The Second Opium War or Arrow War was a war of the United Kingdom and France against the Qing Dynasty of China from 1856 to 1860.
The Qing court rejected the revision demands from Britain, France, and the USA.
On October 8 1856, Qing officials boarded the Arrow, a Chinese-owned ship that had been registered in Hong Kong and was suspected of piracy and smuggling. Twelve Chinese subjects were arrested and imprisoned. This has come to be known as the "Arrow Incident". The British officials in Guangzhou demanded the release of the sailors claiming that because the ship had recently been British-registered it was protected under the Treaty of Nanjing. Only when this was shown to be a weak argument did the British insist that the Arrow had been flying a British ensign and that the Qing soldiers had insulted the flag. Faced with fighting the Taiping Rebellion the Qing government was in no position to resist the West militarily.
Although the British were delayed by the Indian Mutiny, they responded to the "Arrow Incident" in 1857 and attacked Guangzhou from the Pearl River. Ye Mingshen, the then governor of Guangdong and Guangxi provinces ordered a non-resistance command to all of the Chinese soldiers on the forts. After taking the fort near Guangzhou with no effort, the British Army attacked Guangzhou. American warships, including Levant, bombed Guangzhou. The people in Guangzhou and soldiers launched a resistance against the invaders and forced them to retreat from Humen.
The British Parliament decided to seek redress from China based on the report about the "Arrow Incident" submitted by Harry Parkes, British Consul to Guangzhou. France, the USA, and Russia received requests from Britain to form an alliance. France joined the British action against China, prompted by the execution of a French missionary, Father August Chapdelaine ("Father Chapdelaine Incident"), by Chinese local authorities in Guangxi province. The USA and Russia sent envoys to Hong Kong to offer help to the British and French, though in the end they sent no military aid.
The British and the French joined forces under Admiral Sir Michael Seymour. The British army led by Lord Elgin, and the French army led by Gros, attacked and occupied Guangzhou in late 1857. Ye Mingshen was captured, and Bo-gui, the governor of Guangdong, surrendered. A joint committee of the Alliance was formed. Bo-gui remained at his original post to maintain order on behalf of the aggressors. The British-French Alliance maintained control of Guangzhou for nearly four years. Ye Mingshen was exiled to Calcutta in India where he starved himself to death.
The coalition then cruised north to briefly capture the Taku forts near Tientsin (Tianjin) in May 1858.
The major points of the treaty were:
In 1860, an Anglo-French force gathered at Hong Kong and then carried out a landing at Pei Tang on August 3, and a successful assault on the Taku Forts on August 21. On September 26, the force arrived at Beijing and had captured the city by October 6. Appointing his brother, Prince Gong, to be in charge of negotiations, Emperor Xianfeng fled to the Summer Palace in Chengde. British-French troops in Beijing set the Summer Palace and the Old Summer Palace on fire following several days of looting. The Old Summer Palace was totally destroyed. Beijing was not occupied; however the troops remained outside the city itself.
The motives for the destruction of the Summer Palace are an interesting subject for debate. The official reason stated by Elgin was to discourage the Chinese from using kidnappings as a bargaining tool, and to exact revenge on the Emperor for his violation of the flag of truce. Other options, such as executions, were discussed but Elgin deemed this the "least objectionable" as it hurt the despotic government but did not disrupt the daily lives of the innocent Chinese people. Western Historians assert that it was motivated by the torture and murder of almost twenty western prisoners, including two British envoys and a journalist for the London Times. The Manchu Chinese of that era raised torture to a cruel art form including death by a thousand cuts while in a wire jacket and death by mortification, where limbs were tourniqueted off one by one. In that context Elgin was further insulted by the complete opulent decadence of the Old Summer Palace, in contrast to that the populace were reduced to extreme poverty. Chinese historians have argued that the destruction was a cover-up for widespread looting, while ignoring the evidence of torture, and Elgin burning what remained of the Palace, rather than looting. Elgin was acutely sensitive to the charge of looting as it was his own father, Thomas Bruce (1776-1841), who removed, from 1799 to 1803, what are now known as the Elgin Marbles from the Acropolis in Greece off to Britain, where they remain to this day a subject of rancor between the Greek and British Governments.
After the Xianfeng emperor and his entourage fled Peking, the June 1858 Treaty of Tientsin was finally ratified by the emperor's brother Prince Gong in the Convention of Peking on October 18 1860, bringing The Second Opium War to an end.
The opium trade was legalized and Christians were granted full civil rights, including the right to own property, and the right to evangelize.
The content of the Convention of Peking includes:
British Empire | British rule in Hong Kong | Wars of China | History of Hong Kong | Wars of the United Kingdom | Anglo-Chinese relations
Втора опиумна война | Anden opiumskrig | Zweiter Opiumkrieg | Seconde guerre de l'opium | מלחמת האופיום השניה | アロー戦争 | Andre opiumkrig | Druga wojna opiumowa | Toinen oopiumsota | 第二次鸦片战争
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It uses material from the
"Second Opium War".
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