Untitled spreadsheet - Sheet3 Flashcards
Who said “In the 170-plus years since the Opium War of 1840, our great country has weathered untold hardships…Following the Opium War, China gradually became a semi-colonial…society, and foreign powers stepped up their aggression against China.”
In 2011, Chinese president Hu Jintao
To Hu Jintao what was the only victory that enabled his country to finally excape from that shameful past of the Opium War?
Chinese Communist Party
The conflict, of Britain’s violent intrusion into China’s history in order to sell highly addictive opium to China’s people, marked the beginning of what?
what Chinese describe as a “century of humiliation.”
What places were not colonized by the aggressive and industrializing West?
Japan, the Ottoman Empire, Persia (now Iran), Ethiopia and Siam (now Thailand)
How were those not colonized still linked to Europe?
By languages, Christianity, modernity (scientific rationalism), and movements such as nationalism, socialism, feminism, individualism
In a famous letter to the British monarch, King George III, what Chinese emperor in 1793 sharply rejected British requests for a less restricted trading relationship with his country?
Chinese emperor Qianlong
What did emperor Qianlong call the chinese empire?
Our Celestial Empire
In 1912, what happened to China’s long-established imperial state?
It had collapsed, and the country had been transformed to a weak and dependent participant in European-dominated world system in which Great Britain was the major economic player
What did China’s population grow to in 1853 from 100 million people in 1685 and what enabled this growth?
430 million; American food crops
With population growth what tasks were the Chinese state unable to effectivley perform?
tax collection, flood control, social welfare, and public security
What did not take place in China that happened in Europe after a population spurt took place?
no Industrial Revolution, nor agricultural production, no internal expansion
The culmination of Cina’s internal crisis lay in what, which set much of the country aflame between 1850 and 1864?
Taiping Uprising
What did the Taiping Uprising largely reject?
Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism, finding their primary ideology in a unique form of Christianity
Who was the leading figure of the Taiping Uprising and what did he proclaim himself to be?
Hong Xiuquan, who proclaimed himself the younger brother of Jesus, sent to cleanse the world of demons and to establish a “heavenly kingdom of great peace.”
What did the Taiping Uprising call to be taken into action?
abolition of private property, a radical redistribution of land, the end of prostitution and opium smoking, and the organization of society into sexually segregated military camps of men and women, promoted industrialization, education and health insurance
Who was Hong Xiuquan cousin, who developed plans for transforming China into an industrial nation, with railroads, health insurance, newspapers, and public education?
Hong Rengan
the Taiping Uprising posture toward women and gender roles was an outlook reflected in its origins where?
among the minority Hakka people of southern China, where women were notably less restricted than Confucian orthodoxy presribed
Taiping forces swept out of southern China and established their capital where in 1853?
Nanjing
Who rallied up and by 1864 crushed the peasant rebellions in China?
Qing Dynasty loyalists
How many people died as a result of the Taiping Uprising?
20 to 30 million
Nowhere was the shifting balance of global power in the 19th century more evident than in China’s changing relationship with Europe, a transformation that registered most dramatically in what?
the famous Opium Wars
Derived from Arab traders in the 8th century, what had long been used on a small scale as a drinkable medicine; it was regarded as a magical cure for dysentery and described by one poet as “fit for Buddha.”
opium
From 1,000 chests (each weighing roughly 150 pounds) in 1773, China’s opium imports exploded to more than how many chests in 1832?
23,000
What upright official led the campaign against opium use as a kind of “drug czar.”
Commissioner Lin Zexu