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==Establishment: 1636—1675==
==Establishment: 1636—1675==
== Kanggwo's reign: 1675—1698 ==
The later years of the Ming dynasty was rife with internal rebellion, military rot, and political factionalism, leading to its inevitable disintegration in the early 17th century. By the start of the century, they had lost their political sway over Manchuria, Mongolia, and Corea. From the north, the Aisin khanate 金, located in modern northwest [[Corea]], increasingly launched attacks through the Great Wall. In 1618, they entered war with China over the Jodong peninsula, leading to the Manchu clans of the khanate declaring the establishment of Qing 大清 in 1636. After the insurgent Śun dynasty 大順 toppled the Ming administration, the Manchu armies invaded and captured the capital city of Beiging months later in the April of 1644. Joining the occupiers was Ming general & Jodong native U Samgwei 吳三桂 and several of his troops, who were sent to quell Ming loyalism and defeat rival rebel armies.


==''Pax Sinica'': 1698—1788==
In 1643, founding emperor Hwang Taići 皇太極 died, being succeeded by his son, the Sunzi Emperor 順治帝. As the Emperor was still young, Prince Regent Dorgon ᡩᠣᡵᡤᠣᠨ ruled on his behalf for several years until his sudden death in 1650. As an independent ruler, the Emperor did much to reduce corruption in the imperial bureaucracy, improve the judicial system, and include non-Manchus in government, beginning the process of assimilation into the Chinese 'style of rule'. He became a devout Buddhist in 1657. In November of the same year, Consort Donggo 董鄂 would give birth to a son, who would be made heir apparent and eventually the [[Kanggwo Emperor]]. Tragically, a wave of smallpox soon struck Beiging, killing the Consort and severely damaging the Emperor's health, eventually resulting in his death in 1675.


==== Foreign relations and migration ====
==== Chinese Rites crisis ====
{{Main|Catholic Church}}
By the middle of the 1660s, the Qing had gained control over the vast majority of China. In 1663, they had established an amicable relationship with the new Governor-General in Tauland, [[Jacob van Aertens]]. Initially, the Dutch had agreed to limit Chinese immigration to Tauland. Despite this, by the 1670s, immigrants from Hokkien province were entering the island in droves. As a result, the imperial government tightened restrictions on freedom of movement and reiterated the ban on migration. However, this attempt was futile, as by the end of Sunzi's reign, thousands of Chinese were illegally emigrating to southeastern Asia every decade.
Several Catholic orders had been operating within China since the early seventeenth century. The Society of Jesus, also known as the Jesuits, were the first to arrive and dominated Catholic missionary work in the country for decades. In 1633, the Iberian Dominican and Franciscan orders arrived, starting a long political witch-hunt against the Jesuits.


In 1645, a Papal institution named the Congregation of Propaganda Fide was founded in Rome, aiming to centralize Catholic missions worldwide under its authority. Empowered by this, the Dominicans issued a complaint to the Pope regarding the Jesuits' refusal to adopt a Tridentine mould of uniform law, liturgy and discipline. In 1656, the Holy Office upheld the appeal of Jesuit procurator Martino Martini and defended their approach. A counter-appeal was put forth by the Dominicans once again, only to be struck down by Rome in 1668, upholding the principle that Chinese affairs should be decided in China rather than in Europe.
Domestically, the new government fixated on settling sparsely populated regions, often provinces located in the interior, with migrants from densely populated coastal regions in order to expand farmlands. Manchuria, Mongolia, Sićwan, and Hunam received upwards of a million immigrants by the start of the 1670s.


In 1671, the Jesuit mission in Beiging were gifted a precious tablet by the [[Sunzi Emperor]] reading ''Ging Tian Kin Min'' 敬天勤民 ('revere Heaven and serve thy People'). Numerous versions of these tablets began appearing in Catholic churches across the capital. The Dominicans were quick to accuse the Jesuits of facilitating idol worship with the presence of these tablets, eventually leading to their removal in several churches. However, these tablets and the phrase ''Ging Tian Kin Min'' would remain popular in the Chinese Christian community for centuries to come.
==== Ming loyalist campaigns ====
Based in Hokkien province and [[Tauland]], the loyalist [[Zeng family]] <small>鄭氏</small> had established a large maritime trading network, stretching to [[Japan]] and the [[Philippines]]. Other Ming loyalist regimes, up to eleven ''de jure'' ruled by various princes from the [[House of Źu]], were set up along the coast and in the southwest. In the 1653 Battle of Giangdong 江東戰役, the young leader [[Koxinga]]'s fleet was expelled from mainland China by Manchu and supplementary Corean forces, retreating to the Loetsjoe islands and Japan. The Dutch East India Company's hold over much of Asia, and now the Qing conquest, had hampered the businesses of the Zeng family, leading Koxinga to establish himself in his maternal hometown of Hirado, Japan, where he would participate and tragically die in the [[History of Japan#Ōmura Rebellion (1656-1658)|Omura Rebellion]] in 1658.


Toward the end of the 17th century, the Chinese Jesuits had to increasingly defend their beliefs against the increasingly prevalent ideas of Augustinian pessimism and Jansenism. The Society of Jesus generally held the conception that the Chinese were monists and preached that they were monotheists in ancient times. Some figures, like Martino Martini, went as far as claiming that the Chinese were descendants of Noah, and their civilization's brilliance could be attributed to the Ark.
The same year, Governor-General [[Peter Stuyvesant]] agreed to cease attacks on Zeng fleets going to and from Japan. The Zeng family had much influence over Chinese merchants in the [[Soenda|Dutch East Indies]], and had the power to further aggravate rebellions in the area. Following tensions between Qing-aligned Tauland and Japan over the Loetsjoe islands in the 1660s, the Zeng family and its associates began exploiting tensions between the two powers in order to maintain its commercial influence. Their opponents often labeled them with the term 'sea bandits' 倭寇.
[[File:Kircher-100-Elena-Wang-letter.png|thumb|260x260px|Letter sent by Empress Helena Wang to [[Catholic Church|the Pope]] (c. 1655)]]
In China, the Jongli Emperor 永曆帝 and children remained the only surviving royal of the main Wanli branch by 1656. Records of this period remain scarce and mainly derive from Jesuit and Zeng private accounts. The Emperor's court was dominated by Catholics, notably the the empress dowagers Helena Wang 王烈纳 and Maria Ma 玛利亚, as well as eunuch Achilleus Pang 庞天寿. One of Jongli's sons was baptized as Constantine 当 定 by missionary Andreas Koffler, and letters requesting help were sent by the empress dowagers to the Pope. The fate of the Emperor and his family remains vague; most historians subscribe to the idea that he, and members of his family, were slain by U Samgwei in the 1660s.


A period of crisis began after the death of the Sunzi Emperor in 1675. The [[Kanggwo Emperor]], still young, had his court dominated by various hostile political factions and his administration plagued by the First Lingnam Rebellion. As a result of this, Catholicism was heavily suppressed across the empire and all Catholic missionaries were expelled to [[Poeja|Manchuria]] and [[Corea]] the following year. In 1681, the Jesuits, Dominicans, and Franciscans held the Mukden Conference in order to address recent developments. As a consequence of the Conference, many advocated for the voices of Chinese Christians themselves to be heard in the Rites matter. Blasius Liu, a Catholic originally from Shandong, became the most prolific Chinese Christian at the Conference. The missionaries also realized the success of [[Tauland|colonial Formosa]]'s proselytization of Reformed Protestantism in eastern Asia after coming into contact with numerous Dutch missionaries and a few Corean Christians. This provoked a panic among the orders, particularly the Jesuits, who began sending material to Rome annually, urging for Catholic unity.
It is postulated that Constantine survived and continued the Wanli line, as was claimed by some imperial family members of the [[Kingdom of Canton]]. However, it is mostly accepted that account that the [[Prince of Ningźing]] 寧靖王, a prince of the Hongu Emperor's line and close affilaite of the Zeng family, is the ancestor of said imperial house, is true. As his place of burial was discovered in 1968 near Hirado, Japan, the prince would have lived in relative obscurity among the members of the Zeng family, with his fifth-generation descendants eventually returning to the public eye in the 19th century and becoming monarchs after the [[Canton War]].


In 1694, the Kanggwo Emperor issued a decree tolerating Christianity according to "the regulations of Matteo Ricci and George Candidius", indicating a strict acceptance of only Jesuit Catholicism and Reformed Protestantism. The French missionary Charles Maigrot, Vicar Apostolic of Hokkien, was expelled from Hokkien province the following year for insulting remarks towards the decree and embarrassing behavior in front of the Emperor. In Rome, he propagated a hostile anti-Jesuit view which led to him being alienated by the Papal court.
==== Death of the Emperor ====


Soon after, the Holy Office in Rome became aware of the rapid growth of Protestantism in [[Tauland]] and their alliance with the Qing. In order to compete with Calvinist missionaries, the Papacy hired numerous Dutch linguists to translate Chinese books sent by the Jesuits into Latin in order to achieve a better understanding of the Rites controversy. By the start of the 18th century, the pro-Chinese Jesuit faction in Rome was growing at an exponential rate compared to previous decades.
== Kanggwo's reign: 1675—1698 ==


In 1702, the Pope sent a Papal legation to establish relations with the [[Kangsi Emperor]] led by the non-partisan Rinaldo Fieschi. Fieschi compiled the ''Acta Pekinensia'', detailing the 'Eight Permissions', a summary of compromises regarding rites to be adopted by all Catholic missions in China. The German Johann Kilian Stumpf, also viewed as a non-partisan actor, was instrumental in influencing Fieschi's decision. Stumpf would later become the head of the Society of Jesus in the country, with his colleague and friend Claudio Filippo Grimaldi becoming the head of Western astronomy at the Imperial Astronomical Bureau in the capital. François Noël, a Flemish missionary, also became greatly influential in the literary realm by composing poems and translating traditional Chinese literature into Latin and Dutch.
==''Pax Sinica'': 1698—1788==


In 1712, a second Papal Legate proclaimed an edict approving the Eight Permissions. The following year, the Pope issued the decree ''Universalis Ecclesiae,'' codifying the Permissions and concluding the Chinese rites crisis in Rome. However, in Asia, anti-Jesuit sentiment and political tensions between orders would continue across China and in the [[Philippines]], [[Tauland]], and [[Thaitania]].
==== Chinese Rites Crisis ====


==Gai Wan era: 1788—1830==
==Gai Wan era: 1788—1830==

Revision as of 09:26, 13 December 2022

Great Qing

大清
1636–1936
Flag of Great Qing
Flag
Location of Great Qing
CapitalMukden
(1636-1644)

Beiging
(1644-1930)

Sian
(1930-1936)
Largest cityBeiging
Official languagesManchu
Standard Chinese
Common languagesMandarin dialects
Cantonese
Hakka
Hokkien
Mongolian
Turkic
Others
DemonymChinese
GovernmentMonarchy
Establishment1636
History 
• Established
1636
• Disestablished
1936
CurrencyMace (cin, 錢)
Today part ofChina
Serindia
Poeja
Corea
Tibet
Mongolia
Russia

The Qing dynasty, officially the Great Qing (大清, da ćing, /ta.t͡ɕʰiŋ/), was an imperial dynasty of China that lasted from 1636 to 1936. It emerged from the Jurchen Gim state (located in modern Corea) which unified several Manchu tribes and invaded the Ming dynasty, eventually bringing all of China under their control by the 18th century. The country was partitioned in the Canton War, only maintaining control of the northern plains. Thus, the dynasty is often split into two periods: the Western period before 1850, and the Eastern period after. In 1936, the Qing were invaded and annexed by the modern Chinese Republic from the south, putting an end to the three-century old empire.

Etymology

The country was named da ćing 大清 upon its founding, with ćing literally meaning 'pure'. It is often rendered as Qing in English and numerous other European languages, mirroring the empire's preferred romanization since the late 19th century. In modern Standard Chinese romanization, the official name of the country is spelled Da Ćing.

Establishment: 1636—1675

Kanggwo's reign: 1675—1698

Pax Sinica: 1698—1788

Chinese Rites crisis

Several Catholic orders had been operating within China since the early seventeenth century. The Society of Jesus, also known as the Jesuits, were the first to arrive and dominated Catholic missionary work in the country for decades. In 1633, the Iberian Dominican and Franciscan orders arrived, starting a long political witch-hunt against the Jesuits.

In 1645, a Papal institution named the Congregation of Propaganda Fide was founded in Rome, aiming to centralize Catholic missions worldwide under its authority. Empowered by this, the Dominicans issued a complaint to the Pope regarding the Jesuits' refusal to adopt a Tridentine mould of uniform law, liturgy and discipline. In 1656, the Holy Office upheld the appeal of Jesuit procurator Martino Martini and defended their approach. A counter-appeal was put forth by the Dominicans once again, only to be struck down by Rome in 1668, upholding the principle that Chinese affairs should be decided in China rather than in Europe.

In 1671, the Jesuit mission in Beiging were gifted a precious tablet by the Sunzi Emperor reading Ging Tian Kin Min 敬天勤民 ('revere Heaven and serve thy People'). Numerous versions of these tablets began appearing in Catholic churches across the capital. The Dominicans were quick to accuse the Jesuits of facilitating idol worship with the presence of these tablets, eventually leading to their removal in several churches. However, these tablets and the phrase Ging Tian Kin Min would remain popular in the Chinese Christian community for centuries to come.

Toward the end of the 17th century, the Chinese Jesuits had to increasingly defend their beliefs against the increasingly prevalent ideas of Augustinian pessimism and Jansenism. The Society of Jesus generally held the conception that the Chinese were monists and preached that they were monotheists in ancient times. Some figures, like Martino Martini, went as far as claiming that the Chinese were descendants of Noah, and their civilization's brilliance could be attributed to the Ark.

A period of crisis began after the death of the Sunzi Emperor in 1675. The Kanggwo Emperor, still young, had his court dominated by various hostile political factions and his administration plagued by the First Lingnam Rebellion. As a result of this, Catholicism was heavily suppressed across the empire and all Catholic missionaries were expelled to Manchuria and Corea the following year. In 1681, the Jesuits, Dominicans, and Franciscans held the Mukden Conference in order to address recent developments. As a consequence of the Conference, many advocated for the voices of Chinese Christians themselves to be heard in the Rites matter. Blasius Liu, a Catholic originally from Shandong, became the most prolific Chinese Christian at the Conference. The missionaries also realized the success of colonial Formosa's proselytization of Reformed Protestantism in eastern Asia after coming into contact with numerous Dutch missionaries and a few Corean Christians. This provoked a panic among the orders, particularly the Jesuits, who began sending material to Rome annually, urging for Catholic unity.

In 1694, the Kanggwo Emperor issued a decree tolerating Christianity according to "the regulations of Matteo Ricci and George Candidius", indicating a strict acceptance of only Jesuit Catholicism and Reformed Protestantism. The French missionary Charles Maigrot, Vicar Apostolic of Hokkien, was expelled from Hokkien province the following year for insulting remarks towards the decree and embarrassing behavior in front of the Emperor. In Rome, he propagated a hostile anti-Jesuit view which led to him being alienated by the Papal court.

Soon after, the Holy Office in Rome became aware of the rapid growth of Protestantism in Tauland and their alliance with the Qing. In order to compete with Calvinist missionaries, the Papacy hired numerous Dutch linguists to translate Chinese books sent by the Jesuits into Latin in order to achieve a better understanding of the Rites controversy. By the start of the 18th century, the pro-Chinese Jesuit faction in Rome was growing at an exponential rate compared to previous decades.

In 1702, the Pope sent a Papal legation to establish relations with the Kangsi Emperor led by the non-partisan Rinaldo Fieschi. Fieschi compiled the Acta Pekinensia, detailing the 'Eight Permissions', a summary of compromises regarding rites to be adopted by all Catholic missions in China. The German Johann Kilian Stumpf, also viewed as a non-partisan actor, was instrumental in influencing Fieschi's decision. Stumpf would later become the head of the Society of Jesus in the country, with his colleague and friend Claudio Filippo Grimaldi becoming the head of Western astronomy at the Imperial Astronomical Bureau in the capital. François Noël, a Flemish missionary, also became greatly influential in the literary realm by composing poems and translating traditional Chinese literature into Latin and Dutch.

In 1712, a second Papal Legate proclaimed an edict approving the Eight Permissions. The following year, the Pope issued the decree Universalis Ecclesiae, codifying the Permissions and concluding the Chinese rites crisis in Rome. However, in Asia, anti-Jesuit sentiment and political tensions between orders would continue across China and in the Philippines, Tauland, and Thaitania.

Gai Wan era: 1788—1830

Antebellum: 1830—1850

List of monarchs

Name Reign Lifespan Notes
Taići 太極 1636 1643 28 November 1592 – 21 September 1643
Sunzi 順治 1643 1675 15 March 1638 – 3 August 1675
Kanggwo 康國 1675 1698 17 November 1657 – 10 January 1698
Kangsi 康熙 1698 1729 4 May 1654 – 11 July 1729
Dawtong 道同 1729 1734 29 January 1700 – 16 March 1767
Gwangzi 光智 1734 1788 1 October 1702 – 27 November 1788
Gaiging 改警 1788 1817 18 June 1757 – 3 February 1817
Wanle 萬樂 1817 1830 16 October 1788 – 22 April 1830
Zawlong 造隆 1830 1858 6 September 1799 – 14 December 1870
Tiansun 天順 1858 1863 14 July 1798 – 6 March 1863
Gianzeng 建禎 1863 1902 20 May 1840 – 30 April 1902
Cengćang 成昌 1902 1936 19 December 1891 – 9 June 1956

See also