Transcript Slide 1

•After Chengzu’s death in 1424, China’s new emperor decided
that foreign trade was too expensive.
•The rest of the world seemed to demand China’s products
more than China sought theirs.
•The emperor and his advisors agreed that the nation's
money should go to strengthening the military rather than to
finance commercial voyages.
•China entered a period of isolation from the rest of the
world.
•While private merchants continued to trade along routs like
the Silk Road, China never again financed large voyages like
those undertaken by Zheng He.
•In the early 1800’s The Qing decided to allow trade on a
limited
basis.
•They created the Canton System.
•The Canton System only allowed
Europeans to trade in the
Chinese
city of Canton (modern day city
of Guangzhou).
•The Qing intended to limit trade and
protect the Chinese people
from
what they viewed as Europe’s negative
influence.
•The Canton System allowed Europeans to bring new products from their colonies in the
Western Hemisphere.
•These products included squash, corn, sweet potatoes and tobacco.
•Chinese and Indian consumers like the new products.
•They bought and planted many of the new foods.
•Meanwhile, luxury items like tobacco became very popular.
•The system proved profitable.
•Both Chinese merchants and European trades got very rich.
•The Chinese smoked opium for hundreds of years before the Europeans arrived.
•Opium us a drug made from poppy plants.
•It is very strong and addictive.
•Today, these same opium poppies are used to make drugs like morphine (an addictive pain
killer) and heroin.
•Originally, the Chinese used opium predominantly as a medicine.
•However, as its use increased, many became addicted and used it as a “recreation drug” (drug
just for getting high).
•When Europeans arrived, they began shipping increased amounts of opium into the country.
•More and more people became addicted.
•Even after the Qing emperor outlaws the product,
British smugglers
continued supplying it to
Chinese citizens.
•In the 1840’s, Great Britain and China went to war over the
opium trade.
•Due to superior weapons, the British defeated the Chinese
relatively easily.
•Britain's victory in the Opium War meant the end of the
Canton system.
•It also resulted in China having to lease the port city of Hong
Kong to the British.
•Hong Kong was an important center of trade in Eastern Asia.
•Whoever controlled Hong Kong controlled much of the trade
and wealth coming in and out of China.
•Britain used its new power to impose trade policies that
allowed British traders to grow rich while China made little
money.
•As Britain's influence increased and more opium arrived
from India, China’s government grew
weaker
and its people poorer.
•Japan eventually surpassed China
as
the most prosperous and
modern
nation in Eastern Asia.
The Chinese government now only existed on paper, not in
reality
The foreigners could do anything they wanted to China as
they only had to follow their own laws.
Foreign goods were now cheaper than Chinese goods were
China was carved up into spheres
of influence which is where one
nation claims there part
of China for their special
privileges.
•The Chinese Republic was set up in 1911 when
type of rule in China.
•The first ruler was Dr. Sun; “the Father of the
it got rid of the dynasty
Chinese Revolution”
•For years Dr. Sun spread the idea that the Chinese people should have a government “of the
people, by the people, and for the people”
•In 1912, he set up the Kuomintang.
•Kuomintang – The movement founded by Sun Yat-Sen to make China a modern democratic
republic.
•It is now a part of the Republic of China, located on the island of Taiwan
•During the late 19th century and into the 20th century, China grew very unstable.
•Poverty and starvation led to unrest among many of China’s peasants.
•In 1912, a revolution replaced the emperor with a Chinese republic.
•China was divided from 1916 to 1926 when Chiang Kai-shek took over and united most of
China.
•His only nemesis was Mao Zedong and the Communist
In ___________
1911
the Chinese people revolted against the
emperor that they blamed for
_____________________?
Not protecting them
Chinese Warlords, 1920s
Yuan Shi-kai
China in 1924
Chiang Kai-shek Becomes President
of Nationalist China, 1928
The Long March
The Long March
There was not one Long March, but several, as
various Communist armies in the south
escaped to the north and west.
The Communists, under the eventual
command of Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai,
escaped in a circling retreat to the west and
north, which reportedly traversed some
12,500 kilometers (8,000 miles) over 370 days.
The Long March began the ascent to power of
Mao Zedong , whose leadership during the
retreat gained him the support of the
members of the party.
Mao Zedong As a Young Revolutionary
(Mao Tse-tung)
Mao With His Children, 1930s
Japan tries to invade China
• In an effort to rebuff a Japanese invasion in
1937, Chiang collaborated with Mao Zedong
and his army.
• After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the United
States helped to fund Chiang and his
government.
The Peoples’ Liberation Army, 1949
The Communist Victory
Taiwan: The Republic of China
Jiang Jieshu (1887-1975)
(Chiang Kai-shek)
The People’s Republic of China
Reasons for the Communists’ Success
► Mao won support of peasants – land
► Mao won support of women
► Mao’s army used guerilla war tactics
► Many saw the Nationalist government
as corrupt
► Many felt that the Nationalists allowed
foreigners to dominate China.