The resulting
Treaty of Livadia turned out to be very unfavorable to China: a large portion of
Ili was to be ceded to Russia, Russia would have unprecedented access to trade routes in the interior of China, and China would pay an
indemnity of five million rubles. When the terms became known among Chinese government officials, there was an uproar and Chonghou was branded as a traitor. incompetent, and ignorant. Chonghou himself described his reasoning as such: Only because our military forces were exhausted, our treasury was short of money, our border defenses were also inadequate to rely on, and because I wanted to safeguard our national interests, I had no choice but to agree under pressure.
Zeng Jize replaced Chonghou, but Russia refused to renegotiate the treaty unless Chonghou was pardoned. After months of tension and appeals by foreign ambassadors and leaders, including
Queen Victoria, and Zeng as well, the Qing government relented, and commuted his death sentence, but Chonghou still had to make a contribution of 300,000 taels to purchase his freedom. Zeng eventually negotiated the
Treaty of Saint Petersburg, and Chonghou retired to private life. In 1885, he was allowed to present
Empress Dowager Cixi greetings on her 50th birthday, and restored to a rank two levels lower than his original rank. He died in obscurity in 1893. ==Historical reputation==