February 15, 2013 <Back to Index>
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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 (Chinese: 一等肅毅侯), GCVO (February 15, 1823 – November 7, 1901), also spelled Li Hung-chang, was a Chinese civilian official 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. Although he was best known in the West for his diplomatic negotiation skills, after the 1894 First Sino - Japanese War,
Li became a symbol in China for late Qing dynasty Chinese weakness
vis-a-vis foreign powers. His image in China remains largely
controversial, with criticism on one hand for his lack of political
insight and failure to win a single external military campaign against
foreign powers, and praise on the other hand for his role as a pioneer
of industrial and military modernization, his diplomatic skills, and
the success of his military campaigns against the Taiping Rebellion. For his life work the British Queen Victoria made him a Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order. Li Hongzhang 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 formed an army called the Waigun (淮軍). 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 the Convention of Tientsin with 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 the Empire of Japan and had a well founded dread of coming into conflict with that nation. Several
western sources reported that the Imperial Chinese military under the
direction of Li Hongzhang acquired "Electric torpedoes", which were
deployed in numerous waterways along with fortresses and numerous other
modern military weapons acquired by China. At
the Tientsin Arsenal in 1876, the Chinese developed the capacity to
manufacture these "electric torpedoes" on their own. under Li's
direction.
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 some of the warships 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 this treaty. 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. Li Hongzhang played a major role in ending the Boxer Rebellion.
His early position was that the Qing Dynasty was making a mistake by
supporting the Boxers against the foreign forces. He wrote to Empress Dowager Cixi: My
blood runs cold at the thought of events to come. (...) Under an
enlightened sovereign these Boxers, with their ridiculous claims of
supernatural powers, would most assuredly have been condemned to death
long since... your Majesties ... are still in the hands of traitors,
regarding these Boxers as your dutiful subjects, with the result that
unrest is spreading and alarm universal. Li Hongzhang used the Siege of the International Legations (Boxer Rebellion) as a political weapon against his rivals in Beijing, since he controlled the Chinese Telegraph service,
he exaggerated and lied, claiming that Chinese forces committed
atrocities and murder upon the foreigners and exterminated all of them.
This information was sent to the western world. He aimed to infuriate
the Europeans against the Chinese forces in Beijing, and succeeded in
spreading massive amounts of false information. This led to massive
killing and murders of innocent Chinese civilians by the allied forces
due to Li Hongzhang. In 1901, as his last task for the Qing Dynasty, 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 (等肅毅候). After his death, this Peerage was inherited by his grandson Li Guojie. 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”). After 2007, a popular essay about Li spread on Chinese internet. It claims according to Prince Esper Esperovich Ouchtomsky's memoir "Strategic Victory over the Qing Dynasty", Li Hongzhang accepted a bribe 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. Also it claims "Compilation of Records of the Russian Department of Treasury"
documents Li Hongzhong received 1,702,500 rubles of the three million,
with receipts available at the Russian Winter Palace archive. But the two books never existed.So the rumor remains rumor. Although some Chinese historians reappraised
Li's role already in the early 80s 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. |