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First Opium War: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{Infobox military conflict|conflict=First Opium War|place=China|image=鸦片战争.jpeg|date=1840.6|result=British won|combatant1=Qing Empire|combatant2=United Kingdom}}The First Opium War (Chinese:第一次鸦片战争: Pinyin:dìyīcì yāpiàn zhànzhēng) is the British imperialist war of aggression against China that began in June 1840. == Timeline == =...")
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{{Infobox military conflict|conflict=First Opium War|place=China|image=鸦片战争.jpeg|date=1840.6|result=British won|combatant1=[[Qing Empire]]|combatant2=[[United Kingdom]]}}The First Opium War (Chinese:第一次鸦片战争: Pinyin:dìyīcì yāpiàn zhànzhēng) is the [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland|British]] [[Imperialism|imperialist]] war of aggression against [[Qing dynasty (1636–1912)|China]] that began in June 1840.
{{Infobox military conflict|conflict=First Opium War|place=China|image=鸦片战争.jpeg|date=1840.6|result=British won|combatant1=[[Qing Empire]]|combatant2=[[United Kingdom]]}}The First Opium War (Chinese:第一次鸦片战争: Pinyin: dìyīcì yāpiàn zhànzhēng) is the [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland|British]] [[Imperialism|imperialist]] war of aggression against [[Qing dynasty (1636–1912)|China]] that began in June 1840.


== Timeline ==
== Timeline ==
Line 12: Line 12:


== Results ==
== Results ==
On August 29, 1842, the Treaty of Nanjing was signed between China and Britain.
On August 29, 1842, the Treaty of Nanjing was signed between China and Britain. It:


(1) Cession of [[Hong Kong Special Administrative Region|Hong Kong]] Island.
# Ceded [[Hong Kong Special Administrative Region|Hong Kong]] island.
# Compensated the British for the price of opium, commercial debts, and military expenses totaling twenty-one million silver dollars.
# Opened five ports of commerce: [[Guangzhou]], [[Fuzhou]], [[Xiamen]], [[Ningbo]] and [[Shanghai]]; allowed British residents to live there and assigned consuls.
# Agreed that British merchants should pay [[Tariff|import and export taxes and rates]] and that the Chinese customs had no right to autonomy.
# Abolished of the thirteen hongs in [[Guangdong|Canton]], allowing British merchants to trade freely in China.


(2) compensated the British for the price of opium, commercial debts, and military expenses totaling twenty-one million silver dollars.
[[Category:Pages needing references]]
 
[[Category:History of China]]
(3) Opened five ports of commerce, [[Guangzhou]], [[Fuzhou]], [[Xiamen]], [[Ningbo]] and [[Shanghai]], allowing British residents to live there and assigning consuls.
 
(4) agreement on tariffs, the British merchants should pay import and export taxes and rates, the Chinese customs has no right to autonomy.
 
(5) Abolition of The thirteen-hongs in [[Guangdong|Canton]], allowing British merchants to trade freely in China, etc.

Revision as of 18:14, 21 July 2023

First Opium War
Date1840.6
Location
China
Result British won
Belligerents
Qing Empire United Kingdom

The First Opium War (Chinese:第一次鸦片战争: Pinyin: dìyīcì yāpiàn zhànzhēng) is the British imperialist war of aggression against China that began in June 1840.

Timeline

Background

In the nineteenth century, China maintained a trade surplus with Britain, which greatly harmed the interests of British merchants. Britain began to smuggle opium into China for profit. The smuggling of opium cost China a lot of silver and the consumption of opium by a large number of people greatly affected the health of the Chinese people.

In March 1839, Lin Zexu arrived in Guangzhou to destroy opium.

Outbreak

In June 1840, 40 British warships with 4,000 soldiers arrived at the Chinese coast and blockaded Chinese ports.

Results

On August 29, 1842, the Treaty of Nanjing was signed between China and Britain. It:

  1. Ceded Hong Kong island.
  2. Compensated the British for the price of opium, commercial debts, and military expenses totaling twenty-one million silver dollars.
  3. Opened five ports of commerce: Guangzhou, Fuzhou, Xiamen, Ningbo and Shanghai; allowed British residents to live there and assigned consuls.
  4. Agreed that British merchants should pay import and export taxes and rates and that the Chinese customs had no right to autonomy.
  5. Abolished of the thirteen hongs in Canton, allowing British merchants to trade freely in China.