OPIUM WARS

1839–42 and 1856–60, two wars between China and Western countries. The first was between Great Britain and China. Early in the 19th cent., British merchants began smuggling opium into China in order to balance their purchases of tea for export to Britain. In 1839, China enforced its prohibitions on the importation of opium by destroying at Guangzhou (Canton) a large quantity of opium confiscated from British merchants. Great Britain, which had been looking to end China's restrictions on foreign trade, responded by sending gunboats to attack several Chinese coastal cities. China, unable to withstand modern arms, was defeated and forced to sign the Treaty of Nanjing (1842) and the British Supplementary Treaty of the Bogue (1843). These provided that the ports of Guangzhou, Jinmen, Fuzhou, Ningbo, and Shanghai should be open to British trade and residence; in addition Hong Kong was ceded to the British. Within a few years other Western powers signed similar treaties with China and received commercial and residential privileges, and the Western domination of China's treaty ports began. In 1856 a second war broke out following an allegedly illegal Chinese search of a British-registered ship, the Arrow, in Guangzhou. British and French troops took Guangzhou and Tianjin and compelled the Chinese to accept the treaties of Tianjin (1858), to which France, Russia, and the United States were also party. China agreed to open 11 more ports, permit foreign legations in Beijing, sanction Christian missionary activity, and legalize the import of opium. China's subsequent attempt to block the entry of diplomats into Beijing as well as Britain's determination to enforce the new treaty terms led to a renewal of the war in 1859. This time the British and French occupied Beijing and burned the imperial summer palace (Yuan ming yuan). The Beijing conventions of 1860, by which China was forced to reaffirm the terms of the Treaty of Tianjin and make additional concessions, concluded the hostilities.

See A. Waley, The Opium War through Chinese Eyes (1958, repr. 1968); H.-P. Chang, Commissioner Lin and the Opium War (1964); P. W. Fay, The Opium War, 1840–1842 (1975).

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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: Opium Wars  - 7278 results

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...originated at the time of the Opium Wars, when Western critics...between the two world wars and the displacement...complex involvement with opium during this period was...and not only among the wars critics, that the opium trade was the casus...
...ratification of the Treaty of Tientsin, the opium wars had ended. 29 No less essential...worries about association with smuggled opium would finally be over; they could...quash the Taiping Rebellion. 30 At wars end, however, all was not well within...
...linking the Singapore Chinese, opium, and British imperialism is...outbreaks of "secret society" wars as indicative of "inherent...3. Rush, Opium to Java 1990 . farming kongsis...The Causes of Secret Society Wars With the period framework...
...OFFICE ON DRUGS AND CRIME Vienna THE OPIUM ECONOMY IN AFGHANISTAN An International...Thailand, Pakistan and Turkey (on the opium front), Bolivia and Peru (on the cocaine...against cultivation, trade and abuse of opium have been crucial steps towards solving...
...were negotiated by Lord Elgin. His Letters and Journals show Lord Elgins strong disapproval of the opium traffic, and his view that the wars between China and Great Britain had been unjustifiable upon the part of Great Britain. In one place...
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journal articles on: Opium Wars  - 267 results

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...interests as the primary cause of the opium wars. The economic-causation model finds...interpretations for both the first and second opium wars, the historical record provides ample...interpretations of the cause of the opium wars, see the discussion in Tan Chung...
...the cultural attitude toward opium use, as we have seen, was generally favorable. But from the mid century on, as the Opium Wars between England and China developed and statistics on opium addiction, adulteration, suicides, and poisoning (especially...
...known as the Ghee Hin Hui). For much of the nineteenth century, secret society conflicts in Singapore were actually wars between opium farmers. Ultimately, when a single, consolidated farm was created, the Ngee Heng ceased to play a major role in Singapore...
...research that will richly profit China specialists, students of the drug wars, and undergraduate social science majors. NOTE (1.) Kathleen L. Lodwick, Crusaders against Opium: Protestant Missionaries in China, 1874-1917 (Lexington: University of...
...internationally. A significant national policy measure was the creation of the short-lived Opium Monopoly (1830- 38); important international ones included wars (the Crimean war) and economic ups and downs. A separate section deals with these economic...
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magazine articles on: Opium Wars  - 172 results

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Britains Opium Wars. by John Newsinger It is...precipitated the Second (1856-58) and Third Opium Wars (1860) that were to cost the lives of...Hong Kong, the last of the spoils of the Opium Wars. NOTES 1. Denis Judd, Empire (London...
...Leslie Marchant sees the Opium Wars as a philosophical clash...THE ANGLO-CHINESE Opium Wars of 1839-42 and 1856-60...laid the foundation for the wars. Although the Chinese...the British. The laws on opium in China stemmed from empirical...
...also in Colombia, where Washingtons twin wars on drugs and terror continue to wreak havoc...in the New York Times. The figures for opium production in Afghanistan over the five-year...cultivation," he observed. "As a result, Afghan opium is fuelling insurgency in western Asia...
...and prompt rebellion. Wheat and grapes dominated Afghanistans agricultural economy before the wars. But now many farmers, trapped by debts to opium wholesalers, have no choice but to grow poppies. With Afghanistans presidential elections out...
...Australia, for Example. As we wrestle with wars, recession, epidemics, and climatology...fields, source of much of the worlds legal opium (used in pharmaceuticals). Another is wallabies...regrettable results. "Stoned wallabies create opium crop circles," laments an antipodean news...
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newspaper articles on: Opium Wars  - 100 results

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What the Opium Wars Wrought. Byline: Carol Herman, THE...moving forcefully to end the inflow of opium into China. It is the unanimous opinion...offer China something more useful than opium? Would that it were so, said Burnham. But...
...create a vicious cycle of addiction. There are at least 200,000 opium and heroin addicts in Afghanistan u 50,000 more than in the...a window into the human toll of AfghanistanAEs back-to-back wars and desperate poverty. Unlike in the West, the close-knit nature...
...Kabul. Mr. Wankel is a 34-year veteran of international drug wars and is seen by the administration as the right man to try to...Republicans and Democrats on Capitol Hill say the effort to eradicate opium-producing poppies in Afghanistan has been a failure. Privately...
CRUEL BRITANNIA; Drugs. Both World Wars. Vietnam. Global Warming. in a Cynical...here is Grasse on the Anglo-Chinese Opium War of 1840, when Britain sent a task...did to China during the 19th-century opium wars. (Never mind that opium was not, in...
...Afghanistan in an attempt to wipe out the opium trade funding the militants. About 4,000...officials as the largest and fastestmoving of the wars new phase. The goal is to clear insurgents...against the Taliban. They aim to wipe out the opium trade
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encyclopedia articles on: Opium Wars  - 11 results

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OPIUM WARS 1839 42 and 1856 60, two wars between China and Western countries...British merchants began smuggling opium into China in order to balance their...prohibitions on the importation of opium by destroying at Guangzhou (Canton...
...opium into China in order to balance their purchases of tea for export to Britain, an act that set the stage for the Opium Wars . Chinese emigrants to the United States, who were employed to build the transcontinental railroad, brought the opium...
...trade until the opening of Guangzhou in 1834. Great Britain, determined to increase commerce, provoked the first of the Opium Wars with China. The Treaty of Nanjing (1842), which restored peace, provided for five treaty ports Xiamen, Guangzhou, Fuzhou...
...official trade relations with the Ching government. All these attempts failed. But Britains victory in the first of the Opium Wars (1839 42) forced China to sign the Treaty of Nanjing (1842), the first of the unequal treaties that China signed with...
...to complete the task. The power of the pirates along the Straits of Malacca and the China seas was broken after the Opium Wars in the late 19th cent. During the Spanish Civil War the major powers agreed (1937) at the Nyon Conference on an antipiracy...
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