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 Chinese
History --- Qing Dynasty
Although the Manchus were not Han Chinese
and were strongly resisted, especially in the south, they had assimilated
a great deal of Chinese culture before conquering China Proper. Realizing
that to dominate the empire they would have to do things the Chinese way,
the Manchus retained many institutions of Ming and earlier Chinese derivation.
They continued the Confucian court practices and temple rituals, over
which the emperors had traditionally presided.
The Manchus continued the Confucian civil service
system. Although Chinese were barred from the highest offices, Chinese
officials predominated over Manchu officeholders outside the capital,
except in military positions. The NeoConfucianism philosophy, emphasizing
the obedience of subject to ruler, was enforced as the state creed. The
Manchu emperors also supported Chinese literary and historical projects
of enormous scope; the survival of much of China's ancient literature
is attributed to these projects.
Ever
suspicious of Han Chinese, the Qing rulers put into effect measures aimed
at preventing the absorption of the Manchus into the dominant Han Chinese
population. Han Chinese were prohibited from migrating into the Manchu
homeland, and Manchus were forbidden to engage in trade or manual labor.
Intermarriage between the two groups was forbidden. In many government
positions a system of dual appointments was used--the Chinese appointee
was required to do the substantive work and the Manchu to ensure Han loyalty
to Qing rule.
The Qing regime was determined to protect itself
not only from internal rebellion but also from foreign invasion. After
China Proper had been subdued, the Manchus conquered Outer Mongolia (now
the Mongolian People's Republic) in the late seventeenth century. In the
eighteenth century they gained control of Central Asia as far as the Pamir
Mountains and established a protectorate over the area the Chinese call
Xizang, but commonly known in the West as Tibet. The Qing thus became
the first dynasty to eliminate successfully all danger to China Proper
from across its land borders. Under Manchu rule the empire grew to include
a larger area than before or since; Taiwan, the last outpost of anti Manchu
resistance, was also incorporated into China for the first time. In addition,
Qing emperors received tribute from the various border states.
The Qing weren't the worst rulers; under them
the arts flowered (China's greatest novel, a work known variously as The
Dream of the Red Chamber, A Dream of Red Mansions, and The Story of the
Stone, was written during the Qing) and culture bloomed. Moreover, they
attempted to copy Chinese institutions and philosophy to a much greater
extent than then the Mongols of the Yuan. However, in their attempt to
to emulate the Chinese, they were even more conservative and inflexible
than the Ming. Their approach to foreign policy, which was to make everyone
treat the Emperor like the Son of Heaven and not acknowledge other countries
as being equal to China, didn't rub the West the right way, even when
the Chinese were in the moral right (as in the Opium
Wars, which netted Britain Hong Kong and Kowloon).
To
live during the Qing Dynasty was to live in interesting times. Most importantly,
the Western world attempted to make contact on a government-to-government
basis, and, at least initially, failed. The Chinese (more specifically,
the ultra-conservative Manchus) had no room in their world view for the
idea of independent, equal nations (this viewpoint, to a certain degree,
still persists today). There was the rest of the world, and then there
was China. It wasn't that they rejected the idea of a community of nations;
it's that they couldn't conceive of it. It would be like trying to teach
a Buddhist monk about the Father, Son, and the Holy Ghost. This viewpoint
was so pervasive that Chinese reformers who advocated more flexibility
in China's dealings with the West were often accused of being Westerners
with Chinese faces.
The attitude of the Western powers towards
China (England, Russia, Germany, France, and the United States, were,
more or less, the primary players) was strangely ambivalent. On the one
hand, they did their best to undermine what they considered to be restrictive
trading and governmental regulations; the best (or worst, depending on
your point of view) example of that was the British smuggling of opium
into Southern China. Other examples included the 'right' for foreign navies
to sail up Chinese rivers and waterways, and extra territoriality, which
meant that if a British citizen committed a crime in Qing China, he would
be tried in a British council under British law. Most of these 'rights'
came into being under a series of treaties that came to be known, and
rightly so, as the Unequal Treaties.
On the other hand, they did do their best to
prop up the ailing Qing, the most notable example being the crushing of
the Boxer Rebellion in 1900 by foreign troops (primarily U.S. Marines),
and the defeat of Taiping (Red Hair) Rebellion.
What the Western powers were interested in was the carving up of China
for their own purposes, and that, paradoxically, required keeping China
together.
But two things happened to prevent that. First,
in 1911, the Qing dynasty collapsed and China plunged headlong into chaos.
Second, in 1914, the Archduke Ferdinand told his driver to go down a street
in Sarajevo he shouldn't have, and Europe plunged headlong into chaos.
Dish with butterfly and chrysanthemum
design, fen-cai enamels
Qing dynasty, Yong-zheng (1723-1735) mark
and period. Jing-de-zhen ware.
Height 10.0cm. Diameter 50.4cm.
The characteristic of wu-cai (famille verte)
porcelain of the Qing dynasty lies in painterly designs painted on
its white porcelain body. A new technique which made this painterly
decoration possible was the fen-cai (famille rose). Wu-cai on porcelain
started in the fourteenth century at Jing-de-zhen. Addition of gradation
by mixing glass powder in the coloring agents made delicate expressions
possible.
This large dish is one of the typical
works of Qing-dynasty fen-cai porcelain. Its decoration in bright
colors is irresistibly attractive. The chrysanthemum branches rising
in curves bear yellow, pink, white and red flowers painted in careful
brush work. The branches and leaves are also painted in delicately
graduated shades of green, adding to the vividness of the designs
which look almost like still-life paintings. The ample spacing enhances
their noble grace.
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