Boxer Rebellion PDF
Boxer Rebellion PDF
Boxer Rebellion PDF
Contents
Committee Background.... 1
The Qing Dynasty....... 1
Mandate of Heaven....... 2
Opium Wars...... 2
Unequal Treaties.. 3
Spheres of Influence.............. 3
Self-Strengthening Movement..... 4
Hundred Days Reform.... 5
The Guangxu Emperor........ 6
Empress Dowager Cixi..... 6
Factions in the Imperial Court....... 7
Tensions between Chinese and Foreigners... 7
Modernization of Chinas Infrastructure and
Reforms in Government... 10
Delegate Positions...... 11
Chinese Delegation....... 11
Foreign Delegation.... 18
Appendix............... 22
Bibliography 25
Committee Background
THE EMPIRE OF THE GREAT QING, 1900Over the last century, the
Qing Dynastys proud, longstanding dominance over Eastern Asia has been
checked by the growing spheres of influence controlled by invasive foreign
imperialist powers. Humiliating Chinese defeats in the Opium Wars, the Sino-
French War, and the Sino-Japanese War have all taken their toll on the Qing
Dynasty and Chinese civilization at large. The spread of opium by foreign
merchants and Christianity by foreign missionaries have worked in tandem to
erode Chinese tolerance of foreign visitors. Now, with reports of Boxer rebels
lashing out against foreigners and Christians, killing civilians, and burning
buildings, even foreign diplomats and nationals living in the Peking Legation
Quarter fear for their safety as tensions heighten to new extremes
The Qing The ruling Qing Dynasty, a bloodline of emperors from the Manchu clan
Dynasty Aisin-Gioro, has ruled China since 1644, when the Dynastys Manchurian
ancestors invaded the entire country after desperate officials in the Ming Dynasty
requested their aid in fighting off bandits who had captured the capital.1 The
Manchu people of Manchuria (a region in northeastern China) were a separate
ethnic group from the rest of the Chinese population, who were predominantly of
the Han ethnicity.2
Throughout its history, the Qing Dynasty has tried to appease this ethnic
majority, adopting mainstream Chinese values, taking steps such as adopting
Confucian tenets and creating a hierarchal rule governing the countrys diverse
regions. The Qing appointed many local Chinese leaders as the governors of the
countrys divided provinces, with eight viceroys (or Governors-General),
commonly Manchus, who managed groups of governors and were in charge of
multi-provincial military affairs, food production, waterways, civil affairs, salt
control, and various other internal functions for those regions.3
In addition to governors and viceroys, the emperors of the Qing Dynasty
Image Credit:
usually managed their government with a Grand Council of Ministers who served
WikiMedia Commons as advisors to the emperor.4 Most of the highest-ranking officials in the Qing
1 Encyclopdia Britannica, Inc.. "Qing dynasty (Chinese history)." Encyclopedia Britannica.
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/112846/Qing-dynasty (accessed January 5, 2014).
2 Encyclopdia Britannica, Inc.. "Manchu (people)." Encyclopedia Britannica.
1
Dynasty were Manchus, especially princes (duke-like officials who were direct
male descendants of the emperors bloodline) who dominated the Imperial Court.
Opium Wars The decline of the Qing Dynastys dominance in China began in the
nineteenth-century with the Opium Wars of British aggression in retaliation
against the Qing Dynastys repressive Canton system of trade in the port of
Canton.8 Under this system, foreigners trading privileges were restricted by high
tariffs and unreasonable exchange rates. In addition, foreign merchants were
prohibited from entering the mainland and had their movements restricted to the
confines of Canton.9
Tea was the Chinese good most sought-after by British merchants high
demand throughout the British Empire meant that it could be easily sold for a
profit but Chinese merchants would only trade it in exchange for silver. Since
the silver cost of tea created difficulties for many British merchants, some of
them began illegally smuggling opium into China to sell for silver that could then
be used to buy tea. Soon the illicit trade began to escalate as millions of Chinese
became addicted to opium. By the 1830s, opium had so heavily corrupted society
that 90% of all Chinese males under the age of 40 living in coastal areas were
addicted to the drug.10 Attempts by the Chinese to aggressively crack down on the
trade escalated into conflicts with Britain in the First Opium War (1839-42) and
Second Opium War (1856-1860), both devastating and humiliating defeats for
China.
5 Ibid.
6 Higgins, Roland L.. "Pacific Century: The Tributary System." University of Mississippi.
http://www.olemiss.edu/courses/pol337/tributar.pdf (accessed January 18, 2014).
7 Szczepanski, Kallie. "What Is the Mandate of Heaven?" About.com Asian History.
2
Opium Wars,
1830s
Image Credit:
BBC
Unequal Treaties The Qing Dynastys terrible defeats in the Opium Wars were exacerbated
by the westerners extremely abusive terms for Chinese surrender. The Treaty of
Nanking that resolved the First Opium War was the first of many Unequal
Treaties infamously forced upon the Chinese by imperialist nations; many
Chinese still mark the outbreak of the war as the start of an ongoing Century of
National Humiliation for the Chinese people.
Over the course of the century, defeats at the hands of Great Britain,
France, and Japan and perpetual exploitations by the United States, Russia, and
Germany came about as the Qing Dynasty was forced to accept many more
unequal treaties. Each agreement typically required the Chinese to cede access to
new ports, pay war indemnities, and grant foreign citizens extraterritoriality
(stipulating that foreign citizens could only be tried in their own nations courts,
exempting them from Chinese justice). The Treaty of Tientsin that ended the
Second Opium War forced China to allow religious freedom and the free
movement of foreigners throughout China. As a result, Christian missionaries
began spreading across China in search of new converts.11
Spheres of The terms of these unequal treaties also gave each imperialist nation their
Influence own spheres of influence, sections of China where foreign officials and traders
effectively held more power and influence than local Chinese authorities. Great
Britain received Hong Kong and five other ports including Canton, Shanghai, and
Weihaiwei (Port Edward) in the Opium Wars.12 Russia gained Port Arthur and
parts of Manchuria from the Li-Lobonav Treaty, and the United States obtained
11 Ibid.
12 Ibid.
3
rights to share access to all of Great Britains ports following the Treaty of
Wanghia. 13
Map of Spheres
of Influence
Image Credit:
Ellis Global Studies
Self-Strengthening Following the Qing Dynastys horrible defeat in the Second Opium War in
Movement 1860 and costly victory in the Taiping Rebellion of 1865, many officials in
government saw a need for a modernization of the Chinese military.15 While
improvements were made in a subsequent wave of restructuring dubbed the Self
Strengthening Movement, there was enough government resistance to this
movement on the grounds that it reflected western ideals to bureaucratically
halt it. One of the movements few successes was the foundation of Zongli Yamen,
the Qing Dynastys first centralized, though limited, Office of Foreign Affairs, in
1861.16 What little progress was made through the Self-Strengthening Movement
failed to prevent future humiliating defeats for the Qing Dynasty, especially at the
13 Ibid.
14 Esherick, Joseph. The origins of the Boxer Uprising. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987.
15 "The Self-Strengthening Movement." Alpha History. http://alphahistory.com/chineserevolution/self-strengthening-
movement/ (accessed January 26, 2014).
16 Ibid.
4
hands of the Japanese in the Sino-Japanese War in 1895, again exposing
dangerous weaknesses in Chinese infrastructure and the need for real change.17
Hundred Days After the Chinese defeat in the Sino-Japanese War, most Chinese officials
Reform and even the Emperor himself began to see a need for a radical new direction in
Chinese policy. However, when it came to large-scale reforms, particularly with
regard to education, civil society, or government, gridlock prevailed. Members of
government were polarized between the initial factions of Reformists and
Conservatives.18
The most prominent Reformist group, led by the radical politician Kang
Youwei and his protge Liang Qichao, aimed to mirror Japans successful Meiji
Restoration, which transformed Japan from a weak feudal society into an
industrialized new world power in the span of a few decades. Kangs reforms
called for the modernization of the ancient imperial civil service examination
system as well as a massive restructuring of every branch of government.
However, the Conservatives opposed such large-scale reforms because many of
the changes would severely limit their power and expose their corrupt activities.19
Soon, the Reformists ideas captured the Guangxu Emperors attention in
January 1898, and Kang was made an advisor to the emperor as he, Liang, and
other Reformist leaders in his group formally joined the Imperial Court. Soon the
Emperor began enacting hundreds of their changes in a period that came to be
known as the Hundred Days Reform.20 These reforms included modernizing the
Chinese economy to make it more capitalist and interconnected, introducing
measures to reduce corruption in government, and creating a parliamentary
system that would have weakened the existing monarchy.21
However, the reforms were ill-received by most members of the Imperial
Court, and many felt Kang was pushing for a transformation of Chinese
government that would expect it to embrace progressive systems far too rapidly.
The reformists were also accused of colluding too closely with foreigners,
especially given their involvement with the Japanese Prime Minister It
Hirobumi and the Welsh missionary Timothy Richard, who proposed measures
that would have ceded a degree of Chinese sovereignty to foreign powers.
Interpreting the reforms to be a dangerous threat that would undermine the
monarchy and aristocracy, the Empress Dowager staged a coup dtat with
assistance from Ronglu and Yuan Shikai, removing the Guangxu Emperor from
power and ending the Hundred Days Reform.22 The emperor was forced to
relinquish decision-making authority to the empress under the pretense of
mental illness reasons.
Following the coup, while Kang Youwei and Liang Qichao were able to flee
the nation to escape the empress wrath, six other leaders of their movement who
failed to escape were brutally executed by the empress.23 In times since, the duo
have re-established themselves in Japan, where their new Protect the Emperor
Society has gained a following among Chinese ex-patriots and sympathetic
Japanese.
17 Ibid.
18 Hundred Days Reforms." Alpha History. http://alphahistory.com/chineserevolution/hundred-days-reforms/ (accessed
January 23, 2014).
19 Ibid.
20 Ibid.
21 Ibid.
22 Encyclopdia Britannica, Inc.. "Hundred Days of Reform (Chinese history)." Encyclopedia Britannica.
23, 2014).
5
Not long afterward, the empress repealed nearly every reformist edict
enacted by the emperor.24 To a large degree, the line in the sand between those
who supported and those who opposed the Hundred Days Reform years ago
matches the line between supporters and opponents of the Boxers war on
foreigners in the current conflict.
The Guangxu In many ways, the Guangxu Emperors downfall in the Hundred Days
Emperor Reform led many Chinese to begin questioning whether the Qing Dynasty still
held the Confucian Mandate of Heaven. Though his life was spared and he was
able to remain Emperor, the coup only refrained from regicide or dethronement
to avoid the ire of foreign powers who would interpret such actions as Chinese
resistance to Imperialism. This would have provided an impetus for use of force,
which may have pressured the Chinese further into submission.25 Since being
placed under house arrest he has been demoted to being a figurehead. The
emperor has kept his title and still remains an informed (though symbolic)
member on the Grand Council.26
Empress In terms of the empires supreme leadership, the Empress Dowager Cixi
has been the de facto ruler of China for the last four decades. Born a Manchu of
Dowager Cixi the noble Yehenara clan, Cixi was chosen to become an imperial concubine for
the Xaifeng Emperor at a young age. Upon the Xaifeng Emperors death in 1861,
she ascended to Regent Empress and wielded the power behind the throne for
her young son, the newly-coronated Tongzhi Emperor. Following her sons death
in 1875, she instated her nephew Zaitian as the new Guangxu Emperor and has
served as his powerful regent ever since.27
The Empress
Image Credit:
WikiMedia Commons
24 Ibid.
25 Encyclopdia Britannica, Inc.. "Guangxu (emperor of Qing dynasty)." Encyclopedia Britannica.
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/324181/Guangxu (accessed January 7, 2014).
26 Ibid.
27 Szczepanksi, Kallie. "Cixi, Empress Dowager of Qing China." About.com Asian History.
6
Factions of the Following her recent coup against the emperor, the Empress Dowager has
Imperial Court replaced many reformers in the court with Ironhats, and as a result, three
major political factions currently dominate the Imperial Court: Ironhats,
Conservatives, and Reformists. Ironhats, like Prince Duan or Prince Zhuang, are
a splinter-faction of xenophobic conservative Manchus with the ultimate goal of
expelling foreigners from China. More moderate Conservatives like General
Ronglu or Prince Qing oppose most infrastructural reforms but feel that violence
and hostility against foreigners might be unwise and could provoke retaliation
from imperialist powers. Finally, Reformists like Zhang Zhidong or Li Hongzhang
are less radical than Kangs Reformists but believe that Chinas infrastructure
ultimately needs to be remodeled to prevent the collapse of the Qing Dynastys
rule.
28 Ibid.
29 Esherick, Joseph. The origins of the Boxer Uprising. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987.
7
religious rituals will grant them the strengths of ancestral spirits and their faith in
the Chinese gods will make their skin impervious to bullets.30
The Big Swords were also an anti-foreigner group, but their fighters were
mostly dedicated to expelling bandits from Shandong Province.31 Their region of
origin was near the tri-provincial border between Jiansu, Shandong, and Henan
where criminals thrived since they could evade any one provinces law
enforcement by escaping outside its jurisdiction.32
Yuxian, who was then the governor of Shandong Province, was prompted by the
Guangxu Emperor to support the Big Swords crusade to crush the bandit
insurgency, which had also begun disrupting Chinese military supply lines in the
Sino-Japanese War.33 However, after their alliance succeeded, he turned around
and brutally suppressed the Big Swords once he felt they were becoming too
loud and was no longer interested in tolerating their illegal violence against
Christians.34
Violence against
foreigners, 1899
Image Credit:
WikiMedia Commons
The Boxers have become problematic for the Qing Dynasty in recent
years, especially after provoking the Germans in the Juye Incident in 1897. In
that incident, Boxers in Shandong Province murdered two German missionaries.
The Germans response of extreme escalation was to send battleships and seize
Jiazhou Bay in Shandong, where they have since established a new naval base in
the port village of Qidao.35 Even more recently, a skirmish in Shandong between
Boxers and Imperial Army forces in the Battle of Senluo Temple left both sides
with casualties. Though the Boxers lost and were forced to flee, their impressive
performance against the more powerful Imperial Army has led to a surge in
30 "Boxer Beliefs." BOXERS. http://www.bris.ac.uk/Depts/History/Projects/Boxers/boxbeliefs.htm (accessed January 25,
2014).
31 Esherick, Joseph. The origins of the Boxer Uprising. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987.
32 Ibid.
33 Ibid.
34 Szczepanksi, Kallie. "Cixi, Empress Dowager of Qing China." About.com Asian History.
8
support for the Boxer movement outside of Shandong Province.36 Now, the
Imperial Court has been forced to take the rebellious movement seriously for the
first time.37
The Qing Dynasty has a history of brutally suppressing rebellions,
including the Taiping Rebellion in the 1850s and mid 1860s of Chinese Christian
Cultists, the Dungan Revolt of Chinese Muslims in the 1860s-1870s, and even
the unsuccessful Guangzhou Uprising of Sun Yat-Sens Revive China Society in
1895 that spurred Suns flight to self-exile in Japan. As a general principle, the
Qing consider any large-scale non-governmental organization to be a challenge to
their power that cannot be tolerated.38 Many members of the Imperial Court see
the Boxers and the Fists of Righteous Harmony Society as no different from past
threats and point to Yuxians problems with the Big Swords Society. However,
Ironhat elements of the court view the Boxers' nationalism as a valuable force
waiting to be harnessed.
In the aftermath of the German escalation, many in the Imperial Court
feel that they can no longer tolerate such abusive actions by foreign powers that
override Chinese sovereignty. If the Qing Dynasty were to utilize the popular
support of the Boxers to start a nation-wide uprising, the foreigners would be
overwhelmingly outnumbered. It has long been known by foreign powers that
China, with 25% of the worlds population (400 million people), would be very
difficult for foreign nations to conquer completely without sacrificing many of the
resources that make China so valuable. If the foreigners attempted a large-scale
invasion, they might be outnumbered which could lead to a redraft of the
Unequal Treaties. Yet, at the same time, allowing the Boxers insurgency to
continue to grow will definitely risk provoking the wrath of imperialist powers,
which could prove disastrous. The Qing Dynasty is now at a crossroads: Should it
swallow its national pride and accept the abuses of imperialism or attempt to
wriggle free of their strangling grip?
Questions to Consider:
In what ways might it benefit the Qing Dynasty to support the Boxers?
Is the Qing Dynasty or the Guangxu Emperor still worthy enough to claim the
right to the Mandate of Heaven?
If provoked by more violence, would the foreign powers work together to
quell the insurgency, or will they work against each other to extend their own
interests?
Can the Ironhats find a way to persuade another Court faction to join them in
supporting the Boxers, possibly by promising some future cessions in
exchange?
36 Ibid.
37 Ibid.
38 Esherick, Joseph. The origins of the Boxer Uprising. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987.
9
The Modernization of Chinas
Infrastructure and Reforms in
Government
With the failures of both the Self-Strengthening Movement that sought to
modernize Chinas infrastructure and the Hundred Days Reform that aimed to
restructure the government, the last decade has stifled the momentum of reform.
However, a foundation of progressive support remains in the government. A
great number of Chinese leaders believe that Kang Youweis core ideas, though
incredibly radical and impractical in his proposed form, showed great insight
through his thorough solutions to perceived problems with the current system.
Over the last several decades, Chinese industrialists have tried to copy
foreign technology by introducing railroads, telegraph lines, steamships, cotton
mills, and other innovations to grow the Chinese economy. The Qing Dynastys
Confucian philosophy, however, generally discourages the adoption of foreign
ideas.39 In light of the empress recent elevation of Ironhats, the Reformists have
tried to be more shrewdly political in their approach to reforms, but many
Reformists sense a new opportunity to push through proposals as China faces its
current crossroads.
While the majority of Ironhats and many of the Conservatives oppose any
reforms to infrastructure, other officials favor reforms including challenging the
governments standard unwillingness to cooperate with foreigners and
incorporating beneficial Western ideas in the Confucian-focused education of
Chinese students. The majority of Ironhats and a large number of Conservatives
feel such reforms would represent submitting to the uncivilized influence of
foreign barbarians, but to the Reformists, modernizing China only serves to
allow the country to adapt and evolve beyond its current state of being easily
overpowered by foreigner forces.
Questions to Consider:
Should the Qing Dynasty deviate from traditional Confucian tenets and
institute modernizing reforms?
Are the railways benefits of increased efficiency in transportation worth the
cession of sovereignty to foreign nations that is required to have them be
built?
Can the Reformists find a way to persuade another Court faction to institute
their proposed reforms, possibly by promising some future support in
exchange?
"The Self-Strengthening Movement." Alpha History. http://alphahistory.com/chineserevolution/self-strengthening-
39
10
Map of Chinese
provinces
Image Credit:
WikiMedia Commons
Delegate Positions
In addition to the characters portrayed by delegates in committee, delegates are
also allowed and encouraged to interact with crisis characters including the
Empress Dowager Cixi, Baron Clemens von Ketteler (German Minister), the
Guangxu Emperor, George Ernest Morrison (Australian Peking correspondent
for The Times), and many others via communiqus as an application of personal
powers.
11
physically more scattered geographically than the foreign delegates, personal
powers can still be used to affect anything from railroads to telegrams to
waterways.
12
capital Zhili region surrounding Peking, and is simultaneously also Minister of
Beiyang, a major diplomatic position in charge of negotiating international
trade.47 Lis protge, Wang Wenshao, now holds both posts, but when Li still
served, he used his influence to engage in modernizing projects including
founding the Chinese Merchants Steam Navigation Company and working to
encourage more positive negotiations with foreigners.
Recently, The Times Peking correspondent George Ernest Morrison exposed the
Li-Lobanov Treaty, an 1896 agreement between Li Hongzhang and Russias
Foreign Minister, leasing Russia the land to build its railroad across Manchuria
in exchange for a mutual defense agreement against Japanese aggression.48 The
Treaty was Lis attempt to play the rival nations of Russia and Japan against each
other following their developing tensions from the Triple Intervention. In that
incident, which took place during the Sino-Japanese War, Japan attempted to
invade Russias Port Arthur, but was forced to withdraw when given war threats
by Russia, France, and Germany.49 As a foreign sympathizer who believes in
suppressing the Boxers, Li is held in high regard by many foreign nations since he
is one of the only Chinese diplomats to have made foreign visits, and he is not
afraid to take an opposing stance to the throne if he feels it in the best interests of
the country.
http://books.google.com/books?id=lAxresT12ogC&pg=PA228&lpg=PA228&dq=Gangyi+Boxers&source=bl&ots=M1zowOKxW
b&sig=HJ60GkJx0T4uYXx3i3RJQlJKgug&hl=en&sa=X&ei=tD7MUo2ZE8ivsATF-
4DgDA&ved=0CFIQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q&f=false (accessed January 7, 2014).
51 Harrington, Peter. Peking 1900: the Boxer rebellion. Apple iBooks. Oxford: Osprey Military, 2001.
52 Encyclopdia Britannica, Inc.. "Ronglu (Chinese official)." Encyclopedia Britannica.
13
Education and Minister to various countries, most notably France, Germany, and
Russia. While in Europe, Xu attracted enormous controversy when he converted
to Roman Catholicism, and he remains an avid follower of his adopted faith
today. As Minister of Public Works, he is in charge of organizing construction
projects, manufacturing equipment, gathering resource materials, repairing
roads and structures, as well as standardizing weights and measures for the
government.53 His time as a diplomat abroad has given him useful experience in
negotiating with foreigners, and his instrumental role in bringing railroads to
China led to him being appointed Inspector-General of the Chinese Eastern
Railroad and an Executive for the Kaiping Tramway.54 Unlike his mentor, the
prominent politician Wang Wenshao, Xu is not afraid to take a stance different
from that of the throne.55 A crafty plotter, Xu Jingcheng believes that the ends
always justify the means.
General Nie Commander of the Tenacious Army in the Wuwei Troop (Guards
Schicheng Army Front Division)
Nie Shichengs zealous hatred of foreign imperialistsan anti-foreign sentiment
shared by his troopshas created controversies for the entire Wuwei Troop, with
reports of troops in his Tenacious Army attacking individual foreigners without
53 Hucker, Charles. "Governmental Organization of The Ming Dynasty." JSTOR. http://www.jstor.org/stable/2718619 (accessed
January 24, 2014).
54 Xiang, Ah. "The National Humiliation - Peking." Republican China Blog. http://www.imperialchina.org/Peking.html(accessed
http://books.google.com/books?id=lAxresT12ogC&pg=PA228&lpg=PA228&dq=Gangyi+Boxers&source=bl&ots=M1zowOKxW
b&sig=HJ60GkJx0T4uYXx3i3RJQlJKgug&hl=en&sa=X&ei=tD7MUo2ZE8ivsATF-
4DgDA&ved=0CFIQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q&f=false (accessed January 7, 2014).
14
orders.59 A decorated military veteran from the Taiping Rebellion and Sino-
Japanese War, General Nie holds a unique stance as being both anti-Foreigner
and anti-Boxer. The Tenacious Army is one of the two most powerful armies
within the Wuwei Troop, second only to General Yuans newly-created Army in
modern weaponry, but second-to-none in discipline with its modern training
obtained from German military advisors.60 General Nie may ultimately have to
decide which he hates less: the Boxers or the foreigners.
General Dong Commander of the Kansu Braves in the Wuwei Troop (Guards Army
Fuxiang Rear Division)
Dong Fuxiang is a Han Chinese General in command of the Kansu Braves, a large
force of Muslim Chinese fighters.61 He is very xenophobic and also incredibly
loyal to the Empress Dowager. Dong has proven himself to be an effective
commander in the past, having successfully suppressed both of the Dungan
Revolts in his home province of Kansu. His poorly disciplined and ill-equipped
Kansu Braves are often disparagingly referred to as the Kansu Irregulars.62 The
Braves overzealousness in attacking foreigners without being ordered to do so by
the Imperial Court has created difficulties for the Qing Dynasty in defining its
stance towards foreigners.63
General Song Qing Commander of the Resolute Army in the Wuwei Troop (Guards Army
Left Division)
General Song Qing is an elderly and very experienced military officer who
commands the Resolute Armythe Left Division of the Wuwei Troopa large and
well equipped force with modern German guns and artillery at their disposal.64 A
veteran of the Sino-Japanese War and the Taiping Rebellion, General Song is a
strong loyalist to the Qing Dynasty. He believes in the superiority of Chinese
culture over Western values, holds strongly to Confucian tenets, and dislikes the
intrusion of foreigners into Chinese civilization. The General is a native of
Shandong Province who has climbed his way up through the ranks of Chinese
society.
59 Esherick, Joseph. The origins of the Boxer Uprising. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987.
60 Harrington, Peter. Peking 1900: the Boxer rebellion. Apple iBooks. Oxford: Osprey Military, 2001.
61 Ibid.
62 Ibid.
63 Esherick, Joseph. The origins of the Boxer Uprising. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987.
64 Harrington, Peter. Peking 1900: the Boxer rebellion. Apple iBooks. Oxford: Osprey Military, 2001.
65 Encyclopdia Britannica, Inc.. "Yuan Shikai (president of China)." Encyclopedia Britannica.
15
Zhang Zhidong
largest force and most modern equipment, comparable only to General Nies
Tenacious Army.67
Zhang comes from a family of scholars and holds a strong loyalty to the Empress
Dowager Cixi, even though he personally disagrees with her recent appointment
of officials from the xenophobic Ironhat faction of the Court.72 Though he did not
fully support the Hundred Days Reform, he believes that many of Kang Youweis
ideas could still bring groundbreaking benefits if properly implemented.
http://books.google.com/books?id=lAxresT12ogC&pg=PA228&lpg=PA228&dq=Gangyi+Boxers&source=bl&ots=M1zowOKxW
b&sig=HJ60GkJx0T4uYXx3i3RJQlJKgug&hl=en&sa=X&ei=tD7MUo2ZE8ivsATF-
4DgDA&ved=0CFIQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q&f=false (accessed January 7, 2014).
74 Ibid.
16
As the former Grand Councilor of the Grand Council, the highest position a
Manchu could possibly hold outside of royalty, Wang has proven himself to be a
leader who is able to bring divided factions towards compromise, but even his
ability to inspire cooperation may not be enough to unite the divided factions of
the Imperial Court. For the last few years, he has held the honor of being Viceroy
of Zhili and Minister of Beiyang, two connected positions that were previously
held by Li Hongzhang for over two decades, and the enormous expectations of
these positions have placed enormous pressure on Wang with such big shoes to
fill. Wangs position as Viceroy of Zhili is the most prestigious Viceroy position,
since Zhilis boundaries surround Peking, and his position as Minister of Beiyang
is a major diplomatic post focused on international trade negotiations.75
Following pressure on the Imperial Court from the Diplomatic Corps over his
discrimination against Christians, Yuxian was relocated to the position of Shanxi
Governor, and now rules over the province with the largest coal deposits in all of
China. Members of the xenophobic Ironhat faction of the Imperial Court consider
Yuxian to be fully in alignment with their ideology, but Yuxian considers himself
to be a moderate Ironhat at best.
17
militia into a zealous troop of Spirit Boxers who believe that the favor of the
Chinese gods will make them impervious to bullets.81
Cao Futian has held a deep hatred of foreigners since even before missionaries
converted his brothers families to Christianity, feeling that their very presence in
China is a perverse invasion into Chinese society. In the eyes of Cao Futian, every
Christian (regardless of nationality) is a foreigner who must be expelled for
tainting the purity of the Chinese culture.
81Ibid.
82Encyclopdia Britannica, Inc.. "Sir Robert Hart, 1st Baronet (British statesman)." Encyclopedia Britannica.
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/256117/Sir-Robert-Hart-1st-Baronet (accessed January 18, 2014).
18
been a leader for reforms to Chinese infrastructure by helping to establish the
postal service of China and by reforming Chinese maritime laws on tariffs.84
A modernizer, Sir Robert has often tried to help the Qing Dynasty embrace
modernized infrastructure, education, and technology at a pace that he felt would
allow them to use it more wisely. Sir Robert is a longtime friend and ally of the
lifetime diplomat Li Hongzhang, and together with the American Minister Edwin
H. Conger has grown very suspicious of the Reverend Timothy Richards heavy-
handed interference in the Hundred Days Reform that would have ceded a
degree of Chinese sovereignty to Japan.
19
sovereignty while pushing for equal rights in Chinese trade for all engaging
nations.91 Conger, a Christian Scientist, uses his position as a diplomat to protect
the safety and rights of Chinese Christians and foreign missionaries in China, and
though he has been worried by recent reports of violence against foreigners, he
actually holds more faith in the good will of the Qing Dynasty than most other
members of the Diplomatic Corps.92
91 Aboukhadijeh, Feross. "McKinley and Roosevelt." StudyNotes. http://www.apstudynotes.org/us-history/topics/mckinley-
and-roosevelt/ (accessed January 24, 2014).
92 Thompson, Larry Clinton. William Scott Ament and the Boxer Rebellion Heroism, Hubris and the ""Ideal Missionary"".
20
Bishop Pierre- Vicar Apostolic of Northern Zhili
Marie-Alphonse Bishop Favier has served the Catholic Church in China for decades, and while
Chinese xenophobia is nothing new to him, he has never seen such widespread
Favier anti-foreigner hostility in his entire career. As Vicar Apostolic of Northern Zhili,
Bishop Favier is a regional leader for the Catholic Church. He operates mainly out
of Peking in the Church of the North (or Beitang), a major cathedral in Peking
located just outside the International Legation Quarter.98 Recently, the French
government sparked controversy with the Chinese when it required the Qing
Dynasty to give special Mandarin legal status to Catholic missionaries in China.
This Mandarin legal status would legally give missionaries the same honorable
status as governors and viceroys without the same power in order to improve
missionaries continued protection under Chinese law.99
Favier is considered to be the most prominent bishop in China, and played a role
in obtaining a French protectorate status for Catholic missions and missionaries
in China. However, the Boxers naturally have little care for such laws, and though
the Qing Dynasty has indulged French requests that obligate Chinese authorities
to protect missionaries, most view the Qings cooperation as half-hearted.100
Meanwhile, the bishop has begun offering sanctuary to refugees of Boxer violence
in his cathedral. He has been in constant communication with French Minister
Stphen Pichon, who has assured him that he can wire for French troops to be
deployed from French Indochina for the protection of the cathedral or legations
at any time.
98 Favier, A.. "Full text of "The Heart of Pekin: Bishop A. Favier's Diary of the Siege, May-August, 1900"." The Internet Archive.
http://www.archive.org/stream/heartpekinbisho00frgoog/heartpekinbisho00frgoog_djvu.txt (accessed January 25, 2014).
99 Doyle, Rev. A.P. "The Crisis in China and the Missions." Catholic World, July 1900, Volume 71 Issue 424. The Making of
America. 548-554.
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/moajrnl/bac8387.0071.424/568?xc=1&g=moagrp&q1=favier&node=bac8387.0071.424%3A15&v
iew=image (accessed January 25, 2014).
100 Ibid.
101 "Timothy Richard." BMS Home. http://www.bmsworldmission.org/about-us/our-heritage/asia/timothy-richard (accessed
January 7, 2014).
102 Ibid.
21
Appendix: Guide to Pronunciation and
Variant Spellings of Foreign Terms
One of the trickiest things about researching the Boxer Rebellion is that some of
the sources on the topic use different spellings of the same Chinese phrases (e.g.
Dong Fuxiang is sometimes written as Tung Fu-hsiang). This appendix has
been included to help delegates research their roles by listing some variant
spellings of these foreign phrases, while also providing some simplified closer-to-
accurate pronunciations of terms. (NOTE: While delegates should not
stress knowing all of these, it will make discourse easier if everyone
tries to become slightly familiar with this list by reading it once or
twice.)
Chinese (NOTE: The Chinese Zh in Zhang is similar to a French J- in
Jacques; also common in Chinese is pronouncing X as Sh- and
Q as Ch-)
Beiyang (Bay-yung)
Huguang (Hoo-gwong)
Juye (Joo-yee)
Langfang (Long-fong)
22
Liangjiang (Lee-ang Jeh-yung)
Qingdao (Cheeng-dow)
Senluo (Sun-loo-oh)
Shanxi (Shan-shee)
Wuwei (Woo-way)
Yikuang (Yee-kwong)
23
Zaitian (Tsai-tee-yen): Aisin-Gioro Tsai-tien, Dzai-Tiyan. [See
Guangxu]
24
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27