Taiping Rebellion

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Taiping Rebellion

Taiping Army meeting with their leader
Date December, 1850 – August 1871
Location China
Result Victory by the Qing dynasty
Fall of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom
Weakening of the Qing Dynasty
Combatants
Qing Empire
Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Flag of FranceFrance (United Kingdom and France join the war later)
Taiping Heavenly Kingdom
Commanders
Xianfeng Emperor
Tongzhi Emperor
Empress Dowager Cixi
Zeng Guofan
Charles George Gordon
Frederick Townsend Ward
Hong Xiuquan
Yang Xiuqing
Xiao Chaogui
Feng Yunshan
Wei Changhui
Shi Dakai
Li Xiucheng
Strength
2,000,000-5,000,000 regulars
~300,000 militia
1,000,000-3,000,000 regulars
Casualties
~20,000,000 (best estimate)

The Taiping Rebellion (or Rebellion of Great Peace) was a large-scale revolt against the authority and forces of the Qing Government in China. It was conducted from 1850 to 1864 by an army and civil administration led by heterodox Christian convert Hong Xiuquan. He established the Heavenly Kingdom of Great Peace (Simplified Chinese: 太平天国, Pinyin: Tàipíng Tiān Guó) with capital Nanjing and attained control of significant parts of southern China, at its height ruling over about 30 million people. The theocratic and militaristic regime instituted several social reforms, including strict separation of the sexes, abolition of foot binding, land socialization, suppression of private trade, and the replacement of Confucianism, Buddhism and Chinese folk religion by a peculiar form of Christianity, holding that Hong Xiuquan was the younger brother of Jesus Christ.

The Taiping areas were constantly besieged and harassed by Qing forces; the rebellion was eventually put down by the Qing army aided by French and British forces. With an estimated death toll of between 20 and 30 million due to warfare and resulting starvation, this civil war ranks among history's deadliest conflicts.[1][2] Mao Zedong viewed the Taiping as early heroic revolutionaries against a corrupt feudal system. Today, artifacts from the Taiping period can be seen at the Taiping Kingdom History Museum in Nanjing.

Contents

Hong Xiuquan
Hong Xiuquan

In the mid-19th century, China under the Qing Dynasty suffered a series of natural disasters, economic problems, and defeats at the hands of the Western powers--in particular, the humiliating defeat in 1842 by Great Britain in the First Opium War. The Qing Dynasty (ethnically Manchu) was seen by the Chinese majority (ethnically Han) as ineffective and corrupt foreign rule. Anti-Manchu sentiment was strongest in the south among the laboring classes, and it was these disaffected who flocked to join the charismatic visionary Hong Xiuquan, a member of the Hakka minority.

Hong's associate Yang Xiuqing was a former salesman of firewood in Guangxi, who frequently claimed to be able to act as a mouthpiece of God to direct the people and gain himself a large amount of political power.

The sect's militarism grew in the late 1840s, initially in response to its struggle to suppress groups of bandits and pirates, but persecution by Qing authorities spurred the movement into a guerrilla rebellion and then into full-blown civil war.

The revolt began in Guangxi Province. After a previous battle of small scale that resulted in the rebels' victory in the late December 1850, in early January 1851, a ten-thousand strong rebel army organized by Feng Yunshan and Wei Changhui routed Imperial troops stationed at the town of Jintian. Heavenly Kingdom forces successfully drove back the Imperial reprisal, and on January 11, 1851, Hong Xiuquan formally declared the Jintian Uprising on his birthday (lunar calendar). Subsequently, in August 1851, Hong declared the establishment of the Heavenly Kingdom of Peace (Taiping Tianguo) with himself as absolute ruler.

The revolt rapidly spread northward. In March 1853, between 700,000 and 800,000 Taiping soldiers directed by commander-in-chief Yang Xiuqing took Nanjing, killing 30,000 Imperial soldiers and slaughtering thousands of civilians.[3] The city became the movement's capital and was renamed Tianjing (‘Heavenly Capital’). Hong built his Palace of Heavenly King there by converting the former residence of ruling Qing officials.

At its height, the Heavenly Kingdom encompassed much of south and central China, centered on the fertile Yangtze river valley. Control of the river meant that the Taipings could easily supply their capital at Nanjing. From there, the Taipings continued their assault. Two armies were sent west, to secure the upper reaches of the Yangtze. Two more armies were sent north to take the Imperial capital, Beijing. Potentially, these two expeditions could have acted as a giant pincer movement across the country. The western expedition met with some mixed success, but the attempt to take Beijing failed.

In 1853, Hong withdrew from active control of policies and administration, ruling exclusively by written proclamations that often had religious content. Hong disagreed with Yang in certain matters of policy and became increasingly suspicious of Yang's ambitions, his extensive network and spies, and his declarations when "speaking as God". Yang and his family were put to death by Hong's followers in 1856, followed by a bloodbath of Yang's loyal troops who had been trapped with a deceit.[4]

With their leader largely out of the picture, Taiping delegates tried to widen their popular support with the Chinese middle classes -- and to forge alliances with European powers -- but failed on both counts. The Europeans decided to stay neutral. Inside China, the rebellion faced resistance from the traditionalist middle class because of their hostility to many long-standing Chinese customs and Confucian values. The land-owning upper class, unsettled by the Taipings' peasant mannerisms and their policy of strict separation of the sexes, even for married couples, sided with the Imperial forces and their Western allies.

In 1859, Hong Rengan, a cousin of Hong, joined the Taiping in Nanjing, and was given considerable power by Hong. He developed an ambitious plan to expand westward, and in 1860 the Taiping were successful in taking Hangzhou and Suzhou, but failed to take Shanghai, which marked the beginning of the decline of the kingdom.

Within the land that they controlled, the Taiping Heavenly Army established a theocratic and highly militarised rule.

  • The subject of study for the examinations for officials (formerly civil service exams) changed from the Confucian classics to the Christian Bible.
  • Private property ownership was abolished and all land was held and distributed by the state.
  • A solar calendar replaced the lunar calendar.
  • Foot binding was banned. (The Hakka people had never followed this tradition, and consequently the Hakka women had always been able to work the fields.[5])
  • The society was declared classless and the sexes were declared equal. It was the first Chinese regime ever to admit women into examinations.
  • The sexes were rigorously separated; there were separate army units consisting of women only; until 1855, not even married couples were allowed to live together or have sexual relations.[6]
  • The Qing-dictated hairstyle for men (shaven forehead and long pigtail) was abandoned in favor of wearing the hair long.
  • Other new laws were promulgated including the prohibition of opium, gambling, tobacco, alcohol, polygamy (including concubinage), slavery, and prostitution. These all carried draconian penalties.

However, the rule was remarkably ineffective, haphazard and brutal; all efforts were concentrated on the army, and civil administration was very poor. Rule was established in the major cities but the land outside the urban areas was little regarded. Even though polygamy was banned, Hong Xiuquan had numerous concubines. Many high-ranking Taiping officials kept concubines as a matter of prerogative, and lived as de facto kings.

Although ostensibly Christian, the "Heavenly Kingdom of Great Peace" has long been considered heretical by major branches of Christianity.

The movement's founder, Hong Xiuquan, had tried and failed to earn his shengyuan civil service degree numerous times. After one such failure in 1836, Hong overheard a Chinese Protestant missionary preaching and took home some Bible tracts, including a pamphlet titled "Good Words for Exhorting the Age." The missionary was probably Edwin Stevens of New England, who operated illegally in China.[7] In 1843, after Hong's final failure at the exams, he had what some regard as a nervous breakdown and others as a mystical revelation, connecting his in-depth readings of the Christian tracts to strange dreams he had been having for the past six years. In his dreams, a bearded man with golden hair gave him a sword, and, with a younger man Hong addressed as "Elder Brother," taught him how to slay evil spirits.[8]

Based on his readings, Hong Xiuquan came to believe that the figures in his dreams were God the Father and Jesus Christ and that they were revealing his destiny as a slayer of demons and the leader of a new Heavenly Kingdom on Earth[9]. The "demons" were later interpreted by him to be the Qing.

Hong developed a literalist understanding of the Bible, which soon gave rise to a unique theology. He rejected the doctrine of the Trinity -- only the Father was truly God. Jesus Christ was the Father's firstborn Son, with Hong Xiuquan himself being the Father's second Son and the younger brother of Jesus. It was said that when foreign missionaries later explained to Hong Xiuquan that Jesus was the Father's only Son, he simply crossed out the word "only". The Holy Spirit, for Hong, was nothing more than a "Holy Wind" (a belief based on the poor translation skills of Christian missionaries; the Latin root spirit- is literally breath); in fact, Yang Xiuqing later took the title "Holy Wind the Comforter", as he had become the Taiping leader who had most of the political power during the rebellion and was keen to gain titles. Yang Xiuqing's religious motivations are disputed.

Based on his readings and personal revelations, Hong Xiuquan added a third group of books (in addition to the Old Testament and the New Testament) to the Taiping regime's Bible.

In its first year, the Heavenly Kingdom minted coins that were 23 mm to 26 mm and around 4.1 g. The inscription 太平天囯 ("The Heavenly Kingdom of Great Peace") was on the front, where "Kingdom" was written in a non-standard form of the character (, instead of /), and 聖寶 ("Holy Treasure") on the back.

Miniature of the Palace of Heavenly Kingdom in Nanjing
Miniature of the Palace of Heavenly Kingdom in Nanjing

Ranked below the King of Heaven (天王), Hong Xiuquan (洪秀全), the territory was divided among provincial rulers called kings or princes, initially there were five — the Kings of the Four Quarters and the King of the Yi (meaning flanks). Of the original rulers, the West King and South King were killed in combat in 1852. The East King was murdered by the North King during a coup d'etat in 1856, and the North King himself was subsequently killed. The kings' names were:

  • South King (南王), Feng Yunshan (馮雲山) (–1852)
  • East King (東王), Yang Xiuqing (楊秀清) (–1856)
  • West King (西王), Xiao Chaogui (蕭朝貴) (–1852)
  • North King (北王), Wei Changhui (韋昌輝) (–1856)
  • Yi King (翼王), Shi Dakai (石達開) (captured and executed by Qing Imperials in 1863)

The later leaders of the movement were 'Princes':

  • Zhong Prince (忠王), Li Xiucheng (李秀成) (1823–1864, captured and executed by Qing Imperials)
  • Ying Prince (英王), Chen Yucheng (陳玉成) (1837–1862)
  • Gan Prince (干王), Hong Rengan (洪仁玕 Hóng Rēngān) (1822–1864, executed), cousin of Hong Xiuquan
  • Fu Prince (福王), Hong Renda (洪仁達) (executed by Qing Imperials in 1864), Hong Xiuquan's second eldest brother
  • Tian Gui (Tien Kuei) (田貴?) (–1864, executed)

Other princes include:

  • An Prince (安王), Hong Renfa (洪仁發), Hong Xiuquan's eldest brother
  • Yong Prince (勇王), Hong Rengui (洪仁貴)
  • Fu Prince (福王), Hong Renfu (洪仁富)

An attempt to take Shanghai in August 1860 was repulsed by a force of Chinese troops and western officers under the command of Frederick Townsend Ward. This army would later become the 'Ever Victorious Army', led by 'Chinese' Gordon, and would be instrumental in the defeat of the Taiping rebels. Imperial forces were reorganized under the command of Zeng Guofan and Li Hongzhang, and the Imperial reconquest began in earnest. By early 1864 Imperial control in most areas was well established.

Hong declared that God would defend Nanjing, but in June 1864, with Imperial forces approaching, he died of food poisoning as the result of ingesting wild vegetables as the city began to run out of food. His body was buried in the former Ming Imperial Palace where it was later exhumed by the conquering Zeng to verify his death, then cremated. Hong's ashes were later blasted out of a cannon in order to ensure that his remains have no resting place as eternal punishment for the uprising.

Four months before the fall of the Heavenly Kingdom of Taiping, Hong Xiuquan passed the throne to Hong Tianguifu, his eldest son, fifteen years old. Hong Tianguifu was unable to do anything to restore the Kingdom, so the Kingdom was quickly destroyed when Nanjing fell in July 1864 to the Imperial armies after vicious street-by-street fighting. Most of the princes were executed by Qing Imperials in Jinling Town (金陵城), Nanjing.

Although the fall of Nanjing in 1864 marked the destruction of the Taiping regime, the fight was not yet over. There were still several hundred thousand Taiping rebel troops continuing the fight, with more than a quarter-million Taiping rebels fighting in the border regions of Jiangxi and Fujian alone. It would take more than half a decade to finally put down all remnants of the Taiping Rebellion: it was not until August 1871 that the last Taiping rebel army led by Shi Dakai's commander, General Li Fuzhong (李福忠) was completely wiped out by the governmental forces in the border region of Hunan, Guizhou and Guangxi.

The Nian Rebellion (捻軍起義) (1853–1868), and several Muslim rebellions in the southwest (Panthay Rebellion, 1855–1873) and the northwest (Hui Rebellion in Gansu and Shaanxi, 1862–1877) continued to pose considerable problems for the Qing; some former Taiping rebels participated in these uprisings.

Most accurate sources put the total deaths during the 15 years of the rebellion at about 20 million civilians and army personnel.[10] Some historians estimate the combination of natural disasters together with the political insurrections may have cost as many as 200 million Chinese lives between 1850 and 1865[11]. That figure is generally thought to be an exaggeration, as it is approximately half the estimated population of China in 1851[12]. Modern estimates are that China’s population had been about 410 million in 1850 and, after the Taiping, Nien, Muslim, Panthay, Miao and other smaller rebellions, amounted to about 350 million in 1873.[13].

At the Third Battle of Nanking in 1864, more than 100,000 were killed in three days.

The rebellion happened at roughly the same time as the American Civil War. Though almost certainly the largest civil war of the nineteenth century (in terms of numbers under arms), it is debatable whether the Taiping Rebellion involved more soldiers than the Napoleonic Wars earlier in the century, and so it is uncertain whether it should be considered the largest war of the nineteenth century.

The rebellion's army was its key strength. It was marked by a high level of discipline and fanaticism. They typically wore a uniform of red jackets with blue trousers and grew their hair long — in Chinese they were known as Chángmáo (長毛, meaning "long hair"). The large numbers of women serving in the Taiping Heavenly Army also distinguished it from 19th century armies.

Combat was always bloody and extremely brutal, with little artillery but huge forces equipped with small arms. By 1856, the Taiping armies numbered just over 1 million. Their main strategy of conquest was to take major cities, consolidate their hold on the cities, then march out into the surrounding countryside to battle Imperial forces. Estimates of the overall size of the Taiping Heavenly Army varied from 1,000,000 to 3,000,000.

The organization of a Taiping army corps was thus:

These corps were placed into armies of varying sizes. In addition to the main Taiping forces organised along the above lines, there were also thousands of pro-Taiping groups fielding their own forces of irregulars.

Ethnically, the Taiping Heavenly army was formed at the outset largely from two groups: the Hakka, a Hàn Chinese sub-group (客家 pinyin: kèjiā, literally “guest families” or “guest households”), and the Zhuàng (a non-Han ethnic group), both of which were minority peoples as compared to the Hàn Chinese sub-groups that form dominant regional majorities across south China. It is no coincidence that Hóng Xiùquán and the other Taiping royals were Hakka. As a Hàn sub-group, the Hakka were frequently marginalized economically and politically, having migrated to the regions they inhabit only after other Hàn groups were already established there. For example, when the Hakka settled in Guǎngdōng and parts of Guǎngxī, speakers of Cantonese (粵/粤) were already the dominant regional Hàn group there and had been for some time, just as speakers of various dialects of Mín (閩/闽) are locally dominant in Fújiàn province. The Hakka settled throughout South China and beyond, but as latecomers they generally had to establish their communities on rugged, less fertile land scattered on the fringe of the local majority group’s settlements. As their name (“guest households”) suggests, the Hakka were generally treated as migrant newcomers, often subject to hostility and derision from local majority Hàn populations. Consequently, the Hakka, to a greater extent than other Hàn Chinese, have been historically associated with popular unrest and rebellion.

The other significant ethnic group in the Taiping army were the Zhuàng (Simplified Chinese: 壮族; pinyin: Zhuàngzú), an indigenous people of Tai origin and China’s largest non-Han ethnic minority group. Over the centuries Zhuàng communities had been adopting Hàn Chinese culture. This was possible because, given the linguistic complexity of south China, where many of the dialects of Han Chinese are not mutually intelligible, Hàn culture in the region accommodates a great deal of linguistic diversity, so the Zhuàng could be absorbed as if the Zhuàng language were just another Hàn Chinese dialect (which it is not). As Zhuàng communities were integrating with the Hàn at different rates, a certain amount of friction between Hàn and Zhuàng was inevitable, with Zhuàng unrest on occasion leading to armed uprisings.[14] The second tier of the Taiping army was an ethnic mix that included many Zhuàng. Prominent at this level was Shí Dákāi (石達開 / 石达开), who was half-Hakka, half-Zhuàng and spoke both languages fluently, making him quite a rare asset to the Taiping leadership[citation needed].

In the later stages of the Taiping rebellion, the number of Hàn Chinese in the army from Hàn groups other than the Hakka increased substantially.[citation needed] However, the Hakka and the Zhuàng (who constituted as much as 25% of the Taiping army), as well as other non-Hàn ethnic minority groups (many of them of Tai origin related to the Zhuàng ), continued to feature prominently in the rebellion throughout its duration, with virtually no leaders emerging from any Hàn Chinese group other than the Hakka.[citation needed]

Socially and economically, the Taipings came almost exclusively from the lowest classes. Many of the southern Taiping troops were former miners, especially those coming from the Zhuang. Very few Taipings, even in the leadership caste, came from the imperial bureaucracy. Almost none were landlords and in occupied territories landlords were often executed. In this sense the Taiping army was a prototype for the People's Liberation Army of the twentieth century.

Opposing these forces was an imperial army with a size of 2 million to 5 million regulars along with hundreds of thousands of regional militias and foreign mercenaries operating in support. Among the imperial forces was the elite Ever Victorious Army, consisting of Chinese soldiers led by a European officer corps (see Frederick Townsend Ward and Charles Gordon). A particularly famous imperial force was the Xiang Army of Zeng Guofan.

Although keeping accurate records was something Imperial China traditionally did very well, the decentralized nature of the Imperial war effort (relying on regional forces) and the fact that the war was a civil war and therefore very chaotic meant that reliable figures are impossible to find. The destruction of the Heavenly Kingdom also meant that any records it possessed were destroyed.

  • Jonathan Spence, God's Chinese Son: The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom of Hong Xiuquan (1996) ISBN 0-393-03844-0
  • Thomas H. Reilly, The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom: Rebellion and the Blasphemy of Empire (2004) ISBN 0-295-98430-9
  • Lindley, Augustus, Ti-ping Tien-Kwoh: The History of the Ti-Ping Revolution (1866, reprinted 1970) OCLC 3467844 Google books access
  • Hsiu-ch°êng Li, translator, The Autobiography of the Chung-Wang (Confession of the Loyal Prince) (reprinted 1970) ISBN 9780275027230
  • Carr, Caleb, The Devil Soldier: The American Soldier of Fortune Who Became a God in China (1994) ISBN 0-679-76128-4
  • Gray, Jack, Rebellions and Revolutions: China from the 1800s to the 1980s (1990), ISBN: 0-19-821576-2

  • Both China's CCTV and Hong Kong's TVB made historical dramas about the Taiping Rebellion. The series on CCTV ran for 48 episodes, and TVB's Twilight of a Nation had 40 episodes.
  • A strategy computer game based on the Taiping Rebellion has been made in China, and is primarily available in mainland China and Taiwan. The player can play as either the Qing government or the Taiping Rebels.
  • Robert Carter's historical novel "Barbarians" (Orion, 1998, ISBN 0-75281-339-0), deals in detail with the rebellion and the politics surrounding it.
  • Taiping society — in some sources, the Heavenly King himself — is given credit for developing the popular Chinese game of Mahjong.
  • Flashman and the Dragon (1986) — A portion of the memoirs of the fictional Harry Paget Flashman recount his adventures during the Anglo-Chinese Second Opium War and the Taiping Rebellion.
  • The Consumer Goods' song "Taiping Riverboat" from their 2006 album "Pop Goes the Pigdog!" tells of the construction of Nanjing and the subsequent defense of the Heavenly Kingdom through a first-person narrative.
  • The Warlords is a 2007 movie with a setting based on the Taiping Rebellion.

  1. ^ Chinese Cultural Studies: Concise Political History of China
  2. ^ The Great War: A Review of the Explanations
  3. ^ Taiping Rebellion: The destruction of the Chinese culture
  4. ^ Spence 1996, p. 243
  5. ^ Spence 1996, p. 25
  6. ^ Spence 1996, p. 234
  7. ^ Spence 1996, p. 31
  8. ^ Spence 1999, p. 172
  9. ^ Wsu.edu. "Wsu.edu." Taiping Rebellion. Retrieved on 2007-04-11.
  10. ^ Userserols. "Userserols." Statistics of Wars, Oppressions and Atrocities of the Nineteenth Century. Retrieved on 2007-04-11.
  11. ^ Shangri-la-river. "Shangri-la-river." The Bridge section. Retrieved on 2007-04-11.
  12. ^ Afe.easia. "Columbia.edu." "China's Population Growth throughout history." Retrieved on 2007-04-11.
  13. ^ John King Fairbank, The Great Chinese Revolution 1800-1985 (New York: Harper & Row, 1986), 81.
  14. ^ Ramsey, Robert, S. (1987). The Languages of China. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 167, 232-236. ISBN 0-691-06694-9. 

  • Spence, Jonathan D. (1996) God's Chinese Son. New York: Norton.
  • Spence, Jonathan D. (1999) The Search for Modern China. New York: Norton.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, 1851–1864
Personal Name Period of Reign Era Names "Nian Hao 年號" (and their according range of years)
Hong Xiuquan洪秀全
August 1851 – May 1864
Yannian (元年 Yuánnián) 1851–1864
Hong Tianguifu洪天貴福
May 1864 – August 1864
None
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