Late Qing reforms

Late Qing reforms
Chinese
TypePolitical system and economic reform movement
Period1901-1911
ResultFailure due to the 1911 Revolution
Other Chinese names
Other English namesCixi's New Policies
Guangxu's New Policies
Gengzi New Policies
New Policies of the late Qing dynasty
New Deal of the late Qing dynasty

Late Qing reforms (Chinese: 晚清改革[1]; pinyin: Wǎnqīng gǎigé), commonly known as New Policies of the late Qing dynasty[2] (Chinese: 清末新政; pinyin: Qīngmò xīnzhèng), or New Deal of the late Qing dynasty,[3] simply referred to as New Policies, were a series of cultural, economic, educational, military, diplomatic, and political reforms implemented in the last decade of the Qing dynasty to keep the dynasty in power after the invasions of the great powers of the Eight Nation Alliance in league with the ten provinces of the Southeast Mutual Protection during the Boxer Rebellion.

Official map of the Qing Empire published in 1905.

Late Qing reforms started in 1901, and since they were implemented with the backing of the Empress Dowager Cixi, they are also called Cixi's New Policies.[4] The reforms were often considered more radical than the earlier Self-Strengthening Movement which came to an abrupt end with China's defeat in the First Sino-Japanese War in 1895. Despite the reforms and other political struggles the revolutionaries led the 1911 Revolution which resulted in the fall of the Qing dynasty.

  1. ^ "History of Modern East Asia". National Taiwan University. Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  2. ^ Yih-Jye Hwang (2021). "The births of International Studies in China". Review of International Studies. 47 (5): 580–600. doi:10.1017/S0260210520000340. S2CID 228815919.
  3. ^ Eva Huang; John Benson; Ying Zhu (17 March 2016). Teacher Management in China: The Transformation of Educational Systems. Routledge. pp. 32–. ISBN 978-1-317-43514-3.
  4. ^ China Review International. University of Hawaiʻi, Center for Chinese Studies and University of Hawaii Press. 2003.