1-6 Notes 3:

American Imperialism in East Asia

Industrialization led to an increase in demand for ______goods in the United States and Europe. Merchants wanted to trade with East Asia for spices, perfumes, silks, and furniture.

China before Imperialism

In 1800, China was ruled by the Qing dynasty of the ______. This was a prosperous dynasty that rapidly declined due to a combination of internal problems and external pressures. By 1800, Europeans had been regularly trading with China for over 200 years, but they were restricted to a single ______city at Guangzhou (Canton). Much of this trade was controlled by the British who wanted to expand beyond their singular port. China was a large, self-sufficient country and it traded mostly with ______. China saw itself as the ______Kingdom – the highest civilization in the world surrounded by barbarians. The Qing rulers favored an isolationist policy, though Christian missionaries were allowed into the kingdom.

England Solves their Trade Problems with China

The English wanted luxury goods (silk, spices, and porcelain) and tea from China. It is estimated that the average London worker spent ____% of their household budget on tea. Since China was self-sufficient, England was ______more goods from China than China was importing from England. This was in opposition to the current economic theory of ______at the time.

mercantilism: an economic system of imperialist countries that had the imperialist country export more goods to their colonies than they imported from those colonies

To change the trade balance to their favor, the English needed to find a good that they could provide that China did not have. They found this in their colony of India – ______. The English began exporting opium to China even though Chinese officials made it illegal. The English fostered their trade: they ______officials, helped the Chinese work out elaborate smuggling schemes to get the opium into China's interior, and distributed free samples of the drug to innocent victims. The cost to China was enormous. The drug weakened a large percentage of the population (some estimate that ______percent of the population regularly used opium by the late 1800’s), and silver began to flow out of China to pay for the opium.

China Fights Back + Carving Up the Melon

Because opium addiction was severely injuring China, the Chinese government decided to take action. The Chinese government tried to ______foreign stores. The confiscation of British opium under the new laws was too much for the English who decided to punish China for interfering with their trade. This was the beginning of the first ______War (1839-1842). The non-industrialized Chinese lost both the first and second Opium Wars.

After the two Opium wars, European countries began to exert a stronger influence over China. Treaties were signed that gave rights to the Europeans and removed China’s rights to govern European activity in their country. This became known as the “______.” Along with being forced to agree with strong European influence, pieces of China itself were also being carved away by European nations.

The Open Door Policy

By 1898, most of China had been partitioned into “spheres of influence” which were controlled by European powers. The United States realized that they had missed the boat since they did not control any piece of China.

To protect American trade with China into the future, the United States suggested creating an “______Door Policy” in China. This policy would leave China independent (European countries could not completely take over pieces of it) and it would allow all countries free trade with China.

The United States sent their policy out to the other nations that had influence in China. None of these nations ______to sign it, but since none of the nations disagreed with the policy, the U.S. announced that the Open Door Policy was ______.

China tried to strengthen itself after this, but conservatives in the government put a stop to this. By 1911, China was very weak and could not withstand a revolt led by followers of Sun Yat-sen; the Qing dynasty collapsed. The Revolution of 1911 ended imperial rule in China. China is now ruled by a ______system, although aspects of capitalism have recently been introduced into the economy.

Japan before Imperialism

Japan was ruled by the Tokugawa ______. This was a hierarchical system of government and society with four distinct classes – the warriors, farmers, artisans, and merchants. Japan traded with the English and Dutch and allowed Christian missionaries during the 1500’s.

In 1639, the shogun (ruler of Japan under the emperor) ______Japan from the outside world. Christianity, foreign trade, and the building of ocean traveling ships (long distance) were outlawed. A policy of strict isolationism took over as even foreign books were banned. Some of the reasons for this include a fear that the teachings of Christianity would cause the Japanese people to follow the leadership of the Pope or Jesus instead of the ______– also some Jesuits destroyed shrines which angered some Japanese. Only a tiny ______(Netherlands) settlement was allowed in the city of Nagasaki.

America Visits Japan

The closure of Japan to foreign traders was a ______to the imperialists so Commodore Matthew Perry was sent to Japan in 1853 to try and establish trade between Japan and the United States. Matthew Perry sailed four ships into Edo Bay in July 1853 – 2 steam-powered sailing ships which were pulling 2 sloops.

On this trip Perry delivered a ______from the president of the United States, Millard Fillmore, and left shortly thereafter. Perry returned in March 1854 with ______ships to receive the Japanese response. On this trip, Perry and his crew stayed longer in Japan and exchanged gifts with important noblemen. The high point of these activities was a ______signed on March 31, 1854 in Kanagawa which met all of the U.S. government’s requests. The Treaty of Kanagawa guaranteed good treatment of ______, opened two Japanese ______for provisions and refuge, and laid the groundwork for Japan’s reluctant acceptance of an American “consul”—which broke down the remaining barriers to Japan’s incorporation in the global political economy. In 1858, U.S. consul to Japan, Townsend Harris, signed the Harris treaty that called for the opening of several new ports for US trade and residence along with an exchange of ministers. After Japan had agreed to this with the Americans, ______countries soon came to sign similar treaties as well.

After being “opened” by America, Japan decided to quickly ______themselves – this process was known as the ______restoration. Japan had seen what Europeans had done to China and wanted to keep that from happening in Japan. Therefore Japan began to change their system of government, import ______ideas such as the railroad and telegraph, and strengthen and modernize their ______system. This process led Japan to become a world power in a short amount of time. By 1894, they had defeated China in the first Sino-Japanese War over Korea. Japan’s increasing desire for world power would lead to conflict in the 20th century.

1-6 Imperialism and WWI Page 9 January 25, 2010