of
Britain,
Kaiser Wilhelm II of
Germany,
Tsar Nicholas II of
Russia,
Marianne of
France and a
Japanese samurai dividing
China ruled by
Emperor Guangxu. "
Kiao-Tchéou" and "
Port-Arthur," written on slices of the cake, represent those locations in China; a stereotyped
mandarin reacts with horror in the background. inside the Chinese imperial palace, the
Forbidden City, during a celebration ceremony after the signing of the
Boxer Protocol, 1901
The unequal treaties The earliest treaty later referred to as "unequal" was the 1841
Convention of Chuenpi negotiations during the
First Opium War. The first treaty between the
Qing dynasty and the
United Kingdom termed "unequal" was the
Treaty of Nanjing in 1842. Through the treaty of Nanjing, Britain obtained Hong Kong and trading access to the five treaty ports (Shanghai, Guangzhou, Ningbo, Fuzhou, and Xiamen). In 1843, the
Treaty of the Bogue added extraterritorial rights that exempted British citizens from Chinese law in the treaty ports. The treaty ports served as bases for foreign missionaries. After
Chiang Kai-shek declared a new national government in 1927, the Western powers quickly offered diplomatic recognition, arousing anxiety in Japan.
Towards the end of the unequal treaties After the
Boxer Rebellion and the signing of the
Anglo-Japanese Alliance of 1902, Germany began to reassess its policy approach towards China. In 1907 Germany suggested a trilateral German-Chinese-American agreement that never materialised. Thus China entered the new era of ending unequal treaties on March 14, 1917, when it broke off diplomatic relations with Germany, thereby terminating the concessions it had given that country, with
China declaring war on Germany on August 17, 1917. As World War I commenced, these acts voided the unequal treaty of 1861, resulting in the reinstatement of Chinese control on the concessions of Tianjin and Hankou to China. In 1919, the post-war peace negotiations failed to return the territories in Shandong, previously under German colonial control, back to the
Republic of China. After it was determined that the Japanese forces occupying those territories since 1914 would be allowed to retain them under the
Treaty of Versailles, the Chinese delegate
Wellington Koo refused to sign the peace agreement, with China being the only conference member to boycott the signing ceremony. Widely perceived in China as a betrayal of the country's wartime contributions by the other conference members, the domestic backlash following the failure to restore Shandong would cause the collapse of the cabinet of the
Duan Qirui government and lead to the
May 4th movement. On May 20, 1921, China secured with the German-Chinese peace treaty (Deutsch-chinesischer Vertrag zur Wiederherstellung des Friedenszustandes) a diplomatic accord which was considered the first equal treaty between China and a European nation. Many treaties China considered unequal were repealed during the
Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945). After the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, China became an ally with the United Kingdom and the United States, which then signed treaties with China to end British and American
extraterritoriality in January 1943. Significant examples outlasted World War II: treaties regarding
Hong Kong remained in place until
Hong Kong's 1997 handover, though in 1969, to improve
Sino-Soviet relations in the wake of
military skirmishes along their border, the People's Republic of China was forced to reconfirm the 1858
Treaty of Aigun and 1860
Treaty of Peking.
Development of terminology In China, the term "unequal treaties" first came into use in the early 1920s to describe the historical treaties, still imposed on the then-
Republic of China, that were signed through the period of time which the American sinologist
John K. Fairbank characterized as the "treaty century" which began in the 1840s. The term was popularized by
Sun Yat-sen. In assessing the term's usage in rhetorical discourse since the early 20th century, American historian Dong Wang notes that "while the phrase has long been widely used, it nevertheless lacks a clear and unambiguous meaning" and that there is "no agreement about the actual number of treaties signed between China and foreign countries that should be counted as unequal." == Japan ==