurian Banner troops
had deteriorated greatly in their combat worthiness. Secondly,
before the conquest the Manchu banner was a "citizen" army, and its
members were Manchu farmers and herders obligated to provide
military service to the state at times of war. The Qing
government's decision to turn the banner troops into a professional
force whose every welfare and need was met by state coffers brought
wealth, and with it corruption, to the rank and file of the Manchu
Banners and hastened its decline as a fighting force. This was
mirrored by a similar decline in the Green Standard Army. During
peace time, soldiering became merely a source of supplementary
income. Soldiers and commanders alike neglected training in pursuit
of their own economic gains. Corruption was rampant as regional
unit commanders submitted pay and supply requisitions based on
exaggerated head counts to the quartermaster department and
pocketed the difference. When the
Taiping rebellion broke out in 1850s the
Qing Court found out belatedly that the Banner and Green Standards
troops could neither put down internal rebellions nor keep foreign
invaders at bay.
Transition and modernization

General Zeng Guofan
Early during the
Taiping
rebellion, Qing forces suffered a series of disastrous defeats
culminating in the loss of the regional capital city of Nanjing
(南京) in 1853. The rebels massacred the entire Manchu garrison and
their families in the city and made it their capital. Shortly
thereafter a
Taiping
expeditionary force penetrated as far north as the suburbs of
Tianjin (天津) in what was considered Imperial heartlands. In
desperation the court ordered a Chinese mandarin
Zeng Guofan (曾國藩) to organize regional and
village militias (Tuányǒng 團勇 and Xiāngyǒng 鄉勇) into a standing
army called
tuanlian to contain the
rebellion. Zeng's strategy was to rely on local gentries to raise a
new type of military organization from those provinces that the
Taiping rebels directly threatened.
This new force became known as the
Xiang Army (湘軍), named after Hunan
region
where it was raised. The Xiang Army was a hybrid of local
militia and a standing army. It was given professional training,
but was paid for out of regional coffers and funds its
commanders—mostly members of the Chinese gentry—could muster. The
Xiang Army and its successor the
Huai Army
(淮軍) created by Zeng's colleague and pupil
Li Hongzhang (李鴻章) were collectively called
Yongying (勇營).
Prior to forming and commanding the Xiang Army, Zeng had no
military experience.
Being a classically educated Mandarin his
blueprint for the Xiang Army was taken
from a historical source—the Ming Dynasty
General Qi Jiguang (戚繼光)
who, because of the weakness of regular Ming
troops, had
decided to form his own "private" army to repel raiding Japanese pirates in the mid-16th century. Qi's
doctrine was based on Neo-Confucian ideas of binding troops'
loyalty to their immediate superiors and also to the regions in
which they were raised. This initially gave the troops an excellent
esprit de corps. Qi's Army was an ad hoc solution to the
specific problem of combating pirates, as was Zeng's original
intention for the
Xiang Army, which was
raise to eradicate the Taiping rebels. However, circumstances led
to the Yongying system becoming a permanent institution within the
Qing military, which in the long run created problems of its own
for the beleaguered central government.

Qing troops training in Western
drill
Firstly, Yongying system signalled the end of Manchu dominance in
Qing military establishment. Although the Banners and Green
Standard armies lingered on as parasites depleting resources,
henceforth the Yongying corps became Qing government's de facto
first-line troops. Secondly the Yongying corps were financed
through provincial coffers and were led by regional commanders.
This devolution of power weakened the central government's grip on
the whole country, a weakness further aggravated by foreign powers
vying to carve up autonomous colonial territories in different
parts of the Empire in the later half of the 19th century. Despite
these serious negative effects the measure was deemed necessary as
tax revenue from provinces occupied and threatened by rebels had
ceased to reach the cash-strapped central government. Finally, the
nature of Yongying command structure fostered nepotism and cronyism
amongst its commanders whom as they ascended the bureaucratic ranks
laid the seeds to Qing's eventual demise and the outbreak of
regional
warlordism in China during the
first half of the 20th century.
the late 19th century, China was fast descending into a
semi-colonial state. Even the most conservative elements within the
Qing court could no longer ignore China's military weakness in
contrast to the foreign "barbarians" literally beating down its
gates. In 1860, during the
Second Opium
War, the capital Beijing was captured and the Summer Palaces
sacked by a relatively small Anglo-French coalition force numbering
25,000. Although the Chinese invented gunpowder, and firearms had
been in continual use in Chinese warfare since as far back as the
Song Dynasty, the advent of modern
weaponry resulting from the European
Industrial Revolution had rendered
China's traditionally trained and equipped army and navy obsolete.
The government attempts to modernize during the
Self-Strengthening Movement were
in the view of most historians with hindsight piecemeal and yielded
little lasting results. Various reasons for the apparent failure of
late-Qing modernization attempts have been advanced including the
lack of funds, lack of political will, and unwillingness to depart
from tradition. These reasons remain disputed.
Losing the
Sino-Japanese War
of 1894–1895 was a watershed for the Qing government. Japan, a
country long regarded by the Chinese as little more than an upstart
nation of pirates, had convincingly beaten its larger neighbour and
in the process annihilated the Qing government's pride and joy—its
modernized
Beiyang Fleet then deemed
to be the strongest naval force in Asia. In doing so, Japan became
the first Asian country to join the previously exclusively western
ranks of colonial powers. The defeat was a rude awakening to the
Qing court especially when set in the context that it occurred a
mere three decades after the
Meiji
reforms set a feudal Japan on course to emulate the Western
nations in their economic and technological achievements. Finally,
in December 1894, the Qing government took some concrete steps to
reform military institutions and to re-train selected units in
westernized drills, tactics and weaponry. These units were
collectively called the
New Army (新式陸軍),
the most successful of which was the
Beiyang Army (北洋軍) under the overall
supervision and control of an ex-Huai Army commander, the Han
Chinese general
Yuan Shikai (袁世凱), who
exploited his position to eventually become Republic president,
dictator and finally abortive emperor of China.
See also
Notes
References
- Bartlett, Beatrice S. Monarchs and Ministers: The Grand
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Further reading
External links