Feng Guifen (born 1809, Wu county, Jiangsu province, China—died May 28, 1874, Suzhou, Jiangsu province) was a Chinese scholar and official whose ideas were the basis of the Self-Strengthening Movement (1861–95), in which the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12) introduced Western methods and technology in an attempt to renovate Chinese diplomatic, fiscal, educational, and military policy.
A native of South China, Feng came into frequent contact with Westerners in the large trading city of Shanghai. China’s capital at Beijing had just fallen to a combined British-French force, ending the Arrow War (the second Opium War; 1856–60) and forcing trading concessions to be granted to the West. It was then that Feng wrote his well-known Jiaobinlu kangyi (“Protest from the Jiaobin Studio”). In it he warned the Chinese of the difference between the old Confucian world and the new world that had resulted from the intrusion of Western power and technology into China; he argued that the Chinese could best meet the Western challenge by learning the technology themselves.