« ARCHIVE Home | Email msg. | Reply to msg. | Post new | Board info. Previous | Home | Next

WW4=How England Conquered China in the 1800s...The Opium Wars

By: Fiz in ARCHIVE | Recommend this post (0)
Mon, 05 Feb 24 5:17 AM | 37 view(s)
Boardmark this board | Article Archive
Msg. 00119 of 00162
Jump:
Jump to board:
Jump to msg. #

There is a certain dark humor at the thought of a China conquered by English speakers with Opium, choosing to conquer the English speakers, in turn, by manufacturing and pushing fentanyl over the southern border....

I note that Trump said he pretty much killed that operation by enforcing the border and speaking bluntly to Pres. Xi Jinping. I'm sure it is just coincidence that it resumed, in force, under Biden.

http://www.britannica.com/topic/Western-colonialism/The-Opium-Wars

The Opium Wars

The first phase of the forceful penetration of China by western Europe came in the two Opium Wars. Great Britain had been buying increasing quantities of tea from China, but it had few products that China was interested in buying by way of exchange. A resulting steady drain of British silver to pay for the tea was eventually stopped by Great Britain’s ascendancy in India. With British merchants in control of India’s foreign trade and with the financing of this trade centred in London, a three-way exchange developed: the tea Britain bought in China was paid for by India’s exports of opium and cotton to China. And because of a rapidly increasing demand for tea in England, British merchants actively fostered the profitable exports of opium and cotton from India.

An increasing Chinese addiction to opium fed a boom in imports of the drug and led to an unfavourable trade balance paid for by a steady loss of China’s silver reserves. In light of the economic effect of the opium trade plus the physical and mental deterioration of opium users, Chinese authorities banned the opium trade. At first this posed few obstacles to British merchants, who resorted to smuggling. But enforcement of the ban became stringent toward the end of the 1830s; stores of opium were confiscated, and warehouses were closed down. British merchants had an additional and longstanding grievance because the Chinese limited all trade by foreigners to the port of Canton.

In June 1840 the British fleet arrived at the mouth of the Canton River to begin the Opium War. The Chinese capitulated in 1842 after the fleet reached the Yangtze, Shanghai fell, and Nanking was under British guns. The resulting Treaty of Nanking—the first in a series of commercial treaties China was forced to sign over the years—provided for: (1) cession of Hong Kong to the British crown; (2) the opening of five treaty ports, where the British would have residence and trade rights; (3) the right of British nationals in China who were accused of criminal acts to be tried in British courts; and (4) the limitation of duties on imports and exports to a modest rate. Other countries soon took advantage of this forcible opening of China; in a few years similar treaties were signed by China with the United States, France, and Russia.

The Chinese, however, tried to retain some independence by preventing foreigners from entering the interior of China.(continued)




» You can also:
« ARCHIVE Home | Email msg. | Reply to msg. | Post new | Board info. Previous | Home | Next