Chapter 19: Empires in Collision: Europe,
the Middle East, and
East Asia, 1800–1914 |
|
I. |
Reversal of
Fortune:
China
’s
Century of Crisis |
|
A. |
The Crisis Within |
|
|
1. |
Dramatic population growth and pressures on the land |
|
|
2. |
Central state bureaucracy fails to grow and weakens |
|
|
3. |
Taiping Rebellion (1850–1864) |
|
|
4. |
Conservative reaction |
|
B. |
Western Pressures |
|
|
1. |
Commissioner Lin Zexu and
Western narco-trafficking |
|
|
2. |
First Opium War and Treaty of
Nanking
(1842) |
|
|
3. |
Second Opium War and further humiliations |
|
|
4. |
“Informal empire” status for the Middle Kingdom |
|
C. |
The Failure of
Conservative Modernization |
|
|
1. |
Self-strengthening |
|
|
2. |
Landowners fear modernity |
|
|
3. |
Industry in the hands of Europeans |
|
|
4. |
Boxer Rebellion (1898–1901) |
|
|
5. |
Popular nationalist organizations |
|
|
6. |
Hundred Days of Reform, 1898 |
|
|
7. |
Imperial collapse, 1911 |
|
II. |
The
Ottoman Empire and the West in the Nineteenth Century |
|
A. |
“The Sick Man of
Europe” |
|
|
1. |
“The Strong Sword of Islam” in 1750 |
|
|
2. |
Loss of land to
Russia,
France,
Britain, and
Austria |
|
|
3. |
Unable to defend Muslims elsewhere |
|
|
4. |
Changing global economic order |
|
B. |
Reform and its
Opponents |
|
|
1. |
Reaction to Western military advisors |
|
|
2. |
Tanzimat era |
|
|
3. |
Young Ottomans: Islamic modernism |
|
|
4. |
Young Turks, 1908: Secular modernism |
|
C. |
Outcomes:
Comparing
China and the
Ottoman
Empire |
|
|
1. |
“Semi-colonies” in the European “informal empire” |
|
|
2. |
Defensive modernization but no industrial take-off |
|
|
3. |
Growth of nationalism |
|
|
4. |
Revolutionary chaos in
China,
but stability in
Turkey |
|
|
5. |
State rejections of tradition but popular survival |
|
III. |
The Japanese
Difference: The Rise of a New East Asian Power |
|
A. |
The Tokugawa
Background |
|
|
1. |
Shogun, daimyo, samurai, and emperor |
|
|
2. |
250 years of peace |
|
|
3. |
Urban, commercial, and literate |
|
|
4. |
Samurai status versus merchant wealth |
|
|
5. |
Increasing social instability |
|
B. |
American
Intrusion and Meiji Restoration |
|
|
1. |
Limited contact with West since early seventeenth century |
|
|
2. |
Commodore Perry, 1853 |
|
|
3. |
Meiji Restoration, 1868 |
|
C. |
Modernization
Japanese Style |
|
|
1. |
Defensive but revolutionary reforms |
|
|
2. |
Systematic dismantling of the old social order |
|
|
3. |
Fukuzawa Yukichi |
|
|
4. |
Selective borrowing and mixing from the West |
|
|
5. |
New possibilities for women |
|
|
6. |
State-guided industrialization and zaibatsu |
|
|
7. |
Difficult lives for peasants and workers |
|
D. |
Japan
and the World |
|
|
1. |
Anglo-Japanese Treaty, 1902 |
|
|
2. |
War with
China
(1894–1895) and
Russia (1904–1905) |
|
|
3. |
Empire building in
Taiwan,
Korea, and
Manchuria |
|
|
4. |
Admiration from the colonial world |