East Asia in Global Perspective Chapter 20 East Asia in Global Perspective.
CHAPTER 22— East Asia Under Challenge
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Transcript of CHAPTER 22— East Asia Under Challenge
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The Decline of the Qing Dynasty
Revolution in China
Rise of Modern Japan
East Asia Under Challenge, 1800-1914
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The Decline of the Qing Dynasty
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Objectives:
1. Explain that the Qing dynasty declined because of internal and external pressures
2. Summarize how Western nations increased their economic involvement with China
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Causes of Decline
In 1800, the Qing dynasty of the Manchus was at the
height of its powerWithin a century, the Qing dynasty collapsed due to
Western power and authority
Intense internal corruption and peasant revolts led to a
modernization of China
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The Opium War
European merchants encroached on Chinese
territory and traded in the outlet of *Guangzhou
Unfavorable trade balance in China led the British to turn to opium, grown in
northern India
Though made illegal, the British were unrelenting
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The British refused to halt their activity resulting in Chinese blockades and
outright war
The Opium War (1839-1842)
The Treaty of Nanjing in 1842—five coastal ports and the
island of *Hong Kong
*extraterritoriality—Europeans lived in their own sections and
were subject not to Chinese laws but to their own laws
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The Tai Ping Rebellion Peasant revolts known as the Tai Ping Rebellion (1850-1864)
*Hong Xiuquan, the destruction of the Qing and
the creation of the “Heavenly Kingdom of Great Peace”
Social reforms: land to all peasants; women as equals to
men
Outlawed alcohol and tobacco and eliminated the
practice of footbindingSaturday, March 10, 12
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Efforts at Reform By the late 1870s, the Qing dynasty was in decline
Reformers called for a new policy called *”self-
strengthening”
China should adopt Western technology while keeping its
Confucian values and institutions; Some reformers
wanted democracy—but was far too radical
Railroads, weapons factories, and shipyards
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The Advance of Imperialism
In the north and northeast, Russia took advantage of
the Qing dynasty’s weakness to force China to
give up territories
European states began to create *spheres of influence—areas where the imperial
powers had exclusive trading rights
Japan and German forcesSaturday, March 10, 12
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Internal Crisis Scramble for territory took place at a time of
internal crisis in CHina
*Guang Xu launched a massive reform program
based on changes in Japan—modernized
government bureaucracy following
western models, educational systems,
and Western-style schools and fighting
techniquesSaturday, March 10, 12
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The Boxer Rebellion Shadowboxing and the Society of Harmonious Fists
“destroy the foreigner”
They disliked Christian missionaries and Chinese
converts to Christianity who seemed to threaten Chinese
traditions
An allied army of Europeans, the US, and Japan restored order and demanded more
concessions from the Chinese government
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Objectives:
1. Explain that the Qing dynasty declined because of internal and external pressures
2. Summarize how Western nations increased their economic involvement with China
Saturday, March 10, 12
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To improve their balance of trade with China, the British sold the Chinese
1.porcelain2.opium3.tea4.silk
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To improve their balance of trade with China, the British sold the Chinese
1.porcelain2.opium3.tea4.silk
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As a result of China losing the first Opium War to Britain, all of the following happened except
1.Britain received Hong Kong2.Five ports were opened to British trade3.the British in China accepted Chinese laws4.China paid for the cost of the war
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As a result of China losing the first Opium War to Britain, all of the following happened except
1.Britain received Hong Kong2.Five ports were opened to British trade3.the British in China accepted Chinese laws4.China paid for the cost of the war
Saturday, March 10, 12
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The Qing dynasty’s “self strengthening” reforms included
1.ending trade2.adopting Western technology3.moving toward democracy4.eliminating Confucian ideals
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The Qing dynasty’s “self strengthening” reforms included
1.ending trade2.adopting Western technology3.moving toward democracy4.eliminating Confucian ideals
Saturday, March 10, 12
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The Qing dynasty was weakened by all of the following except
1. war with Japan2. disputes with Russia3. warlords independence4. a changing value system
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The Qing dynasty was weakened by all of the following except
1. war with Japan2. disputes with Russia3. warlords independence4. a changing value system
Saturday, March 10, 12
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Revolution in China
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Objectives:
1.Identify Sun Yat-sen and his reforms, which led to a revolution in China
2. Discuss how the arrival of Westerners brought changes to the Chinese economy and culture
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The Fall of the Qing
The Qing dynasty in China tried desperately to reform
itself
New educational systems were created based on the
Western model
Legislative assemblies were formed at the *provincial
(local) level
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The emerging new elite, composed of merchants,
professionals, and reform-minded gentry
grew impatient with the pace of reform
The previous reforms had done nothing for peasants and artisans;
Unrest grew in the countryside
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The Rise of Sun Yat-Sen *Sun Yat-sen formed the Revive China Society
Unless the Chinese were inited under a strong government, they
would remain at the mercy of other countries
three-stage reform process: (1) a military takeover (2) a transitional
phase to prepare for democratic rule (2) constitutional democracy
He formed the Revolutionary Alliance, which eventually became
the Nationalist Party
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The Revolution of 1911 The throne was now occupied by China’s “last
emperor,” the infant Henry Pu Yi
Still uprisings in central China still erupted
The Party had neither the military nor the political strength to form a new government and gave
power to *General Yuan Shigai, who controlled the
armySaturday, March 10, 12
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General Yuan agreed to serve as president of a new Chinese republic
and to allow the election of a legislature
The “glorious revolution” ended two
thousand years of imperial rule—however,
no new political or social order emerged,
though based on Western liberal
democratic principlesSaturday, March 10, 12
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An Era of Civil Waryuan’s dictatorial efforts
rapidly led to clashes with Sun’s party, now renamed
the Guomindang, or National Party. Yuan dissolved the
new parliament, the Nationalists launched a
rebellion, and Sun Yat-sen fled to Japan
China slipped into civil war
military warlords seized power in the provinces
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Chinese Society in Transition
The growth of industry and trade—oil, copper, salt, tea, and porcelain made more profitable due to reliable transportation and a new
money economy
The coming of Westerners to China affected the
Chinese economy in three ways: (1) modern
transportation (2) export market (3) Chinese market
integrated into world economy
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Western influences forced
the Chinese to adopt new ways of thinking and
acting
local industry was largely destroyed
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China’s Changing Culture
Most Chinese culture never changed: farmers, villages,
domestic life
Confucian social ideals were declining rapidly in influence
and those of Europe and North America were on the
rise
Radical reformers wanted to eliminate traditional culture
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Intellectuals began to introduce Western books, paintings,
music, and ideas to China
By the first quarter of the twentieth century, China was flooded by
Western culture
Literature in particular was influenced by
foreign ideas
Saturday, March 10, 12
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Objectives:
1.Identify Sun Yat-sen and his reforms, which led to a revolution in China
2. Discuss how the arrival of Westerners brought changes to the Chinese economy and culture
Saturday, March 10, 12
![Page 34: CHAPTER 22— East Asia Under Challenge](https://reader034.fdocuments.in/reader034/viewer/2022052315/5539ff424a79591c7b8b4a19/html5/thumbnails/34.jpg)
The coming of Westerners did not affect the Chinese economy in one of the following ways. Which one?
A. introducing modern means of transportationB. creating an export marketC. integrating the Chinese market into the world economyD. building a large middle class
Saturday, March 10, 12
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The coming of Westerners did not affect the Chinese economy in one of the following ways. Which one?
A. introducing modern means of transportationB. creating an export marketC. integrating the Chinese market into the world economyD. building a large middle class
Saturday, March 10, 12
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Yuan tried to rule China without
A. an armyB. understanding the influence of new Western ideasC. dictating his viewsD. the use of terror
Saturday, March 10, 12
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Yuan tried to rule China without
A. an armyB. understanding the influence of new Western ideasC. dictating his viewsD. the use of terror
Saturday, March 10, 12
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When the Nationalists’ rebellion failed,
A. Sun Yat-sen fled to JapanB. Sun Yat-sen surrenderedC. the Qing emperor was restoredD. Yuan turned back history to 1800
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When the Nationalists’ rebellion failed,
A. Sun Yat-sen fled to JapanB. Sun Yat-sen surrenderedC. the Qing emperor was restoredD. Yuan turned back history to 1800
Saturday, March 10, 12
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When General Yuan Shigai died in 1916
A. the warlords surrenderedB. soldiers assisted the peopleC. civil war eruptedD. the Nationalists seized power
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When General Yuan Shigai died in 1916
A. the warlords surrenderedB. soldiers assisted the peopleC. civil war eruptedD. the Nationalists seized power
Saturday, March 10, 12
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By 1925, many urban, middle-class Chinese people
A. embraced Western art and literatureB. rejected all Western influenceC. celebrated the pastD. wrote their own novels
Saturday, March 10, 12
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By 1925, many urban, middle-class Chinese people
A. embraced Western art and literatureB. rejected all Western influenceC. celebrated the pastD. wrote their own novels
Saturday, March 10, 12
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Rise of Modern Japan
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Objectives:
1.Describe how Western intervention opened Japan, an island that had been isolated for 200 years, to trade
2. Discuss the interaction between Japan and Western nations that gave birth to a modern industrial society
Saturday, March 10, 12