China in official robes in the back, with
Queen Victoria (
Britain),
Wilhelm II (
Germany),
Nicholas II (
Russia),
Marianne (
France), and a
samurai (
Japan) discussing how to cut up
Chine ("
China" in French) In 1839, China found itself fighting the
First Opium War with Great Britain after the
governor-general of
Hunan and
Hubei,
Lin Zexu, seized the illegally traded opium. China was defeated, and in 1842 agreed to the provisions of the
Treaty of Nanking.
Hong Kong Island was ceded to Britain, and
certain ports, including
Shanghai and
Guangzhou, were opened to British trade and residence. In 1856, the
Second Opium War broke out; the Chinese were again defeated and forced to the terms of the 1858
Treaty of Tientsin and the 1860
Convention of Peking. The treaty opened new ports to trade and allowed foreigners to travel in the interior. Missionaries gained the right to propagate Christianity, another means of Western penetration. The United States and Russia obtained the same prerogatives in separate
treaties. Towards the end of the 19th century, China appeared on the way to territorial dismemberment and economic vassalage, the fate of India's rulers that had played out much earlier. Several provisions of these treaties caused long-standing bitterness and humiliation among the Chinese:
extraterritoriality (meaning that in a dispute with a Chinese person, a Westerner had the right to be tried in a court under the laws of his own country), customs regulation, and the right to station foreign warships in Chinese waters. In 1904, the
British invaded Tibet, a pre-emptive strike against Russian intrigues and secret meetings between the
13th Dalai Lama's envoy and
Tsar Nicholas II. The Dalai Lama fled into exile to China and Mongolia. The British were greatly concerned at the prospect of a Russian invasion of the Crown colony of India, though Russia – badly defeated by Japan in the
Russo-Japanese War and weakened by
internal revolution – could not realistically afford a military conflict against Britain. China under the
Qing dynasty, however, was another matter. Natural disasters, famine and internal rebellions had enfeebled China in the late Qing. In the late 19th century, Japan and the Great Powers easily carved out trade and territorial concessions. These were humiliating submissions for the once-powerful China. Still, the central lesson of the
war with Japan was not lost on the Russian General Staff: an Asian country using Western technology and industrial production methods could defeat a great European power. Jane E. Elliott criticized the allegation that China refused to modernize or was unable to defeat Western armies as simplistic, noting that China embarked on a massive military modernization in the late 1800s after several defeats, buying weapons from Western countries and manufacturing their own at arsenals, such as the
Hanyang Arsenal during the
Boxer Rebellion. In addition, Elliott questioned the claim that Chinese society was traumatized by the Western victories, as many Chinese peasants (90% of the population at that time) living outside the concessions continued about their daily lives, uninterrupted and without any feeling of "humiliation". The British observer Demetrius Charles de Kavanagh Boulger suggested a British-Chinese alliance to check Russian expansion in Central Asia. During the Ili crisis when Qing China threatened to go to war against Russia over the Russian occupation of Ili, the British officer
Charles George Gordon was sent to China by Britain to advise China on military options against Russia should a potential war break out between China and Russia. The Russians observed the Chinese building up their arsenal of modern weapons during the Ili crisis, the Chinese bought thousands of rifles from Germany. In 1880, massive amounts of military equipment and rifles were shipped via boats to China from Antwerp as China purchased torpedoes, artillery, and 260,260 modern rifles from Europe. The Russian military observer D. V. Putiatia visited China in 1888 and found that in Northeastern China (Manchuria) along the Chinese-Russian border, the Chinese soldiers were potentially able to become adept at "European tactics" under certain circumstances, and the Chinese soldiers were armed with modern weapons like Krupp artillery, Winchester carbines, and Mauser rifles. Compared to Russian controlled areas, more benefits were given to the Muslim Kirghiz on the Chinese controlled areas. Russian settlers fought against the Muslim nomadic Kirghiz, which led the Russians to believe that the Kirghiz would be a liability in any conflict against China. The Muslim Kirghiz were sure that in an upcoming war, that China would defeat Russia. The Qing dynasty forced Russia to hand over disputed territory in Ili in the
Treaty of Saint Petersburg (1881), in what was widely seen by the west as a diplomatic victory for the Qing. Russia acknowledged that Qing China potentially posed a serious military threat. Mass media in the west during this era portrayed China as a rising military power due to its modernization programs and as major threat to the western world, invoking fears that China would successfully conquer western colonies like Australia. Russian sinologists, the Russian media, threat of internal rebellion, the pariah status inflicted by the
Congress of Berlin, and the negative state of the Russian economy all led Russia to concede and negotiate with China in St Petersburg, and return most of Ili to China. Historians have judged the Qing dynasty's vulnerability and weakness to foreign imperialism in the 19th century to be based mainly on its maritime naval weakness while it achieved military success against westerners on land, the historian Edward L. Dreyer said that "China’s nineteenth-century humiliations were strongly related to her weakness and failure at sea. At the start of the Opium War, China had no unified navy and no sense of how vulnerable she was to attack from the sea; British forces sailed and steamed wherever they wanted to go. ... In the
Arrow War (1856–60), the Chinese had no way to prevent the Anglo-French expedition of 1860 from sailing into the
Gulf of Zhili and landing as near as possible to Beijing. Meanwhile, new but not exactly modern Chinese armies suppressed the midcentury rebellions, bluffed Russia into a peaceful settlement of disputed frontiers in Central Asia, and defeated the French forces on land in the
Sino-French War (1884–1885). But the defeat of the fleet, and the resulting threat to steamship traffic to Taiwan, forced China to conclude peace on unfavorable terms." The British and Russian consuls schemed and plotted against each other at Kashgar. In 1906, Tsar
Nicholas II sent a secret agent to China to collect intelligence on the reform and modernization of the Qing dynasty. The task was given to
Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim, at the time a colonel in the Russian army, who travelled to China with French Sinologist
Paul Pelliot. Mannerheim was disguised as an ethnographic collector, using a Finnish passport. Finland was, at the time, a Grand Duchy. For two years, Mannerheim proceeded through
Xinjiang,
Gansu,
Shaanxi,
Henan,
Shanxi and
Inner Mongolia to
Beijing. At the sacred Buddhist mountain of
Wutai Shan he even met the 13th Dalai Lama. However, while Mannerheim was in China in 1907, Russia and Britain brokered the
Anglo-Russian Agreement, ending the classical period of the Great Game. The correspondent Douglas Story observed Chinese troops in 1907 and praised their abilities and military skill. The rise of Japan as an imperial power after the
Meiji Restoration led to further subjugation of China. In a dispute over regional suzerainty,
war broke out between China and Japan, resulting in another humiliating defeat for the Chinese. By the
Treaty of Shimonoseki in 1895, China was forced to recognize
Korea's exit from the
Imperial Chinese tributary system, leading to the proclamation of the
Korean Empire, and the island of
Taiwan was ceded to Japan. In 1897, taking advantage of the
murder of two missionaries, Germany demanded and was given a set of
mining and railroad rights around
Jiaozhou Bay in
Shandong province. In 1898, Russia obtained access to
Dairen and
Port Arthur and the right to build a railroad across
Manchuria, thereby achieving complete domination over a large portion of northeast China. The United Kingdom, France, and Japan also received a number of concessions later that year. The erosion of Chinese sovereignty contributed to a spectacular anti-foreign outbreak in June 1900, when the "
Boxers" (properly the society of the "righteous and harmonious fists") attacked
foreign legations in
Beijing. This
Boxer Rebellion provoked a rare display of unity among the colonial powers, who formed the
Eight-Nation Alliance. Troops landed at
Tianjin and marched on the capital, which they took on 14 August; the foreign soldiers then looted and occupied Beijing for several months. German forces were particularly severe in exacting revenge for the killing of
their ambassador, while Russia tightened its hold on Manchuria in the northeast until its crushing defeat by Japan in the
Russo-Japanese War of 1904–1905. Extraterritorial jurisdiction was abandoned by the United Kingdom and the United States in 1943. Mainland Chinese historians refer to this period as the
century of humiliation. ==Central Asia==