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I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia
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I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

I. European Trade With China

Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia

Page 2: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

Portuguese traders reached China in 1514

A. Strict Limits on Trade

Page 3: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

A. Strict Limits on Trade

The Ming allowed the Portuguese to build a trading post at Macao, near Canton

Page 4: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

A. Strict Limits on Trade

European goods were inferior to Chinese products and the Chinese demanded payment in gold or silver

Page 5: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

A. Strict Limits on Trade

Trade was supervised by imperial officials and Europeans had to sail away when the trading season ended

Page 6: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

B. Scholars and Missionaries

A few Europeans, like Jesuit priest Matteo Ricci, made a positive impression on Ming China

Page 7: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

B. Scholars and Missionaries

Ricci learned to speak Chinese and adopted Chinese dress but had little success spreading religion

Page 8: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

II. The Manchu Conquest

The Ming dynasty was failing and in 1644, Manchu armies seized Beijing and made it their capital

Page 9: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

A. Qing Rule

The Manchu set up a new dynasty called the Qing (“pure”) - two important rulers were Kangxi and his grandson Qianlong

Emperor Kangxi Emperor Qianlong

Page 10: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

A. Qing Rule

Kangxi ruled for 61 years and spread Chinese power and culture into Central Asia

Page 11: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

A. Qing Rule

Qianlong ruled for 60 years, expanded China's borders, and ruled the largest area in China's history

Manchu ruled China: Qing dynasty (1644-1911AD) - last

imperial dynasty in China

Page 12: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

B. Prosperity

The Chinese economy grew, new crops from the Americas boosted farm output, and the population boomed

Page 13: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

B. Prosperity

Handicraft industries grew and European demand for Chinese goods increased

Page 14: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

C. Response to Westerners

Restricting foreign trade proved disastrous - in the 1800s China learned about western advances the hard way

Page 15: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

III. Korea and Isolation

Like China, Korea restricted outside contacts in the 1500s and 1600s and became known as the "Hermit Kingdom”

Page 16: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

III. Korea and IsolationA Japanese invasion in the 1590s devastated the land of Korea

Page 17: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

III. Korea and Isolation

In 1636, the Manchus conquered Korea and Korea became a tributary state

Page 18: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

IV. Japan and Foreign TradersThe Portuguese reached Japan in 1543, followed by the Spanish, Dutch, and English

Page 19: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

IV. Japan and Foreign TradersAt first, Japan was more open to European missionaries like Francis Xavier than China

Page 20: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

IV. Japan and Foreign Traders

The Tokugawa shoguns became hostile and saw foreigners as agents of an invading force

Page 21: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

IV. Japan and Foreign Traders

They expelled missionaries and executed thousands of Japanese Christians

Page 22: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

IV. Japan and Foreign Traders

By 1638, the Tokugawas barred all western merchants, forbid Japanese travel abroad and outlawed the building of large ships

Page 23: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

IV. Japan and Foreign Traders

They permitted just one or two Dutch ships a year to trade at a small island in Nagasaki harbor

Page 24: I. European Trade With China Chap 15.4 – Encounters in East Asia.

IV. Japan and Foreign TradersJapan maintained a policy of strict isolation until it was forced to reopen contacts with the western world in 1853