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About
the End of Qing Dynasty (1644-1911)
The Dynasties
of China, A History
Bamber Gascoigne, Carroll & Graf Publishers
To view this book at Amazon.com

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Emperor Qianlong (1736-1795),
the fourth emperor in the Qing Dynasty who took China to a new
height. In the emperor's eighty-third year, Lord Macartney, the ambassador of George III of England went to
China to ask to trade with China. The mission failed.
Both countries missed a historic
opportunity to get to know each other. |
(Editor's note: In the paragraphs below, the author speaks of the end of the Qing
Dynasty.)
During the previous few years many of the revolutionary groups
and secret societies within China had become allied with the
republican movement of Sun Yat-sen, whose hope was to start
separate provincial revolutions simultaneously in many different
parts of China. Events followed his blueprint almost exactly. An
uprising in Sichuan (over the government’s railway policy),
followed by a rebellion of the soldiers of Wuchang in Hupei, led
to revolutionaries seizing important centers all over the
country in October 1911. In rapid succession province after
province declared themselves independent of the Manchu court,
and on 12 February 1912 it was announced from the palace that
the child-emperor was abdicating. The edict included the
sentence ‘The people’s wishes are plain’, but even now authority
was sought, and duly found, in the classics; ‘The form of
government in China shall be a constitutional Republic, to
comfort the longing of all within the empire and to act in
harmony with the ancient sages, who regarded the throne as a
public heritage.’
Thus ended the world’s most remarkable span of imperial history.
It was 2133 years since Shi Huangdi had first unified China. His
hope of countless emperors from his own line had been soon
frustrated, but the generations of rulers following him on that
same imperial throne had been as near to countless as history is
likely to come. One loses a normal sense of time in writing or
reading of China. Comparison with two of the world’s other great
empires can serve perhaps to put her dynasties into some sort of
perspective. The Roman Empire was founded during the Han dynasty
and came to an end in the gap between the Han and the Tang. The
British Empire began early in the Qing dynasty and barely
survived it.
During those two millennia the Chinese had developed a
consistent and slowly unfolding culture, faithful throughout to
its own particular virtues and vices. From the disciples of
Confucius in 500 BC to those who were still being examined on
their understanding of his ideas in AD 1900, from the autocracy
of Shi Huangdi to that of Cixi, from the pottery of the early
tombs to the porcelain turned out by the imperial kilns at
Jingdezhen, from the characters of the oracle-bones to those
announcing the last emperor’s abdication - in all these
respects, and many more like them, the beginning and the end of
Chinese imperial history show closer links over thousands of
years than one is accustomed to find elsewhere over hundreds.
There has been no story like it in human experience.
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