The Opium War, also called the Anglo-Chinese War, was
the most humiliating defeat China ever suffered. In European history,
it is perhaps the most sordid, base, and vicious event in European
history, possibly, just possibly, overshadowed by the excesses of the
Third Reich in the twentieth century.
By the 1830's, the English had become the
major drug-trafficking criminal organization in the world; very few
drug cartels of the twentieth century can even touch the England of the
early nineteenth century in sheer size of criminality. Growing opium in
India, the East India Company shipped tons
of opium into Canton which it traded for Chinese manufactured goods and
for tea. This trade had produced, quite literally, a country filled
with drug addicts, as opium parlors proliferated all throughout China
in the early part of the nineteenth century. This trafficing, it should
be stressed, was a criminal activity after 1836, but the British
traders generously bribed Canton officials in order to keep the opium
traffic flowing. The effects on Chinese society were devestating. In
fact, there are few periods in Chinese history that approach the early
nineteenth century in terms of pure human misery and tragedy. In an
effort to stem the tragedy, the imperial government made opium illegal
in 1836 and began to aggressively close down the opium dens.
Lin Tse-hsü
The key player in the prelude to
war was a brilliant and highly moral official named Lin Tse-hsü. Deeply
concerned about the opium menace, he maneuverd himself into being
appointed Imperial Commissioner at Canton. His express purpose was to
cut off the opium trade at its source by rooting out corrupt officials
and cracking down on British trade in the drug.
He took over in March of 1839 and within two
months, absolutely invulnerable to bribery and corruption, he had taken
action against Chinese merchants and Western traders and shut down all
the traffic in opium. He destroyed all the existing stores of opium
and, victorious in his war against opium, he composed a letter to Queen
Victoria of England requesting that the British cease all opium trade.
His letter included the argument that, since Britain had made opium
trade and consumption illegal in England because of its harmful
effects, it should not export that harm to other countries. Trade,
according to Lin, should only be in beneficial objects.
To be fair to England, if the only issue on
the table were opium, the English probably (just probably) would have
acceded to Lin's request. The British, however, had been nursing
several grievances against China, and Lin's take-no-prisoners
enforcement of Chinese laws combined to outrage the British against his
decapitation of the opium trade. The most serious bone of contention
involved treaty relations; because the British refused to submit to the
emperor, there were no formal treaty relations between the two
countries. The most serious problem precipitated by this lack of treaty
relations involved the relationship between foreigners and Chinese law.
The British, on principle, refused to hand over British citizens to a
Chinese legal system that they felt was vicious and barbaric. The
Chinese, equally principled, demanded that all foreigners who were
accused of committing crimes on Chinese soil were to be dealt with
solely by Chinese officials. In many ways, this was the real issue of
the Opium War. In addition to enforcing the opium laws, Lin
aggressively pursued foreign nationals accused of crimes.
The English, despite Lin's eloquent letter,
refused to back down from the opium trade. In response, Lin threatened
to cut off all trade with England and expel all English from China.
Thus began the Opium War.
The War
War broke out when Chinese junks
attempted to turn back English merchant vessels in November of 1839;
although this was a low-level conflict, it inspired the English to send
warships in June of 1840. The Chinese, with old-style weapons and
artillery, were no match for the British gunships, which ranged up and
down the coast shooting at forts and fighting on land. The Chinese were
equally unprepared for the technological superiority of the British
land armies, and suffered continual defeats. Finally, in 1842, the
Chinese were forced to agree to an ignomious peace under the Treaty of
Nanking.
The treaty imposed on the Chinese was
weighted entirely to the British side. Its first and fundamental demand
was for British "extraterritoriality"; all British citizens would be
subjected to British, not Chinese, law if they committed any crime on
Chinese soil. The British would no longer have to pay tribute to the
imperial administration in order to trade with China, and they gained
five open ports for British trade: Canton, Shanghai, Foochow, Ningpo,
and Amoy. No restrictions were placed on British trade, and, as a
consequence, opium trade more than doubled in the three decades
following the Treaty of Nanking. The treaty also established England as
the "most favored nation" trading with China; this clause granted to
Britain any trading rights granted to other countries. Two years later,
China, against its will, signed similar treaties with France and the
United States.
Lin Tse-hsü was officially disgraced for his
actions in Canton and was sent to a remote appointment in Turkestan. Of
all the imperial officials, however, Lin was the first to realize the
momentuous lesson of the Opium War. In a series of letters he began to
agitate the imperial government to adopt Western technology, arms, and
methods of warfare. He was first to see that the war was about
technological superiority; his influence, however, had dwindled to
nothing, so his admonitions fell on deaf ears.
It wasn't until a second conflict with
England that Chinese officials began to take seriously the adoption of
Western technologies. Even with the Treaty of Nanking, trade in Canton
and other ports remained fairly restricted; the British were incensed
by what they felt was clear treaty violations. The Chinese, for their
part, were angered at the wholescale export of Chinese nationals to
America and the Caribbean to work at what was no better than slave
labor. These conflicts came to a head in 1856 in a series of skirmishes
that ended in 1860. A second set of treaties further humiliated and
weakened the imperial government. The most ignominious of the
provisions in these treaties was the complete legalization of opium and
the humiliating provision that allowed for the free and unrestricted
propagation of Christianity in all regions of China.
The Illustrated Gazatteer of Maritime Countries
China's defeat at the hands of England led to the publication of the Illustrated Gazatteer of Maritime Countries by Wei Yüan (1794-1856). The Gazatteer marks the first landmark event in the modernization of China. Wei Yüan, a distinguished but minor official, argued in the Gazatteer
that the Europeans had developed technologies and methods of warfare in
their ceaseless and barbaric quest for power, profit, and material
wealth. Civilization, represented by China, was in danger of falling to
the technological superiority of the Western powers. Because China is a
peaceful and civilized nation, it can overcome the West only if it
learns and matches the technology and techniques of the West. The
purpose of the Gazatteer was to disseminate knowledge about
the Europeans, their technologies, their methods of warfare, and their
selfish anarchy to learned officials. It is a landmark event in Chinese
history, for it was the first systematic attempt to educate the Chinese
in Western technologies and culture. This drive for modernization,
begun by Lin Tse-hsü and perpetuated by Wei Yüan would gain momentum
and emerge as the basis for the "Self-Strengthening" from 1874 to 1895.
©1996, Richard Hooker
For information contact: Richard Hines
Updated 7-14-1999