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  • For centuries, China had remained largely aloof from the intrigues of world politics,

  • but things were beginning to change, and what started as a dispute over trading rights,

  • would bring about a full-scale war, which was to then bring about a huge influx of foreign influence

  • and herald the beginning of a "century of humiliation".

  • The Middle Kingdom would never be the same again,

  • and it all started with two highly addictive and lucrative goods: tea and opium.

  • I’m Indy Neidell, welcome toBattlefields”.

  • Regular trade between China and Europe had been ongoing since the arrival of the Portuguese in the 16th Century.

  • As European economic power expanded in the 17th and 18th centuries,

  • Chinese goods like silk and porcelain became highly fashionable in the cities and courts of the West,

  • and trade in these products was very lucrative.

  • In Britain, however, there was no Chinese product which created a greater demand than tea,

  • for which the British developed an insatiable appetite.

  • There were two problems with that, though.

  • First, European merchants could not directly access the Chinese market,

  • but were restricted to a small merchant's quarter outside the city of Canton.

  • They dealt through Chinese middlemen known as the Cohong, who charged high prices in order to cover heavy taxes.

  • Second, Chinese interest in European goods was limited, and payment was only accepted in silver.

  • To the British, who were on the gold standard and had to purchase silver

  • from other countries in order to trade with China, this created a huge trade deficit.

  • How then could the British trade for these goods? Well, there was one crop,

  • abundant in British-controlled India, which might solve the problem.

  • Opium, a narcotic derived from the resin of the opium poppy,

  • had been known in China since at least the 8th Century AD,

  • initially being used for medicinal purposes and as an aphrodisiac.

  • When the Portuguese first introduced tobacco from North America,

  • many Chinese had started smoking the two drugs together recreationally.

  • It became a popular social pastime and by the late 18th Century,

  • increasingly large amounts of opium, produced by the British East India Company,

  • were being shipped to China. The Chinese imperial government tried to ban the opium trade several times,

  • but the British were able to bypass these laws with the help of smugglers

  • and cooperative local authorities eager to exploit the demand.

  • British companies flooded the black market with thousands of tons of the drug during the 1830s receiving silver in return.

  • The number of Chinese opium addicts grew as large as 12 million,

  • obviously a cause for concern. In December 1838, the Daoguang Emperor

  • sent commissioner Lin Zexu to Canton to deal with the problem.

  • Lin declared the death penalty would be applied to anyone found importing or possessing opium.

  • He also confiscated over 1000 tons of opium (worth £2 million) following a blockade

  • of the merchant's quarter. He then had the opium destroyed in May 1839.

  • The British merchants demanded compensation for their seized goods,

  • which, Superintendent Charles Elliot assured them, would be provided by the British government.

  • But that government was unwilling to compensate the merchants for the seized opium,

  • believing that the responsibility should lie with the Chinese.

  • There was a fierce, prolonged public debate on the matter.

  • A young William Gladstone said, "...a war more unjust in its origin,

  • a war more calculated in its progress to cover this country with permanent disgrace, I do not know."

  • But profitable interests won out over moral outrage at the "infamous and atrocious traffic",

  • and parliament voted in April 1840 to send a fleet to China carrying Britain's demands:

  • Compensation for the confiscated opium, an end to the Cohong monopoly,

  • and the right to occupy an island off the coast to use as a base.

  • By June, the expeditionary force had arrived on the Chinese coast.

  • It blockaded the Pearl River before heading north to bring the demands to the Emperor.

  • On July 6th, the British captured the island of Zhoushan near the mouth of the Yangtze,

  • virtually annihilating Chinese defences in a nine-minute barrage after local officials refused to surrender.

  • They headed further north in August, blockading more ports.

  • In battle after battle, the dire state of the Chinese military had become clear:

  • Soldiers were equipped with bows, spears, and swords, and the occasional matchlock musket.

  • Military units, scattered across a vast empire, would take many months to march to where they were needed.

  • Chinese coastal defences were crumbling stone forts, and the small war junks

  • simply weren't equipped to fight the battleships and frigates of the Royal Navy.

  • Also, local authorities and military leaders were unwilling to bear news of defeats to Beijing,

  • and the Emperor instead received fabricated reports of heroic victories.

  • Seeing the whole business with Britain as a mere sideshow, many refused to acknowledge that there was a war on at all.

  • Indeed, when the British fleet first arrived, Daoguang was informed

  • that it was simply an unusually large flotilla of opium smugglers.

  • The British attacked two forts guarding the mouth of the Pearl River, Chuanbi and Tycocktow.

  • Fighting lasted less than an hour, with over 500 killed on the Chinese side and a mere 38 wounded among the British.

  • The battle of Chuanbi also marked the debut of the first steam-powered iron warship Nemesis,

  • whose devastating onslaught was described in a book from 1845:

  • "The very first rocket fired from the Nemesis

  • was seen to enter the large junk against which it was directed, near that of the admiral,

  • and almost the instant afterwards it blew up with a terrific explosion,

  • launching into eternity every soul on board, and pouring forth its blaze like the mighty rush of fire from a volcano."

  • Several more battles followed in February and March 1841,

  • with the British seizing more towns and forts on the Pearl River,

  • putting them in a position to bombard Canton itself by the end of May.

  • Local officials and merchants paid the British six million dollars to withdraw.

  • Following the withdrawal from Canton, the fleet headed north again,

  • occupying several cities between August and October 1841.

  • Campaigns the following year captured Chapu and Shanghai, then still a small town.

  • The final major battle of the war took place at Zhenjiang [Jen-jiahng],

  • where the British assault destroyed much of the city and killed many of the men defending it.

  • With the road to Nanjing open, and with it control of the entire Yangtze region,

  • the Chinese government became fully aware of how serious the situation was, and sued for peace.

  • On August 29, 1842, Britain and China signed the Treaty of Nanking.

  • Among other things, China agreed to pay 20 million silver dollars in indemnities,

  • abolish the Cohong monopoly, adhere to fixed customs duties, open five ports to foreign trade

  • (including Canton and Shanghai), and cede the island of Hong Kong to Britain.

  • This was the first of many "Unequal Treaties" that China was to sign over the following decades.

  • The 1850s saw Britain and France fight China in a second Opium War,

  • which culminated in the burning of the Emperor's Summer Palace in Beijing,

  • fully legalised the opium trade and opened yet more ports to foreign merchants.

  • The one-sided victories that the technologically superior British forces had achieved

  • drove home the need to modernise, and shook the public's faith in the ability of the Qing Dynasty

  • to defend China from a foreign invasion.

  • The huge influx of Westerners in the second half of the 19th Century

  • was to have a profound influence on the Chinese way of life.

  • All these factors would lead to the Boxer Rebellion and the overthrow of imperial rule in the 20th Century.

  • But that's all story for another time.

  • In any case, while it might initially have been seen as a relative sideshow at the time,

  • both in London and Beijing, it should be no surprise

  • that the first Opium War is now widely regarded as the beginning of modern Chinese history.

  • The Opium War, though, wasn’t the first time that century

  • that Britain crushed their enemy with their naval power.

  • You can find out all about Admiral Nelson’s Battle of Trafalgar up here.

  • A battle that would lay the groundwork to centuries of Great Britain’s naval superiority.

  • So what do you think?

  • Was the forceful opening of China an inevitable consequence of rising European Imperialism

  • and China's military weakness, or might things have gone differently

  • if the opium dispute had taken a different course?

  • Let us know in the comments.

  • Stay tuned for next week when we'll look at what happened in China during the second half of the 19th century.

  • Don't forget to subscribe to It's History for more historical action every week.

For centuries, China had remained largely aloof from the intrigues of world politics,

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