| The Qing Dynasty, which was founded by the
Jurchen (Manchu) people, was the second minority 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 minority
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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