16 th century – Portuguese traded for silk and tea Portuguese followed by the Dutch and English.
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Transcript of 16 th century – Portuguese traded for silk and tea Portuguese followed by the Dutch and English.
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16th century – Portuguese traded for silk and tea
Portuguese followed by the Dutch and English
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18th century› Chinese believe that they are
superior to the Europeans.
› Manchus began restricting Europeans – missionaries and traders. Only trading for silver.
› Porcelain & Silk
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China unwilling to trade for resources frustrates Britain.
Britain no longer wants to give up all of their silver they decided to illegally trade Opium in China.
British brought opium from India to Canton› Many Chinese became addicts
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Chinese emperor forbade opium imports› War between British and Chinese
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Chinese emperor forbade opium imports› War between BritishBritish and Chinese
Treaty of Nanking (1842)1.Additional British ports in China2.British control over Hong Kong3.China had to pay an indemnity4.China limited to 5% tariff
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Explain to your partner if you think Europeans were justified fighting the Opium War. Why or Why Not
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Belgium, France, Holland (Netherlands), Portugal, Prussia (Germany), United States
Spheres of influence› Exclusive trading areas
Extraterritoriality› Tried in their own courts and under their
own laws (Exempt from Chinese Law)
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Also known as the Arrow War Results
1. More Chinese ports opened up to European trade
2. Opium traffic legalized3. Protection of Christian missionaries4. All foreign vessels could navigate
the Yangtze River5. Russia’s border extended to Amur
River
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Explain to your partner if you think China was actually imperialized.
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What forms of Imperialism are present in China.
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Proposed by U.S. Secretary of State John Hay (1899)
Fear that China would be carved up between imperialist powers
Left China’s independence and territory intact
All nations could trade equally in China
Endorsed internationally› But not always strictly followed
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Chinese people resented foreign influence and power
Order of the Patriotic Harmonious Fists› Called “Boxers” by Westerners› Demanded that foreigners leave China› Killed circa 300 western religious figures and
vandalized foreign property European imperialists, Americans, and
Japanese put down the rebellion China paid $333,000,000 in damages and
had to permit military forces in Peking (Beijing) and Tientsin
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Sun Yat-sen (Sun Yixian)› Founded Kuomintang
(Nationalist party) Overthrew Manchu (Qing)
dynasty Established a republic President of Chinese
Republic who succeeded him – Yuan Shih-k’ai
Kuomintang symbol
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Create a license plate for a European driving in China during this time and a Chinese man driving in China during the late 1800’s and early 1900’s.