BOXER UPRISING

1898–1900, antiforeign movement in China, culminating in a desperate uprising against Westerners and Western influence.

By the end of the 19th cent. the Western powers and Japan had established wide interests in China. The Opium War (1839–42), which Great Britain had provoked, forced China to grant commercial concessions (see treaty port) and to recognize the principle of extraterritoriality. The concessions to Great Britain were soon followed by similar ones to France, Germany, and Russia. The Ch'ing regime, already weakened by European encroachments, was more enfeebled by Japan's success in the First Sino-Japanese War (1894–95) and the subsequent further partitioning of China into foreign spheres of influence. The Ch'ing emperor, Kuang-hsu, attempted to meet the imperialist threat by adopting modern educational and administrative reforms, but he stirred conservative opposition and was frustrated (1898) by the dowager empress, Tz'u Hsi, who, favoring a last effort to expel foreign influence, supported armed resistance.

The dowager empress tacitly encouraged an antiforeign secret society called I Ho Ch'uan [Chinese,=righteous, harmonious fists] or, in English, the Boxers. The Boxers soon grew powerful, and late in 1899 the movement began to assume menacing proportions. Violent attacks on foreigners and on Chinese Christians occurred, particularly in the provinces of Zhili, Shanxi, and Shandong; in Manchuria; and in Inner Mongolia. In those regions, railway building, a visible symbol of the foreigner, was most active; and Chinese Christians, especially Roman Catholics, adherents to the foreigners' religion, were most numerous. Also located there were the majority of territorial leaseholds acquired by the European powers.

In June, 1900, the Boxers (some 140,000 strong and now led by the war party at court), occupied Beijing and for eight weeks besieged the foreigners and the Chinese Christians there. Provincial governors in SE China suppressed the court's declaration of war and assured the powers of protection for foreign interests, thus limiting the area of conflict to N China. The siege was lifted in August by an international force of British, French, Russian, American, German, and Japanese troops, which had fought its way through from Tianjin. The Boxer Uprising thus ended.

The Western powers and Japan agreed—mainly because of U.S. pressure to "preserve Chinese territorial and administrative integrity" and because of mutual jealousies among the powers—not to carry further the partition of China. Nevertheless, China was compelled (1901) to pay an indemnity of $333 million, to amend commercial treaties to the advantage of the foreign nations, and to permit the stationing of foreign troops in Beijing. The United States later (1908) used some of its share of the indemnity for scholarships for Chinese students. China emerged from the Boxer Uprising with a greatly increased debt and was, in effect, a subject nation.

Bibliography

See A. H. Smith, China in Convulsion (1901); G. N. Steiger, China and the Occident (1927); C. C. Tan, The Boxer Catastrophe (1955); P. Fleming, The Siege at Peking (1959); V. W. W. S. Purcell, The Boxer Uprising (1963); R. O'Connor, The Spirit Soldiers (1973).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Boxer Uprising  - 575 results

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...Roman Catholics uniformly ascribe the Boxer uprising to the political and military action...explanation is the following: The Boxer Rising was no sudden and unexpected...missionary technique, both before the Boxer Uprising and after it, was the same...
...ch. 9, n. 11. 51. The Boxer siege and subsequent occupation...Jizhou , excerpted in Purcell, Boxer Uprising , 287. See also ibid., 285...The first mention of the Boxers in the foreign press was in...Sept 21, 1899. Purcell, Boxer Uprising , 242. 56. See...
...Nicholls, B. Bluejackets and Boxers: Australias Naval Expedition to the Boxer Uprising . Allen and Unwin, 1986. OConnor, R. The Boxer Rebellion . London: Robert Hale...Scribner, 1989. Purcell, V. The Boxer Uprising . Cambridge University...
...China , An Morrison , 26 Austria, 261 Autumn Crop Uprising, 351 , 358 Bannermen, 24 , 80 , 158 , 229 Barrier...83 , 85 , 88 , 90 , 92 , 93 , 95 , 96 , 97 , 108 Boxer, C. R., 143 Boxer movement, 64 , 253 -58, 259 -75, 276 , 277...
...organization parallel to the all-male Red Spears, the Flower Baskets were comparable to the Red Lantern Societies of the Boxer uprising. 101 It was common for women to play an important role in White Lotus-inspired sects, although this highly segregated...
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journal articles on: Boxer Uprising  - 50 results

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...capitalize on the Boxer Uprising. Unlike Ackerman...in gruesome scenes of Boxer barbarism, both Lubin...they out-boxed both Boxers and Biograph, and forced...understanding of the Boxer Uprising, which really had very...Bio-graph produced Boxer-related comedies...Captured the Chinese Boxers (1900), produced...
...ambitions are missing in the Boxer rebellion and the teutomanic...character of the anti-French uprising. Marx points out that in the...the Sepoys, the Mahdis, the Boxers as simple expressions of xenophobia...Mao Zedong characterized the Boxer rebellion as a "just war...The Origins of the Boxer Uprising. Berkeley: Univ. of California...
...6. Deep humiliation of the Boxer Uprising: allied forces from eight powers...son, Yuanbao, to be its Big Dream Boxer. But the training regime actually...Cohen, History in Three Keys: The Boxers as Event, Experience, and Myth...
...1864), and the outbreak of the Boxer Uprising (1900). This style of pedagogy not...the Taiping Movement, and the Boxer Uprising. I divide them into teams and ask them...as the Taiping Movement and the Boxer Uprising. By participating in the games as if...
...only one year after the Boxer Uprising (1900) as troops from...foreign activities of the "Boxers." The Society of the...Yihe Tuan) as the Boxers called themselves, were...were killed. In the Boxer Protocol signed in 1901...double the amount. The Boxer Uprising followed the...
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magazine articles on: Boxer Uprising  - 38 results

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...Chinas Christians and the Boxer Uprising of 1900 by R. G. Tiedemann...hundredth anniversary of the Boxer Uprising, this "midsummer...The majority of the Boxers victims were, in fact...Chinese victims of the Boxers.4 Although the worlds...event on the part of the Boxer fanatics took place July...
...movements (Victor Purcells The Boxer Uprising: A Background Study, 1963...Eshericks The Origins of the Boxer Uprising, 1987), or else...History in Three Keys: The Boxers as Event, Experience and Myth...historians to look again at the Boxer rising, and the Boxer war...
...Knocking out the Boxers: Mark Bryant Looks...Mark Bryant The Boxer Rebellion of 1899...ambassador. The uprising followed the three...ILLUSTRATIONS OMITTED The Boxer Rebellion, however...especially boxing. These Boxers, as they came to...The actions of the Boxers included the burning...in China if the Boxer rebellion was not...
...Shandong where the Boxer movement originated...violence in the uprising took place in the...witnessed by Liu. The Boxers opposition to the...today, not as the Boxer Uprising but as the Invasion...focus from the Boxers themselves to the...interpretations of the uprising. FOR FURTHER READING...Three Keys: The Boxers as Event, Experience...Origins of the Boxer Uprising (University...
...soil, 86 of them during the Boxer Uprising in 1900. The timing of this...of saints were killed by the Boxers exactly 100 years earlier...innocent people killed by "Boxer rebels." Pointing to another...24,1900, during the same Boxer Uprising. On October 24...
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...the radicals ruling Iran have been actively promoting uprisings in other countries in the Middle East with the hope of overthrowing...resulting in many conflicts. Another one points to an uprising in Yemen, and one refers to the death of the ruler of Saudi...Ali Khamenei, Irans supreme leader, called the Egyptian uprising an Islamic Awakening. Brig. Gen. Mohammad Reza Naghdi...
...parts of the globe may not have been apparent until years later. The fact that more people died during the Chinese Boxer Uprising and subsequent famine, than the whole of the Second World War, went relatively unnoticed until the scale of this...
...Tientsin was part of the Boxer rebellion of 1900. This...officially sanctioned peasant uprising aimed at driving all foreigners from China. Boxer was the nickname given...Christian missionaries, the Boxers began to increase their...On May 28, 1900, Boxers burned several railroad...subdued the uprising. The Boxer rebellion weakened the...
...It took a visit of the president to the boxer rsquo;s home to ldquo;quell a political uprising rdquo; with Duran and the president appearing...Manny to stop or encourage the political uprising. Very few Filipinos are familiar with APEC...
...Tientsin was part of the Boxer rebellion of 1900. This...officially sanctioned peasant uprising aimed at driving all foreigners from China. Boxer was the nickname given...Christian missionaries, the Boxers began to increase their...On May 28, 1900, Boxers burned several railroad...subdued the rebellion. The Boxer Rebellion weakened the...
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encyclopedia articles on: Boxer Uprising  - 16 results

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BOXER UPRISING 1898 1900, antiforeign...fists or, in English, the Boxers. The Boxers soon grew powerful, and...In June, 1900, the Boxers (some 140,000 strong...through from Tianjin. The Boxer Uprising thus ended. The...
...the reform movement in a coup. She supported the Boxer Uprising , however, in a vain attempt to dislodge the foreign...of the Dynasty Following foreign suppression of the Boxer Uprising, Tzu Hsi changed course and allowed some moderate...
...powers, and China was divided into separate zones of influence. Chinese resentment of foreigners grew, and the Boxer Uprising (1900), encouraged by Empress Tzu Hsi , was a last desperate effort to suppress foreign influence. Belated domestic...
...1ST EARL be te, 1871 1936, British admiral. He served with distinction in Egypt and Sudan (1896 98) and in the Boxer Uprising (1900) in China. Made rear admiral in 1910, he commanded successful naval actions early in World War I at Helgoland...
...French in 1860 made Tianjin a treaty port and conceded parts of it for foreign settlements and garrisons. In the Boxer Uprising (1900) there was a joint foreign occupation, and the Europeans razed the walls. With the abolition of the last...
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