Causes Of The Boxer Rebellion

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Throughout most of the nineteenth and early twentieth century, China had gone through a lot of rebellions and wars, including the Boxer Rebellion. The Boxers consisted of a group of peasants who attacked Chinese Christians and foreigners and they also performed physical exercises that believed would make them be invincible. During the Boxer Rebellion, what they were trying to drive European powers out of China. The outcome of this was that the Boxers didn’t succeed at trying to get westernization out of their land.
According to “Boxer Rebellion: Aftermath”, the boxers was, “a Chinese secret organization called the Society of the Righteous and Harmonious Fists who led an uprising in northern China against the spread of Western and Japanese
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The Boxers then fought with a small amount of the government soldiers. Later in the year of 1899, Boxers would then start to attack foreigners and Chinese Christians in western Shandong and the Boxers also damaged a lot of their buildings as well. The Boxers then tried to gain more followers by making anti-foreign propagandas, such as posters and poems, and giving them out to the people in China. Throughout this time period, the Boxers’ and the Qing government’s started to strengthen because they saw that they could benefit off of one another. The Qing government also donated money to the Boxers for armor and to recruit more soldiers. The Boxers then started attacking the capital of China, Beijing, where there was a high population of foreigners and were still trying to kick as much foreigners out of their land. According to “A Prisoner of the Boxer Rebellion, 1900”, the Boxers invaded towns in China saying, “Kill the foreign devils! Kill the secondary foreign devils (Christians)”. On June 21, 1900, Qing Empress Dowager Tzu’u Hzi demanded for a war on the foreign nations in China. Due to the massive amount of deaths and the indulgence to crush the rebellion, America …show more content…
One outcome is that the Eight Nation Alliance drove the Boxers out of Beijing and did achieve their goal of wanting to rescue foreigners besieged by the Boxers. Another outcome was the Qing government was forced to sign the Boxer Protocol and was charged $330,000,000 and was to give the “foreign powers certain territorial rights”(“A Prisoner of the Boxer Rebellion”). These territorial rights included giving the foreign powers access to mineral wealth and trade in China. Also the money from the Boxer Protocol was used to build a university in China called Tsinghua University. According to “Boxer Rebellion: Aftermath”, another agreement that was involved in the Boxer Protocol was that the “Boxer and Chinese government officials involved in the uprising were to be punished”. In order to fulfill this, the Eight Nation Alliance arrested some of the Boxers that were identified. The Qing government was also obligated to write an apology letter for the murder of the German ambassador. According to “The Boxer Rebellion, 1900”, another outcome was that “the price for China was high with a huge bill to pay for the cost of the allied expeditions and memorials built in the honor of the killed diplomats”. Another outcome of the Boxer Rebellion was that China’s army was seen as weak because of its failure to beat the foreigners on their own homeland. One more outcome was that over 1,000 Christians,