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Opium: The Rise Of China In The Late 19th Century

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In the late nineteenth century China was plagued with a range of internal issues - political turmoil, floods, famine, and foreign invasions. It was a country stuck in its traditional ways in a industrial and imperialist world. There were issues with the bureaucracy, as it remained small as did its ability to collect taxes for government revenue. This led to minimal spending on the military, which was needed to go against the imperialist threats from the West. These foreign powers, led by the British, sought new markets for their possessions from their empires. One product that became immensely popular was the opium poppy grown in India, which was mass-marketed by the British. Opium spread throughout China and conflict and dissension of its …show more content…

Christian missionaries covered much of China in their travels and often were not welcomed openly as gunned men seemed to accompany them frequently. As a result of their conversions in China a peasant named Hong Xiuquan came to believe he was the younger brother of Jesus Christ and was sent to live on Earth to remove the Qing Dynasty from power and create a heavenly realm of peace. A bitter civil war ensued and the Taiping’s successfully created a separate state within China with Nanjing as its capital. In the 1960’s China had tried to begin modernizing in a Self-Strengthening Movement by trying to imitate the West, as Japan would later on. However, it was not a countrywide movement but an effort to modernize by provincial governors who strived to emulate the West’s military techniques in their vicinities. The Qing were compelled to urgently take out the rebellion, however the official military forces were not in the condition to take down a rebellion, therefore more modern armies were created by local officials and power holders. These “new armies” were efficiently organized and trained, provided with more modern weapons and were commonly modelled after the Japanese military, such as the Beiyan Army was. The rebellion was successfully defeated at the last battle of Nanjing in 1864 but with high costs, including revealing more weaknesses in the dynasty’s

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