The Fall of Beijing in 1644 was followed by years of costly warfare, as the newly victorious Manchu fought to extend their rule over all of China. The siege of the city of Yangzhou, in the Yangtze River Delta, and subsequent massacre of its residents in May 1645 was among the bloodiest episodes in the large-scale conflicts that preceded the suzerainty of the Qingdynasty.
When the Manchu declared the Qing dynasty rulers in Beijing, officials loyal to the Ming set up an alternative administration in China’s old capital, Nanjing. A member of the Ming family, the prince of Fu, was named Emperor Hongguang. In response, declaring that there could not be “two suns in the firmament,” the Manchu sent a vast army under Prince Dodo—a son of the original Manchu leader Nurhaci—south from Beijing, following the Grand Canal toward Nanjing. In their path stood the prosperous commercial city of Yangzhou, one of the most celebrated cities in the China of its day, and loyalist Ming general Shi Kefa persuaded his soldiers to defend it.
Prince Dodo had brought with him a train of siege guns, but Shi also lined the city walls with cannon. The Manchu made furious assaults on the walls, suffering heavy casualties. It is said that after a week the bodies were piled so high outside the walls that Manchu soldiers were able to climb on top of the dead and from there onto the battlements. Once the Manchu had entered the city, resistance soon ceased. In a terrible act of vengeance for the price his army had to pay in lives to capture Yangzhou, Prince Dodo unleashed his men upon the city’s population for ten days. According to traditional accounts, 800,000 people were reportedly killed in the terrible massacre that followed, although this figure is probably quite exaggerated. Leaving the city, the Manchu soldiers set it afire, though heavy rains extinguished most of the blazes before much damage was done, and Yangzhou recovered quickly.
Shi Kefa was executed after refusing to join the Manchu; Chinese annals record that Dodo personally beheaded his foe. Intimidated by the example of the massacre at Yangzhou, Nanjing surrendered almost without a fight. Emperor Hongguang fled, but was captured and executed in 1646. Many of the young women of Yangzhou were sent into slavery in Manchuria and Mongolia, so numerous that they formed a recognizable ethnic minority.
The Qing (or Ch’ing) dynasty, also called the Manchu (or Manzu) dynasty, was the last of the imperial dynasties of China, spanning from 1644 to 1911/12.
Where was the Qing dynasty located?
The Qing dynasty was primarily located in what is now China and Mongolia, along with parts of Russia.
When was the Qing dynasty established?
The Qing dynasty was established in 1636 by the Manchus to designate their regime in Manchuria, in what is now northeastern China. It became the imperial dynasty of all of China in 1644 after the reigning Ming dynasty called upon the Manchus for military assistance. The Manchus used that opening to declare their own imperial rule.
What did the Qing dynasty accomplish?
Under the Qing dynasty the territory of the Chinese empire expanded greatly, and the population grew from some 150 million to 450 million. Many of the non-Chinese minorities within the empire were Sinicized, and an integrated national economy was established. The dynasty’s cultural accomplishments included work with jade carving, painting, and porcelain; philological developments; and the development of jingxi (Peking opera).
Qing dynasty, the last of the imperial dynasties of China, spanning the years 1644 to 1911/12. Under the Qing the territory of the empire grew to treble its size under the preceding Ming dynasty (1368–1644), the population grew from some 150 million to 450 million, many of the non-Chinese minorities within the empire were Sinicized, and an integrated national economy was established.
The Qing dynasty was first established in 1636 by the Manchus to designate their regime in Manchuria (now the Northeast region of China). In 1644 the Chinese capital at Beijing was captured by the rebel leader Li Zicheng, and desperate Ming dynasty officials called on the Manchus for aid. The Manchus took advantage of the opportunity to seize the capital and establish their own dynasty in China. By adopting the Ming form of government and continuing to employ Ming officials, the Manchus pacified the Chinese population.
To guarantee Manchu control over the administration, however, the Qing made certain that half the higher-level officials were Manchus. Chinese military leaders who surrendered were given ranks of nobility, and troops were organized into the Lüying, or Army of the Green Standard, which was garrisoned throughout the country to guard against local rebellions. The regular Manchu Banner System troops (Qibing, or Baqi) were kept at the capital and in a few selected strategic spots throughout the country.
Under Kangxi (reigned 1661–1722), the second Qing emperor, the Manchus forced the Russians to abandon their fort at Albazin, located along the Manchurian border on the Amur River. In 1689 a treaty was concluded with Russia at Nerchinsk demarcating the northern extent of the Manchurian boundary at the Argun River. Over the next 40 years the Dzungar Mongols were defeated, and the empire was extended to include Outer Mongolia, Tibet, Dzungaria, Turkistan, and Nepal. Under the two succeeding emperors, Yongzheng (reigned 1722–35) and Qianlong (reigned 1735–96), commerce continued to thrive, handicraft industries prospered, and Roman Catholic missionaries were tolerated and employed as astronomers and artists. In addition, painting, printmaking, and porcelain manufacture flourished, and scientific methods of philology were developed.
CixiPortrait of Cixi, empress dowager of China; oil on canvas by Herbert Vos, 1905–06; in the collection of the Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Subsequent rulers, however, were unable to meet the problems caused by increased population pressure and concentration of land ownership. The Manchu armies deteriorated, and popular unrest, aggravated by severe floods and famine, were factors contributing to the Taiping (1850–64) and Nian (1853–68) rebellions in the south and north, respectively. Efforts at modernization and Westernization met opposition from conservative officials especially through the efforts of the dowager empress Cixi. Bureaucratic inefficiency and corruption became widespread, a notable example being the diversion of funds intended for building a Chinese navy to instead construct an ornamental marble warship at the imperial Summer Palace outside Beijing.
The first Opium War (1839–42), the Anglo-French War (1856–58), the Sino-Japanese War (1894–95), and the Boxer Rebellion (1900) all resulted in defeats for China and the granting of major concessions to foreign powers. By 1900 revolutionary groups had begun to form throughout the country. The October 10, 1911, Republican Revolution led to the abdication of the boy emperor Xuantong (better known as Puyi) and the transfer of authority to the provisional republican government under Yuan Shikai.
The efforts of the Manchu rulers, from the beginning of their rule, to become assimilated into Chinese culture bred strongly conservative Confucian political and cultural attitudes in official society and stimulated a great period of collecting, cataloging, and commenting upon the traditions of the past. Decorative crafts declined to increasingly repetitive designs, although techniques, notably in jade carving, reached a high level. Much architecture survives; although it is often grandly conceived, it tends to an inert massiveness with overwrought ornamentation. The two major visual art forms of the period were painting and porcelain.
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White Clouds over Xiao and XiangWhite Clouds over Xiao and Xiang, hanging scroll after Zhao Mengfu by Wang Jian, one of the Six Masters of the early Qing period, ink and colour on paper, 1668; in the Freer Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
Despite the prevailing attitude of conservatism, many Qing dynasty artists were both individualistic and innovative. Based largely on the dicta of a late Ming dynasty artist-critic, Dong Qichang, Qing painters are classified as “individualist” masters (such as Daoji and Zhu Da) and “orthodox” masters (such as the Six Masters of the early Qing period). In addition, there are “schools” of painting (though painters so classified share more a common location than a single style), such as the Four Masters of Anhui, the Eight Eccentrics of Yangzhou, and the Eight Masters of Nanjing. The attitude shared by most artists, in spite of obvious differences, was a strong preference for “literati painting” (wenrenhua), which emphasized personal expression above all.
Qing dynasty famille verte vaseTrumpet-shaped vase with floral decoration on background of green enamel, famille verte, Qing dynasty, reign of the Kangxi emperor, 1662–1722; in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. Height 61 cm.
Qing porcelain displays a high technical mastery even to the almost total obliteration of any mark of the potter’s hand. Among the innovations of the period was the development of coloured glazes such as copper red, called “blown red” (jihong) by the Chinese and “oxblood” (sang-de-boeuf) by the French, and two classes of painted porcelain ware, known in Europe as famille verte and famille rose, from their predominant green and rose colours.
The literature of the Qing dynasty resembled that of the preceding Ming period in that much of it focused on classical forms. The Manchu conducted a literary inquisition in the 18th century to root out subversive writings, and many suspect works were destroyed and their authors jailed, exiled, or killed. Novels in the vernacular—tales of romance and adventure—developed substantially. After Chinese ports were opened to overseas commerce in the mid-19th century, translation of foreign works into Chinese increased dramatically.
Watch a dancer perform jingxiExcerpt from a jingxi performance.
In music, the most notable development of the dynasty probably was the development of jingxi, or Peking opera, over several decades at the end of the 18th century. The style was an amalgam of several regional music-theatre traditions that employed significantly increased instrumental accompaniment, adding to flute, plucked lute, and clappers, several drums, a double-reed wind instrument, cymbals, and gongs, one of which is designed so as to rise quickly in pitch when struck, giving a “sliding” tonal effect that became a familiar characteristic of the genre. Jingxi—whose roots are actually in many regions but not in Beijing—uses fewer melodies than do other forms but repeats them with different lyrics. It is thought to have gained stature because of patronage by the empress dowager Cixi of the late Qing, but it had long been enormously popular with commoners.
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