Today in History- August 14th
PEKING RELIEVED BY MULTINATIONAL FORCE:
August 14, 1900
During the Boxer Rebellion, an international force featuring British, Russian,
American, Japanese, French, and German troops relieves the Chinese capital of
Peking after fighting its way 80 miles from the port of Tientsin. The Chinese
nationalists besieging Peking's diplomatic quarter were crushed, and the Boxer
Rebellion effectively came to an end.By the end of the 19th century, the
Western
powers and Japan had forced China's ruling Ch'ing dynasty to accept wide
foreign
control over the country's economic affairs. In the Opium Wars, popular
rebellions, and the Sino-Japanese War, China had fought to resist the
foreigners, but it lacked a modernized military and millions died.In 1898, Tz'u
Hsi, the dowager empress, gained control of the Chinese government in a
conservative coup against the Emperor Kuang-hsu, her adoptive son and an
advocate of reforms. Tz'u Hsi had previously served as ruler of China in
various
regencies and was deeply anti-foreign in her ideology. In 1899, her court began
to secretly support the anti-foreign rebels known as the I Ho Ch'uan, or the
"Righteous and Harmonious Fists."The I Ho Ch'uan was a secret society
formed
with the original goal of expelling the foreigners and overthrowing the Ch'ing
dynasty. The group practiced a ritualistic form of martial arts that they
believed gave them supernatural powers and made them impervious to bullets.
After witnessing these fighting displays, Westerners named members of the
society "Boxers." Most Boxers came from northern China, where natural
calamities
and foreign aggression in the late 1890s had ruined the economy. The ranks of
the I Ho Ch'uan swelled with embittered peasants who directed their anger
against Christian converts and foreign missionaries, whom they saw as a threat
to their traditional ways and blamed for their misery.After the dowager empress
returned to power, the Boxers pushed for an alliance with the imperial court
against the foreigners. Tz'u Hsi gave her tacit support to their growing
violence against the Westerners and their institutions, and some officials
incorporated the Boxers into local militias. Open attacks on missionaries and
Chinese Christians began in late 1899, and by May 1900 bands of Boxers had
begun
gathering in the countryside around Peking. In spite of threats by the foreign
powers, the empress dowager began openly supporting the Boxers.In early June,
an
international relief force of 2,000 soldiers was dispatched by Western and
Japanese authorities from the port of Tientsin to Peking. The empress dowager
ordered Imperial forces to block the advance of the foreigners, and the relief
force was turned back. Meanwhile, the Peking-Tientsin railway line and other
railroads were destroyed by the Chinese. On June 13, the Boxers, now some
140,000 strong, moved into Peking and began burning churches and foreign
residences. On June 17, the foreign powers seized forts between Tientsin and
Peking, and the next day Tz'u Hsi called on all Chinese to attack foreigners.
On
June 20, the German ambassador Baron von Ketteler was killed and the Boxers
began besieging the foreign legations in the diplomatic quarter of the Chinese
capital.As the foreign powers organized a multinational force to crush the
rebellion, the siege of the Peking legations stretched into weeks, and the
diplomats, their families, and guards suffered through hunger and degrading
conditions as they fought desperately to keep the Boxers at bay. Eventually, an
expedition of 19,000 multinational troops pushed their way to Peking after
fighting two major battles against the Boxers. On August 14, the eight-nation
allied relief force captured Peking and liberated the legations. The foreign
troops looted the city and routed the Boxers, while the empress and her court
fled to the north. The victorious powers began work on a peace settlement.Due
to
mutual jealousies between the nations, it was agreed that China would not be
partitioned further, and in September 1901 the Peking Protocol was signed,
formally ending the Boxer Rebellion. By the terms of agreement, the foreign
nations received extremely favorable commercial treaties with China, foreign
troops were permanently stationed in Peking, and China was forced to pay $333
million as penalty for its rebellion. China was effectively a subject nation.
The Boxers had failed to expel the foreigners, but their rebellion set the
stage
for the successful Chinese revolutions of the 20th century.
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