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  • By the 19th Century, the Chinese and the foreigners had grown highly distrustful of each other,

  • and it was only a matter of time before the powder keg exploded.

  • And when it did, it was to be the death knell for the Qing Dynasty and Imperial China.

  • I’m Indy Neidell, welcome toBattlefields”.

  • During the 1880s and 1890s, tensions were rising, with increasing individual acts of violence,

  • particularly against communities of Christian converts.

  • The 1894 Sino-Japanese War ended in another humiliating defeat for the Chinese,

  • and China was forced to sign yet more "unequal treaties" in 1895, ceding several territories for foreign occupation.

  • This naturally increased resentment of foreigners.

  • That war also led to poor harvests, economic disruptions, and banditry,

  • which of course only led to more civil unrest.

  • Now, religious societies had played a central role in uprisings throughout Chinese history,

  • and during the last decade of the 19th Century, a number of secret organisations emerged in northern China

  • with a strong emphasis on physical exercise and mysticism, along with anti-foreign and anti-Christian sentiment.

  • The biggest of these groups would be the "Righteous and Harmonious Fists" or Yihequan,

  • who held public performances of martial arts and spirit possession and claimed

  • that their rituals rendered them invulnerable to bullets and shells.

  • In the West, they soon became known as the Boxers.

  • With the slogan "Support the Qing, destroy the foreigner",

  • they caught the imagination of rural Shandong Province and drew many out-of-work young men into their ranks.

  • The Boxers embarked on a campaign against missionaries and converts to Christianity.

  • Foreign leaders pressured the Qing government to suppress the sect,

  • and initial clashes took place in the summer of 1899.

  • When the governor of Shandong drove the Boxers out of the province in 1900, they headed north,

  • approaching Tianjin and Beijing and attacking Christian communities along the way.

  • By May, the Boxer movement, while still armed with simple weapons like swords and polearms,

  • had become more organised. It was attacking railways and telegraph lines,

  • and had gained popular support in both the cities and the countryside.

  • Now, Qing troops continued to engage the Boxers in early 1900,

  • but Empress Dowager Cixi soon seemed to reverse the government's anti-Boxer position,

  • decreeing that secret societies should not all be treated as criminals.

  • Now, she was considered the leader of the conservative faction at the Qing court,

  • and she may have sought to harness the Boxers as a means of removing foreign influence from China.

  • She was also aware of the danger that such popular movements posed,

  • lest they turn the Chinese people against the Qing.

  • In any case, the foreign legations in Beijing grew so fearful,

  • that they requested permission to call in foreign soldiers for protection.

  • The Chinese government reluctantly agreed, and just over 400 marines arrived in Beijing on May 31st,

  • but on June 6th, Boxers destroyed the Beijing Tianjin railway, cutting off the foreign legations.

  • Days later, rioters burned down the grandstand of Beijing Race Course,

  • who had sought refuge within it died. Two days after that, the Japanese chancellor was assassinated.

  • British minister Claude MacDonald wired for help, and over 2000 international troops

  • landed at Tianjin and began a march towards Beijing.

  • If the Chinese army's position in this whole affair had been unclear up to this point,

  • this act of invasion finally drove them into an alliance with the Boxers.

  • They drove the relief force back, and in Beijing, the foreign legations were given an ultimatum to leave

  • within 24 hours, which they refused.

  • On the afternoon of June 20th, Chinese forces opened fire on the missions,

  • which had been fortified with makeshift barricades.

  • This was the last that the outside world heard from Beijing for several weeks.

  • The siege of the Legation Quarter had begun. The foreign powers decided that a bigger force was needed.

  • Over 50,000 soldiers and marines from eight different countries -

  • Japan (whose forces made up over a third of the combined army), Russia, Britain (including many Indian troops),

  • France, the United States, Germany, Austria -Hungary and Italy landed on the coast,

  • capturing Tianjin on July 14th with heavy casualties on both sides.

  • At around the same time, reports started arriving that the foreign diplomats, their families,

  • the Chinese Christians seeking refuge with them and the marines guarding them had been massacred,

  • but the leadership of the Eight Nation Alliance could not confirm these reports.

  • After defeating the Imperial Army at Beicang and Yangcun, the allied troops reached the eastern outskirts of Beijing.

  • By now, it had become clear that reports of a massacre were false,

  • and the legations were still holding out in the diplomatic quarter.

  • The invading army was formed into four columns, each charged with attacking a particular city gate

  • and section of wall. After a premature attack by the Russians on the night of the

  • 13th of August, the Battle of Beijing began.

  • It soon became a race to see who could relieve the Legations first.

  • The Russians were the first to enter the city in the rainy early hours of the morning,

  • but Japanese troops bore the brunt of the fighting as they assaulted the Chih Hua Gate on the right flank, East of the Imperial City.

  • American and British troops scaled the walls of the southern half of the city.

  • After overwhelming the defenders and entering the city, they breached the inner gate

  • leading to the Tartar City, where the Legation Quarter was.

  • By the evening of 14th August, the Legations had been relieved.

  • Beitang Church, where thousands of Christians had sought refuge, was also relieved two days later.

  • Muslim troops accompanied the Empress Dowager and Emperor as they fled to Xian

  • while the victorious foreign soldiers pillaged the ruined capital.

  • Over a hundred thousand civilians were dead, including 30,000 Chinese Christians.

  • Fighting would continue over the following months, but the main part of the Boxer Rebellion was over.

  • Tales quickly reached Europe and America of the brave defence of the Legation Quarter during the 55 day siege.

  • The New York Sun called it "the most exciting episode ever known to civilization".

  • The reality was somewhat more complicated.

  • While there had been ongoing sniping and occasional skirmishes during the first weeks of the siege,

  • by the middle of July the situation had actually calmed.

  • Truces and lulls in the fighting had allowed the besieged to replenish supplies,

  • and the Empress Dowager had even ordered several shipments of fruit sent to the Legation Quarter.

  • In general, restraint on the part of the Chinese government was at least partly responsible

  • for the legation quarter not being overrun, and there is some evidence

  • that many high-ranking Imperial officers tried their best to remain moderate amidst the chaos,

  • holding back their troops, when they could have ordered an all-out attack.

  • The victorious foreign powers did not see it that way, though.

  • Allied troops would occupy Beijing for over a year,

  • and undertook punitive expeditions in the surrounding countryside, with many reports of looting and atrocities.

  • On September 7th, 1901, the Boxer Protocol was signed.

  • China was forced to pay 450 million taels in silver over a period of 40 years as indemnity,

  • anti-foreign societies were banned on pain of death, and the importation of armaments was forbidden.

  • While the Protocol was seen as the culmination of a long series of "Unequal Treaties",

  • China was not entirely without bargaining power.

  • The government was not deposed, and China rejected demands to execute several leading figures in the war.

  • Cixi embarked on a programme of modernisation during the final years of her life,

  • following the Japanese model of constitutional monarchy,

  • but revolutionary republican movements soon sought to oust the Qing entirely.

  • While they had ruled for two and a half centuries, it now appeared that they too had lost the mandate of heaven,

  • like the Han, the Tang and the Ming before them.

  • You can find out all about the rise and fall of the great Ming and Qing dynasties right here,

  • and if you missed it, find out just what major influence the Opium War had on China

  • and how it would change Chinese History forever!

  • And subscribe to "It's History" to keep up with all videos on our current season

  • and be sure to check out our Facebook page for more historical facts.

  • See you next time.

By the 19th Century, the Chinese and the foreigners had grown highly distrustful of each other,

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ボクサーの乱 l 中国の歴史 (The Boxer Rebellion l HISTORY OF CHINA)

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    Pedroli Li に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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