Just Napoleon. They'd only recently gotten enough of a stake in India to worry about it.The British fear of an invasion of India through Egypt dates back to Napoleon, possibly even farther back.
Just Napoleon. They'd only recently gotten enough of a stake in India to worry about it.The British fear of an invasion of India through Egypt dates back to Napoleon, possibly even farther back.
That your step-brother has clearly been smoking too much opium. The Opium Wars were decisive in opening China to European trade, as was the product itself. I've read that at one time over half of the adult male population of certain areas was addicted to opium.I had a conversation with my step-brother who said that opium was not a big factor in Europeans taking control of Chinese land, and that it was not a major problem for the Chinese in general. He went on to say that this was actually just exaggerated for the 'drugs-are-bad' crowd. I'm not so convinced, what does CFC say?
I had a conversation with my step-brother who said that opium was not a big factor in Europeans taking control of Chinese land, and that it was not a major problem for the Chinese in general. He went on to say that this was actually just exaggerated for the 'drugs-are-bad' crowd. I'm not so convinced, what does CFC say?
I had a conversation with my step-brother who said that opium was not a big factor in Europeans taking control of Chinese land, and that it was not a major problem for the Chinese in general. He went on to say that this was actually just exaggerated for the 'drugs-are-bad' crowd. I'm not so convinced, what does CFC say?
The primary reason is that Japan successfully centralised their administration and bureaucracy, enabling them to meet the challenge of Westernisation and modernisation effectively. Other countries which attempted this, most notably China, didn't do a good enough job of bringing provincials into line with the central government, nor of stopping corruption from sapping away the funds they tried to use for the purpose of modernising.I'm sure this is a colossally complicated issue so I won't expect any sort of in-depth answer, but a brief one if possible; I was wondering why it is the case that Japan was the only non-Western nation to become a great power in the 19th/early 20th centuries. I think only a handful of countries attempted modernization, and it was only Japan where it succeeded immensely well. Why is that?
This is the potted story: -
English like tea.
English pay silver
English don't have that much silver, desperately need something to fix deficit
English find opium
English sells opium
Opium becomes a problem
Emperor tells his man to clean it up
Man cleans it up
English become angry
English bring gunboats
China loses
China signs unequal treaty
Other powers go medieval on China's arse
My limited reading of the story of Japan was that quite a few people had an idea how to make Japan great. It just so happened that the people with the most number of right ideas got the the guts to raise themselves to a position of power by eliminating political opponents (at first through good old civil warring and then through election manipulation). Now, the alliance between the powers that had the most number of right ideas was respected to such a point that it became ridiculous, and they weren't willing to sacrifice enough of their own powers to think about the really long term, so when those first few guys who brought Japan high up were gone nobody was really sure who was in charge. This would have been fine for a while, I guess, if it wasn't for the dire economic times fostering all that radical jingoism.
As for comparing with other countries, I suppose it's because when a group knows what the right ideas are (and as a consequence we never do find out if they would have the right ideas) they don't have the political will and/or firepower to make those ideas reality, both or either horizontally (against other groups with different ideas) or vertically (say, corrupt local politicians or even the constituents themselves); plus, whenever a group achieves that kind of political control and has that kind of power their ideas tended to be wrong and damaging.
Japan's rise was very pragmatic. Internally it sacrificed the good of the farmers, especially the traditional subsistence farmers, in order to feed the industry which it believed would bring it to world-power levels of wealth and strength. I guess, i.e. pulling out of my ass, if an industrializing country can't keep its farmers in check, either because it fears that the farmers would rebel or the landowners (who tended to be rich) would not cooperate, then it really can't establish industrialization and stuff that accompanied that. Actually, looking back it helped that the Japanese leaders were able to exploit the good fortunes of winning a civil war and using the leverage they got in the aftermath to institute reforms that would otherwise be massively unpopular with many levels of society.
No, actually it all boils down to: the people with the right ideas having enough guns and bodies to throw at people who didn't agree.
Key to the UK being able to acquire quantities of opium significant enough to make a difference was its new control of India, where the stuff could be produced in bulk to be shipped to China.Originally Posted by BananaLee View Post
This is the potted story: -
English like tea.
English pay silver
English don't have that much silver, desperately need something to fix deficit
English find opium
English sells opium
Opium becomes a problem
Emperor tells his man to clean it up
Man cleans it up
English become angry
English bring gunboats
China loses
China signs unequal treaty
Other powers go medieval on China's arse
China insists that europeans can only trade with the Cohong, a goverment monopoly.[GT]
The Cohong refuse to buy any significant european goods, accepting only silver.[GT]
As the trade grows there is simply not enough silver. Opium can however be sold to smugglers for silver, which can be used to buy Opium from the Cohong.[GT]
Yeah, since the drive to modernise came from the "outer lords", the out-group in relation to the Shogunate (provinces of Choshu, Satsuma, Ise and a few others). I.e. the impetus for reform came from those parts of Japan where the feudal lords had been allowed to pretty much run their province on their own, with little interference from the Shogunate. And since they were also excluded from all office in the Shogunate, these people kept polishing their little provinces.No, actually it all boils down to: the people with the right ideas having enough guns and bodies to throw at people who didn't agree.
Key to the UK being able to acquire quantities of opium significant enough to make a difference was its new control of India, where the stuff could be produced in bulk to be shipped to China.
Also Japan had a number of notable advantages over some of their neighbors. Korea was pretty far afield (actually both the French and Americans tried invading it still, both failed) but it was hopelesslessly backwards even compared to Japan. Japan at least had a fairly modern system of currency IIRC, and also didn't have tax exempt nobles.Japan also had as LB said earlier fairly centralized government administration during the Edo Period. The internal economy of Japan was very dynamic as well. Its high literacy rate also helped. Japan was also fairly isolated and far enough from where all the attention was (China, Ottoman Empire, Egypt, India) to have the time it needed to reform. Japan was at the very edge of the Eurocentric world map - other countries weren't so lucky.
Key to the UK being able to acquire quantities of opium significant enough to make a difference was its new control of India, where the stuff could be produced in bulk to be shipped to China.