First Opium War

First Opium War
Part of the Opium Wars

The East India Company steamship Nemesis (right background) destroying war junks during the Second Battle of Chuenpi, 7 January 1841
Date4 September 1839 – 29 August 1842 (2 years, 11 months, 3 weeks and 4 days)
Location
China
Result British victory
Territorial
changes
Hong Kong Island ceded to Britain
Belligerents
Qing China
Commanders and leaders
Strength

19,000+ troops:[1]

37 ships:[1]

222,212 total troops[b]

Casualties and losses
est. 3,100 killed[c]
First Opium War
Traditional Chinese第一次鴉片戰爭
Simplified Chinese第一次鸦片战争
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinDìyīcì yāpiàn zhànzhēng
Bopomofoㄉㄧˋ  ㄘˋ ㄧㄚ ㄅㄧㄢˋ ㄓㄢˋ ㄓㄥ
Wade–GilesTi4-i1-tzʻu4 ya1-pʻien4 chan4-cheng1
Tongyong PinyinDì-yi-cìh ya-piàn jhàn-jheng
IPA[tî.í.tsʰɹ̩̂ já.pʰjɛ̂n ʈʂân.ʈʂə́ŋ]
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationDaihyātchi Āpin Jinjāng
JyutpingDai6 jat1 ci3 aa1 pin3 zin3 zang1
IPA[tɐj˨ jɐt̚˥ tsʰi˧ a˥ pʰin˧ tsin˧ tsɐŋ˥]

The First Opium War (Chinese: 第一次鴉片戰爭; pinyin: Dìyīcì yāpiàn zhànzhēng), also known as the Anglo-Chinese War, was a series of military engagements fought between the British Empire and the Qing dynasty of China between 1839 and 1842. The immediate issue was the Chinese enforcement of their ban on the opium trade by seizing private opium stocks from mainly British merchants at Guangzhou (then named Canton) and threatening to impose the death penalty for future offenders. Despite the opium ban, the British government supported the merchants' demand for compensation for seized goods, and insisted on the principles of free trade and equal diplomatic recognition with China. Opium was Britain's single most profitable commodity trade of the 19th century. After months of tensions between the two states, the Royal Navy launched an expedition in June 1840, which ultimately defeated the Chinese using technologically superior ships and weapons by August 1842. The British then imposed the Treaty of Nanking, which forced China to increase foreign trade, give compensation, and cede Hong Kong Island to the British. Consequently, the opium trade continued in China. Twentieth-century nationalists considered 1839 the start of a century of humiliation, and many historians consider it the beginning of modern Chinese history.

In the 18th century, the European demand for Chinese luxury goods (particularly silk, porcelain, and tea) created a trade imbalance between China and Britain. European silver flowed into China through the Canton System, which confined incoming foreign trade to the southern port city of Guangzhou. To counter this imbalance, the British East India Company began to grow opium in Bengal and allowed private British merchants to sell opium to Chinese smugglers for illegal sale in China. The influx of narcotics reversed the Chinese trade surplus and increased the numbers of opium addicts inside the country, outcomes that seriously worried Chinese officials.

Senior government officials within the country had been shown to be colluding against the imperial ban due to stocks of opium in European warehouses in clear view being ignored. In 1839, the Daoguang Emperor, rejecting proposals to legalise and tax opium, appointed Viceroy of Huguang Lin Zexu to go to Guangzhou to halt the opium trade completely.[7] Lin wrote an open letter to Queen Victoria appealing to her moral responsibility to stop the opium trade, although she never received it.[8][9][10] Lin then resorted to using force in the western merchants' enclave. He arrived in Guangzhou at the end of January 1839 and organized a coastal defence. In March 1839, British opium dealers were forced to hand over 2.37 million pounds of opium. On 3 June 1839, Lin ordered the opium to be destroyed in public on Humen Beach to show the Government's determination to ban smoking.[11] All other supplies were confiscated and a blockade of foreign ships on the Pearl River was ordered.[12][page needed]

Tensions escalated in July 1839 after drunk British sailors killed a Chinese villager named Lin Weixi; the British official in charge, Admiral Charles Elliot, refused to hand over those accused to Chinese authorities in an attempt to avoid their being killed on the spot, as had happened with British citizens in the Lady Hughes Affair of 1784. Later, fighting broke out, with the British navy destroying the Chinese naval blockade, and launching an offensive.[11] In the ensuing conflict, the Royal Navy used its superior naval and gunnery power to inflict a series of decisive defeats on the Chinese Empire.[13] In 1842, the Qing dynasty was forced to sign the Treaty of Nanking—the first of what the Chinese later called the unequal treaties—which granted an indemnity and extraterritoriality to British subjects in China, opened five treaty ports to British merchants, and ceded Hong Kong Island to the British Empire. The failure of the treaty to satisfy British goals of improved trade and diplomatic relations led to the Second Opium War (1856–1860). The resulting social unrest was the background for the Taiping Rebellion, which further weakened the Qing regime.[14][full citation needed][15]

  1. ^ a b c d Martin, Robert Montgomery (1847). China: Political, Commercial, and Social; In an Official Report to Her Majesty's Government. Volume 2. London: James Madden. pp. 80–82.
  2. ^ Mao 2016, pp. 50–53.
  3. ^ The Chinese Repository, vol. 12, p. 248.
  4. ^ Bate 1952, p. 174.
  5. ^ Rait, Robert S. (1903). The Life and Campaigns of Hugh, First Viscount Gough, Field-Marshal. Volume 1. p. 265.
  6. ^ Makeham, John (2008). China: The World's Oldest Living Civilization Revealed. Thames & Hudson. p. 331. ISBN 978-0-500-25142-3.
  7. ^ Fay (2000) p. 73.
  8. ^ Fay (2000) p. 143.
  9. ^ "digital china/harvard: Letter of Advice to Queen Victoria". cyber.harvard.edu. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  10. ^ "Longman World History". wps.pearsoncustom.com. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  11. ^ a b "Opium Wars". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  12. ^ Farooqui, Amar (March 2005). Smuggling as Subversion: Colonialism, Indian Merchants, and the Politics of Opium, 1790–1843. Lexington. ISBN 0-7391-0886-7.
  13. ^ Steve Tsang, A modern history of Hong Kong (2007) pp. 3–13.
  14. ^ Tsang, A modern history of Hong Kong p. 29.
  15. ^ "The Mechanics of Opium Wars". The Australian Museum. Retrieved 28 June 2022.


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