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Li Hongzhang

 

(born Feb. 15, 1823, Hefei, Anhui province, China — died Nov. 7, 1901, Beijing) Chinese statesman who represented China in the series of humiliating negotiations at the end of the Sino-French War (1883 – 85), Sino-Japanese War (1894 – 95), and Boxer Rebellion (1900). Much earlier in his career, Li had helped with the suppression of the Taiping Rebellion (1850 – 64) and had put down the Nian Rebellion (c. 1852 – 68). At that time, he came in contact with Westerners (notably England's Charles George Gordon) and Western weapons and became convinced that China needed Western-style firepower if it wanted to protect its sovereignty. In 1870, when Li was appointed governor-general of the capital province, Zhili, he was able to build arsenals, found a military academy, establish two modern naval bases, purchase warships, and undertake other "self-strengthening" measures. Through modernization he hoped to preserve traditional China, but within traditional China Li's innovations could not develop fully, and he was fatally hampered by the system he was trying to protect.

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Biography: Li Hung-Chang
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Li Hung-chang (1823-1901), Chinese soldier, statesman, diplomat, and industrialist, was one of the most powerful and influential officials in China and a leader of the Self-strengthening movement.

During the latter half of the 19th century China had to contend with internal rebellions and everincreasing foreign encroachments. To cope with this twin threat, a few far-sighted Chinese leaders advocated a policy of military and economic development along Western lines which would give China the strength to suppress the rebellions, get rid of the Westerners, and preserve its superior traditional culture. This movement was known as the Self-strengthening movement.

Li Hung-chang was born on Feb. 15, 1823, in Hofei in Anhwei Province. In 1843 he passed the first of the official examinations. Shortly thereafter he set out for Peking. Because Li's father and the soldier-statesman Tseng Kuo-fan both had received their chin-shih degrees (the highest academic degree) in 1838, Li became Tseng's student in the capital, and thus began the long and close association between these two men which was to affect the course of Chinese history. In 1844 Li passed the second examination and in 1847 achieved the chin-shih degree and was made a bachelor of the Hanlin Academy - a signal honor.

Military Career

Li's budding career as a scholar-official in the capital was cut short in 1853, when he and his father were ordered to return to Anhwei to organize the local militia to fight the Taiping and Nien rebels. For the next 6 years he fought the rebels in Anhwei and received honors but was dissatisfied and frustrated in what he considered a backwash area. In 1858 he resigned his position in Anhwei and set out to join Tseng, who was the commander of his own army fighting the Taiping rebels in Kiangsi.

Between 1859 and 1862 Li served under Tseng in various military and administrative capacities. He has been described during this period as "a brash, young genius," and because of this, his relations with Tseng were often strained. Tseng's attempts to discipline and mold Li's character, however, gradually met with success, and in 1861 Tseng sent Li back to Anhwei to recruit an army which came to be known as the Huai Army. In 1862 Li led his new army to Shanghai and was concurrently made governor of Kiangsu Province.

In Shanghai, Li for the first time came into close contact with foreigners and saw for himself the military strength of the West. The Ever Victorious Army, a Chinese mercenary group led by foreigners, also proved to Li that, given the proper leadership, training, and weapons, Chinese soldiers could fight effectively. Operating out of Shanghai, Li's Huai Army, spearheaded at times by the Ever Victorious Army, cleared Kiangsu of Taiping rebels. Through the efforts of Tseng, Li, and Gen. Tso Tsung-t'ang, in Chekiang, the Taiping Rebellion was crushed in 1864.

Li continued to work closely with Tseng, who was the governor general in Nanking and nominally Li's superior. The two men cooperated in rehabilitating the Shanghai-Soochow area, established an arsenal in 1865, and supported each other's efforts at reform and in the suppression of the Nien Rebellion between 1865 and 1868. When Tseng was made governor general of Chihli in 1868, Li assigned elements of his Huai Army to Tseng so that Tseng would have a military force on which he could rely.

After the suppression of the Nien Rebellion in 1868, Li kept his army intact. It was the best army in China, owed him personal allegiance, and was the basis of Li's further rise in power. When France threatened war because of the Tientsin Massacre in 1870, Li, who was the governor general of Hunan and Hupei, was ordered to bring the Huai Army to Tientsin to support Tseng in the negotiations. While en route he received word of his appointment as the governor general of Chihli to replace Tseng, who had been sent back to Nanking. Li held this post for the next 25 years, and because of his talents, his army, and his close proximity to Peking he played a leading role in China's international and domestic affairs.

Reforms and Industrial Revolution

As the superintendent of trade for the northern ports, a post he held concurrently with his governor generalship after 1870, Li was responsible for all trade relations with foreigners in the northern half of China. As a result, especially after 1875, he gradually became a one-man foreign office. He was responsible for, or involved in, all of China's negotiations with foreign powers from 1871 until his death. For his efforts he was called a traitor and an appeaser by the war advocates, but Li knew that China had to buy time in order to build up its strength if it hoped to get rid of Western influence. The price it had to pay, he felt, was to give in to the foreign demands without a fight. Experience had shown that military defeats cost China more than diplomatic defeats, so Li was willing to pay the lesser price.

Li's efforts in Western-style industrial development grew out of his desire to see China economically, as well as militarily, strong. In 1872 he established the China Merchants Steam Navigation Company in order to restore China's economic rights, which the foreigners had usurped by taking over the coastal and inland shipping. To provide fuel for his ships he founded the Kaiping mines in 1877 and built China's first railway in 1880 to get the coal to the docks. He established the first telegraph lines in 1881, and in 1882 the first cotton mill, which was granted a monopoly in order to prevent the foreign interests from invading the market and removing the profits from the country. In all his commercial and industrial enterprises Li made sure that they were financed and controlled by Chinese.

Despite Li's concerted efforts to build up China's military defenses in the form of a modern army, navy, forts, arsenals, docks, and military academies, he was a realist, although an arrogant one, and recognized that he was bucking a conservative, self-seeking system that was innately opposed to anything Western or anything that involved change. With the halfhearted support of the empress dowager Tz'u-hsi, he was able to hold the conservatives at bay until 1894, when they pushed China into war with Japan, and all Li's efforts at "self-strengthening" failed to save China from defeat. He had failed to realize that the ships and guns of the West would be of no use without the ideas and institutions of the West.

Final Years

Although Li had been opposed to the war, he was blamed for the fiasco, as it was his army and navy that had fought and lost, and he narrowly escaped with his life. He was further humiliated by the Japanese insistence that he personally sign the Treaty of Shimonoseki in 1895, which ended the war. To get him out of the country until the furor died down, Li was sent to Russia early in 1896 as China's representative at the coronation of the Czar. He conferred with Bismarck in Germany and Gladstone in England and returned to China from the United States and Canada in October.

Until he was appointed governor general at Canton in 1899, Li was in semiretirement, continuing to hold only minor posts. However, in 1900 his stay in Canton was interrupted by the Boxer Rebellion in the North, and he was once again called upon to save his country. The foreigners, in retaliation for the Boxer siege of the legation quarter in Peking, had mounted an eight-nation allied force which had occupied the capital. He negotiated the Boxer Protocol, which he signed only a month before his death on Nov. 7, 1901.

Further Reading

The two most recent books in English on Li are Kenneth E. Folsom, Friends, Guests, and Colleagues (1968), in which Li's career is used as an example of the personal relationships in Chinese government and society; and Stanley Spector, Li Hung-chang and the Huai Army (1964). Arthur W. Hummel, ed., Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period (2 vols., 1943), contains a lengthy biography of Li.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Li Hung-chang
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Li Hung-chang (lē hūng-jäng), 1823-1901, Chinese statesman and general. His first success was as a commander of forces fighting the Taiping Rebellion. As viceroy of the capital province of Zhili (1870-95), he controlled Chinese foreign affairs for the Empress Dowager Tz'u Hsi. Li was the chief negotiator of the Treaty of Shimonoseki (1895), which ended the First Sino-Japanese War. In 1896 he negotiated the treaty that granted Russia the right to build the Trans-Siberian RR across N Manchuria. He protected foreigners when he was viceroy of Guangzhou during the Boxer Uprising (1900), and he was able to reduce the demands of the foreign powers for reparations. His moderately progressive internal policy included modernization of the army and railroad building.
Wikipedia: Li Hongzhang
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This is a Chinese name; the family name is 李 (Li).
Li Hongzhang
李鴻章


In office
1871 – 1895
Preceded by Zeng Guofan
Succeeded by Wang Wenzhao
In office
1900 – 1901
Preceded by Yu Lu
Succeeded by Yuan Shikai

Viceroy of Huguang
In office
1867 – 1870
Preceded by Guan Wen
Succeeded by Li Hanzhang

In office
1899 – 1900
Preceded by Tan Zhonglin
Succeeded by Tao Mo

Born February 15, 1823(1823-02-15)
Hefei, Anhui, China
Died November 7, 1901 (aged 78)
Qing Dynasty Beijing
Occupation Official
General
Diplomatist

Li Hongzhang (simplified Chinese: 李鸿章traditional Chinese: 李鴻章pinyin: Lǐ Hóngzhāng; Wade-Giles: Li Hung-chang), Marquis Suyi of the First Class (), GCVO, (February 15, 1823 – November 7, 1901), also spelled Li Hung-chang, was a Chinese general who ended several major rebellions, and a leading statesman of the late Qing Empire. He served in important positions of the Imperial Court, once holding the office of the Viceroy of Zhili.

He was best known in the west for his diplomatic negotiation skills. Since 1894 First Sino-Japanese War, Li has been a literary symbol for China's embarrassments in the late Qing Dynasty. His image in China remains largely controversial, with most criticizing his lack of political insight and his failure to win a single external military campaign against foreign powers, but praising his role as a pioneer of industrial and military modernization in Late Qing, his diplomatic skills and his internal military campaigns against the Taiping Rebellion. For his life work Queen Victoria made him a Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order.

Contents

Life

Li Hungzhang was born in the village of Qunzhi (Chinese: 群治村) in Modian township (Chinese: 磨店鄉), 14 kilometers (9 miles) northeast of central Hefei, now the capital of Anhui province. From very early in life, he showed remarkable ability, and he became a shengyuan in the imperial examination system. In 1847, he obtained jinshi degree, the highest level in the Imperial examination system. Two years later gained admittance into the Hanlin Academy. Shortly after this the central provinces of the empire were invaded by the Taiping rebels, and in defence of his native district he raised a regiment of militia. His service to the imperial cause attracted the attention of Zeng Guofan, the generalissimo in command.

In 1859, Li was transferred to the province of Fujian, where he was given the rank of taotai, or attendant of circuit.At Zeng's request, he fought the rebels. He found his cause supported by the "Ever Victorious Army," which, having been raised by an American named Frederick Townsend Ward, was placed under the command of Charles George Gordon. With this support Li gained numerous victories leading to the surrender of Suzhou. For these exploits, he was made governor of Jiangsu, was decorated with an imperial yellow jacket, and was enfeoffed as an earl.

An incident connected with the surrender of Suzhou soured Li's relationship with Gordon. By an arrangement with Gordon, the rebel princes yielded Nanjing on condition that their lives should be spared. In spite of the agreement, Li ordered their instant execution. This breach of faith so infuriated Gordon that he seized a rifle, intending to shoot the falsifier of his word, and would have done so had Li not fled. On the suppression of the rebellion (1864), Li took up his duties as governor, but was not long allowed to remain in civil life. On the outbreak of the Nian Rebellion in Henan and Shandong (1866), he was ordered again to take to the field, and after some misadventures, he succeeded in suppressing the movement. A year later, he was appointed viceroy of Huguang, where he remained until 1870, when the Tianjin Massacre necessitated his transfer to the scene of the outrage. He was appointed to the viceroyalty of the metropolitan province of Zhili, and justified his appointment by the energy with which he suppressed all attempts to keep alive the anti-foreign sentiment among the people. For his services, he was made imperial tutor and member of the grand council of the empire, and was decorated with many-eyed peacocks' feathers.

To his duties as viceroy were added those of the superintendent of trade, and from that time until his death, with a few intervals of retirement, he created the foreign policy of China. He concluded the Chefoo Convention with Sir Thomas Wade (1876), and thus ended the difficulty caused by the murder of Mr. Margary in Yunnan; he arranged treaties with Peru and Japan, and he directed the Chinese policy in Korea.

On the death of the Tongzhi Emperor in 1875, he introduced a large armed force into the capital and effected a coup d'etat which placed the Guangxu Emperor on the throne under the tutelage of the two dowager empresses. In 1886, on the conclusion of the Sino-French War, he arranged a treaty with France. Li was impressed with the necessity of strengthening the empire, and while Viceroy of Zhili he raised a large well-drilled and well-armed force, and spent vast sums both in fortifying Port Arthur and the Taku forts and in increasing the navy. For years, he had watched the successful reforms effected in Japan and had a well-founded dread of coming into conflict with that nation.

Li Hongzhang with Lord Salisbury and Lord Curzon

Because of his prominent role in Chinese diplomacy in Korea and of his strong political connections in Manchuria, Li Hongzhang found himself leading Chinese forces during the disastrous Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895). In fact, it was mostly the armies that he established and controlled that did the fighting, whereas other Chinese troops led by his rivals and political enemies did not come to their aid. Rampant corruption in the army further weakened China's military. For instance, one official missapropriated ammunition funds for personal use. As a result, shells ran out for the some of the battleships during battle forcing one navy commander, Deng Shichang, to resort to ramming the enemies' ship. The defeat of his modernized troops and a small naval force at the hands of the Japanese undermined his political standing, as well as the wider cause of the Self-Strengthening Movement. Li paid a personal price for China's defeat, while signing the Treaty of Shimonoseki ending the war: a Japanese assassin fired at him and wounded him below the left eye. Due to the diplomatic loss of face, Japan dropped some of its harshest compensation demands in said treaty.

Li Hungzhang
Names (details)
Known in English as: Li Hongzhang or Li Hung-chang
Traditional Chinese: 李鴻章
Simplified Chinese: 李鸿章
Pinyin: Lǐ Hóngzhāng
Wade-Giles: Li Hung-chang
Peerage : Marquis Suyi of the First Class 一等肅毅侯
Courtesy names (字): Jiànfǔ (漸甫)
Zǐfù (子黻)
Pseudonyms (號):
(Yisou and Shengxin
used in his old age)
Shǎoquán (少荃)
Yísǒu (儀叟)
Shěngxīn (省心)
Nickname: Mr. Li the Second (李二先生)
(i.e. 2nd son of his father)
Posthumous name: Wénzhōng (文忠)
(Refined and Loyal)

In 1896, he toured Europe and the United States of America, where he advocated reform of the American immigration policies that had greatly restricted Chinese immigration after the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 (renewed in 1892). (He also witnessed the 1896 Royal Naval Fleet Review at Spithead.) It was during his visit to Britain in 1896 that Queen Victoria made him a Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order.[1]

Li Hongzhang played a major role in ending the Boxer Rebellion. In 1901, he was the principal Chinese negotiator with the foreign powers who had captured Beijing, and, on September 7, 1901, he signed the treaty (Boxer Protocol) ending the Boxer crisis, obtaining the departure of the foreign armies at the price of huge indemnities for China. Exhausted from the negotiations, he died from liver inflammation two months later at Shenlian Temple in Beijing. Guangxu created him the title Marquis Suyi of the First Class (一等肅毅候). After his death, this Peerage was inherited by his grandson Li Guojie.

Opinions and legacy

Since the First Sino-Japanese War (1894), Li Hongzhang has been a target of criticism and was portrayed in many ways as a traitor to the Chinese people, an infamous name that lives in history. Well-known negative comments from common Chinese people, such as "Actor Yang the Third is dead; Mr. Li the Second is the traitor" (楊三已死無蘇丑,李二先生是漢奸), have made the name Li Hongzhang a notorious trademark for traitors. In the Mainland this negative verdict is echoed through history textbooks and other media until today.

As early as 1885, General Zuo Zongtang, an equally famous but more respected Chinese military leader, accused Li Hongzhang of being a traitor. The Chinese navy had been eliminated in August 1884 at the Battle of Foochow, In July 1885, Li signed the Sino-French treaty to confirm the Treaty of Hué accepting conditions that did not reflect the decisive victory of the Chinese army in the Battle of Bang Bo in March 1885, which brought about the fall of the Jules Ferry government in France. General Zuo disapproved Li's behavior, predicting that Li would be notorious in Chinese history (“李鴻章誤盡蒼生,將落個千古罵名”).

According to Prince Esper Esperovich Ouchtomsky, Li Hongzhang accepted bribery of 3,000,000 Russian rubles (about US$1,900,000 at the time) at the time of signing the "Mutual Defense Treaty between China and Russia" on June 3, 1896. In his memoir "Strategic Victory over the Qing Dynasty", Prince Ouchtomsky wrote: "The day after the signing of the Mutual Defense Treaty between China and Russia, Romanov, the director of the general office of the Department of Treasury of the Russian Empire, chief officer Qitai Luo and I signed an agreement document to pay Li Hongzhang. The document stipulates that the first 1,000,000 rubles will be paid at the time when the Emperor of the Qing Dynasty announces the approval of constructing the Chinese Eastern Railway; the second 1,000,000 rubles will be paid at the time of signing the contract to build the railway and deciding the route of the railway; the last 1,000,000 rubles will be paid at the time when the construction of the railway is finished. The document was not given to Li Hongzhang, but kept in a top secret folder in the Department of Treasury of Russia." The 3,000,000 rubles were deposited into a dedicated fund of the Russo Chinese Bank. According to the records of the Russian Department of Treasury, Li Hongzhong received 1,702,500 rubles of the three million, with receipts available at the Russian Winter Palace archive.[citation needed]

Although some Chinese historians reappraised Li's role already in the early 80ies when they discussed the Self-Strengthening Movement, Li Hongzhang's image in history education and the public in Mainland China remained negative until the TV series Towards the Republic was released in 2003. In this controversial history soap (历史电视剧) produced by China's Central Television station, Li was for the first time introduced as a hero to the Chinese audience. Although the series was patriotic in tone it was later banned due to its positive portrayal of Li Hongzhang and Yuan Shikai and unwelcome discussions of democracy it had triggered.

Many historians and scholars consider Li a sophisticated politician, an adept diplomat and an industry pioneer in the later Qing Dynasty era of Chinese history. Though many of Li's signed treaties were considered unequal and humiliating for China and he was for some decades named a traitor, more and more historical documents are being found showing some of Li's heroic episodes in his encounters with foreigners[citation needed].

See also

References

  1. ^ Antony Best, "Race, Monarchy, and the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, 1902–1922,"Social Science Japan Journal 2006 9(2):171-186
  • Hummel, Arthur William, ed. Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period (1644-1912). 2 vols. Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1943.
  • Liu, Kwang-ching. "The Confucian as Patriot and Pragmatist: Li Hung-Chang's Formative Years, 1823-1866." Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 30 (1970): 5-45.
  • Liang Qichao,"Biography of Li Hongzhang"
Political offices
Preceded by
Zeng Guofan
Acting Viceroy of Liangjiang
1865–1866
Succeeded by
Zeng Guofan
Preceded by
Guan Wen
Viceroy of Huguang
1867–1870
Succeeded by
Li Hanzhang
Preceded by
Zeng Guofan
Viceroy of Zhili and Minister of Beiyang (1st time)
1871—1895
Succeeded by
Wang Wenzhao
Preceded by
Tan Zhonglin
Viceroy of Liangguang
1899─1900
Succeeded by
Tao Mo
Preceded by
Yu Lu
Viceroy of Zhili and Minister of Beiyang (2nd time)
1900—1901
Succeeded by
Yuan Shikai

 
 
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