The Boxer Rebellion |
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(1900) |
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| China | Punitive Strike |
| European Powers, United States and Russians -vs- Boxer Fanatics & Imperial Chinese | |
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The
emperor of China (who had come to the throne in 1875 as a child) was at
loggerheads with the dowager empress soon after his personal rule began in
1889. When, in 1898, the reforming party seemed at last to be getting
somewhere and a stream of reforming edicts and laws was issued in what was
known as 'The Hundred Days of Reform', the empress enlisted the support of
Manchu officials and soldiers whose sinecures and privileges were
threatened, seized the emperor, locked him up and swept the reformers aside.
At about the same time, signs of popular support for sticking to old ways
could be seen in an outbreak of troubles in the provinces where certain
militia units had come under the influence of a widespread and secret
society called (somewhat oddly to western ears) the 'Society of Harmonious
Fists'. Its members were usually called 'Boxers', for short. They were
violently anti-foreign. They attacked Christian Chinese converts and, soon,
foreign missionaries. |
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