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| | | | Ching Shan, 224, 251 - 303, 327, 413, 478 death of, 251 | | | Ching Yüan-shan, 219 291 | | | Ch'i Ying, Envoy, 12, 502 | | | Chou Dynasty, 315 | | | Chou Tsu-p'ei, 41 | | | Christianity, 105, 248, 260, 268, 313, 336, 392, 461, 505 | | | Christians, 282, 286, 292, 331, 415 | | | Chuang, Prince, 270, 273, 282, 286, 357, 365, 370 | | | Chu Hung-teng, 311 | | | Ch'ung Ch'i, 118, 350, 351 | | | Ch'ung Hou, 419, 501 - 2 | | | Chung Li, 257 | | | Ch'un, House of, 5, 158, 164, 446 | | | Ch'un, Prince (brother of Kuang Hsu), 5, 302, 383, 444, 446, 451, 458, 462 | | | Ch'un, Prince (the first), 5, 99, 121 - 2, 125, 130, 143, 158 - 65, 167, 446 adviser to Grand Council, 160 death of, 166 | | | Clan Imperial, vide Imperial | | | Classical essays, vide Examinations | | | Coast Defences, 100, 328 | | | "Cobbler's Wax" Li, vide Li Lien-ying | | | "Cold Palace," 32, 149 | | | Colleges, 194, 196, 205, 222, 429, 461, 493 | | | Concubines, Palace, 9, 107, 162, 209, 225, 231, 300, 408, 429 (also vide under "Pearl" and "Lustrous") | | | Conferences, Palace, 125 - 6, 297, 457 | | | Confucian system, 64, 136, 213, 226 - 7, 236, 245, 307, 328, 363, 488, 512 | | | Confucius, 83, 469, 484 - 5 quoted, 113, 260, 288, 302, 319, 420 | | | Conger, Mrs., 290, 488 | | | Conservative Party, 235, 194, 197, 201 - 10, 221, 229 | | | Conspiracy of Regents, vide Tsai Yuan | | | Constitutional Government, 106, 221, 425, 431, 438, 441, 450, 461, 468, 498 | | | Consular Service, British, 339 | | | Corea, 168, 170, 201, 390 | | | Council, Grand, vide Grand | | | Coup d'état, 169 et seq., 201 - 210, 213, 438, 451, 505, 511 | | | Court Ceremonies, 58, 75, 130, 153, 168, 178, 206, 208, 212, 218, 355, 412, 450, 462, 492 | | | Court in exile, 97, 344 | | | Court of Astronomers, 34, 117, 493 | | | Court physicians, 217 - 8, 448, 457 | | | Court's return to Peking, 353, 357, 394, 399, 404 - 11, 486 | | | Criminal Code, 431 | | | Czar's Coronation, 182 | | | DALAI LAMA, 448, 452, 454 - 5 | | | Decrees:-- | | 1860: 24, 26, 27, 28, 29 | | | 1861: 34, 42, 44, 45, 46, 54, 60 | | | 1864: 67, 86 | | | 1865: 60, 62 | | | 1866: 89 | | | 1869: 92, 93 | | | 1872: (T'ung Chih's majority) 117 | | | 1873: (Foreign Ministers' audiences) 115 | | | 1874: ( Tung Chih's illness) 120 | | | 1884: (Dismissal of Prince Kung) 154 | | | 1889: (Position of Emperor's father) 164 | | | 1894: ( Tzŭ Hai's 60th birthday) 168 (Re Censor An Wei-chun) 175 | | | 1898: (Death of Prince Kung) 183 | | (Chinese versus Manchus) 231 | | | (Coup d'état) 207, 221 | | | ( K'ang Yu-wei) 204, 226 | | | (Reform Edicts) 186 - 7, 196 - 7, 199 | | | (Re lawsuits) 240 | | | (The Boxers charter) 241, 243 | | | ( Tzŭ Hsi's policy) 237 | | | ( Weng T'ung-ho) 188 | | | ( Yüan Shih-k'ai) 203 | | | | 1900: (Heir Apparent) 303 | | (Boxers Punished) 364, 367 | | | Disowning Boxers) 331 | | | (Expiatory) 349 | | | (Flight to Hsi-an) 354 | | | (Return to Peking) 357 | | | (Yangtsze Viceroys) 330 | | | | 1901: (Conversion to Reform) 419 - 424, 426 | | (Cancels Boxer Edicts) 375 | | | (Penitential) 376 | | | | 1902: (Re Jung Lu) 414 (Reforms) 416 | | | 1903: (Death of Jung Lu) 437 | | | 1905: (Constitutional Government) 431 - 2 | | | 1908: (Death of Kuang Hsü) 460 | | (Imperial Succession) 462 | | | (Regency) 465 | | | ( Tzŭ Hsi's Valedictory) 467 - 9 | | | (Valedictory) 461 | | | -518- | | |
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Publication Information: Book Title: China under the Empress Dowager: Being the History of the Life and Times of Tzu Hsi. Contributors: J. O. P. Bland - compiler, E. Backhouse - compiler. Publisher: J. B. Lippincott. Place of Publication: Philadelphia. Publication Year: 1910. Page Number: 518.
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