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Chinas Revolution

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The Boxer Rebellion ... The Boxer Protocol: 67.5 mil. Pounds indemnity. Punishment of pro-Boxer officials, the downfall of conservatives ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chinas Revolution


1
Chinas Revolution Destruction
  • The Nationalists, the Communists, and Chinas
    Suffering in the first half of the 20th century

2
The Road toward the 1911 Revolution
  • The constitutional reform, an aborted attempt of
    fundamental reform
  • Yan Fus social Darwinism without fundamental
    reform, China would be extinguished as a nation
    and a race-the rising nationalist sentiments
  • Kang Youwei Liang Qichao constitutional
    monarchy was the way to save China
  • New interpretations of Confucianism with new
    western twists
  • Convinced the new emperor Guangxu to issue edicts
    to reform the system, but none implemented
  • Cixis coup ended the Hundred Day Reform (June
    11-Sept. 20, 1898)

3
External Crisis Scramble for concessions
  • The prediction of Chinas complete
    disintegration western powers preparation for
    carving China like a melon
  • Russias gains in Manchuria Port Arthur
  • Britains gains in Weihaiwei New Territory of
    Hong Kong
  • French gains in Guangzhou Bay
  • German gains Shandong Prov. Qingdao
  • Japans gains in Fujian Prov.
  • Gains usually include territorial leasehold,
    railway rights (10 miles on both sides of the
    truck policed by foreign nations, exclusive
    rights to mining resource, etc.)
  • US policy of open door keeping Chinas
    sovereignty and none-discrimination in the market
    place

4
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5
The Boxer Rebellion
  • Anti-foreign xenophobia among northern peasants
    court conservatives alike an unlikely alliance
    between Cixi rebels.
  • 1900, 2 months siege of the legation district in
    Beijing,
  • 8 powers expeditionary forces reach Beijing in
    August 1900, Qing court fled to Xian
  • The Boxer Protocol
  • 67.5 mil. Pounds indemnity
  • Punishment of pro-Boxer officials, the downfall
    of conservatives
  • The right to station troops in Beijing the
    Beijing-Tienjin corridor
  • Secretary Hays two diplomatic notes open door
    in China

6
The Last Decade of Qing
  • Changes took place too late
  • The death of Cixi and Emperor Guangxu
  • The abolition of civil service exam
  • The last reform attempt along the line of the
    failed one-hundred-day reform including
    provincial assemblies,
  • A revolution in the making
  • Anti-Manchu pro-republic sentiment grew the
    debate between constitutional monarch
    republicanism
  • Zhou Rongs Revolutionary Army, Wang Jingweis
    assassination attempt, and anti-Qing uprisings

7
Sun Yat-sen and the Guomindang
  • Sun Yat-sen, educated in Hong Kong Hawaii,
    http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_Yat_Sen
  • The Revolutionary Alliance (Tongmenghui) in
    Tokyo, the predecessor of Guomindang (GMD), the
    Nationalist Party
  • Three-minism (????)nationalism (??)democracy
    (??)peoples livelihood (??)
  • Revolutionary agitation organization in China
    to overthrow Qing

8
The 1911 Revolution
  • Two leading forces
  • The provincial assembly men representing
    gentry-merchant elite
  • The officer core of the new army, sons of
    gentry-merchant families
  • The railway controversy the Sichuan uprising
  • Qings insistence on central control via a
    foreign consortium v. provinces insistence on
    local control via peoples initiative
  • Sichuan Assembly declared indipendence
  • Qing moved neighboring provinces army into
    Sichuan
  • The Wuchang Uprising 10/10/1911, led by the
    revolutionary officers of the new army
  • The declaration of independence of the southern
    provinces and the founding of the Republic of
    China (ROC) in 1912 in Nanjing

9
Yuan Shikai the Aftermath of 1911 Revolution
  • Yuan Shikai, the Qing army commander, negotiated
    with ROC presidency for the Qing abdication.
    http//www.free-definition.com/YC3BCan-Shihkai.h
    tml
  • Sun Yat-sens two conditions for Yuan loyalty to
    the constitution of the French style and Nanjing
    as the capital
  • Yuans ambition to be the monarch
  • Forced the government to move to Beijing
  • Closed the GMD dominated parliament
  • Suppressed the southern provinces
  • Courting Japans support (the 21 demands)
  • Anti-Yuan uprising and Yuans death in 1916

10
Warlordism Civil War, 1916-1924
  • The North-South division
  • North ROC government controlled by Yuans
    commanders, who were fighting among themselves as
    well
  • South the GMD parliamentarians moved to Canton
    to form another ROC, which had no military force
    of its own, thus dependent on the southern
    provincial warlords Sun was driven out by the
    Guangdong warlord and moved to Shanghai
  • The warring provinces, alignment and realignment,
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