The Boxer Rebellion1899 — 1901
The Anti-Foreign Uprising That Sealed Imperial China’s Fate
When peasant martial artists who believed they were bulletproof besieged the world’s great powers in their own embassies — and an empress declared war on everybody at once. The story of how desperation, superstition and imperial arrogance brought eight foreign armies to Beijing and destroyed the last legitimacy of a 2,000-year-old dynasty.
Context — China at the Breaking Point
By the late 1890s, China was a nation in agony. Six decades of foreign humiliation — the Opium Wars, unequal treaties, the loss of territory, the carving of “spheres of influence” — had reduced the once-mighty Qing Empire to a semi-colonial state. The devastating defeat by Japan in the Sino-Japanese War (1894–95) — a smaller nation that China had historically considered inferior — was the final psychological blow.
In 1897, Germany seized Jiaozhou Bay in Shandong province after the murder of two German missionaries — taking the region as a colonial concession. Russia seized Port Arthur. France took Guangzhouwan. Britain expanded Hong Kong with a 99-year lease on the New Territories. China was being “carved like a melon” — a phrase that captured the terror of a nation watching itself be dismembered.
Who Were the Boxers?
The “Boxers” was a Western name derived from the martial arts rituals that defined the movement. The Chinese name was 义和拳 (Yìhéquán — “Righteous and Harmonious Fists”), later known as 义和团 (Yìhétuán — “Righteous and Harmonious Militia”) after the Qing court officially endorsed them.
They were young peasant men — mostly teenagers and men in their twenties — from the rural villages of Shandong and Zhili (Hebei) provinces. They were not soldiers, not intellectuals, not reformers. They were the rural poor — illiterate, desperate, displaced by floods and economic collapse, and burning with rage at the foreigners who had humiliated their country and the missionaries who were dismantling their culture.
The Boxers emerged from a tradition of Chinese secret societies — organisations that combined martial arts, folk religion, mutual aid and anti-government or anti-foreign resistance. Secret societies like the White Lotus and the Big Sword Society had existed for centuries; the Boxers drew on this deep tradition while adding a specific anti-Christian, anti-foreign focus.
Causes — Why the Uprising Erupted
Sixty years of unequal treaties, territorial losses, extraterritoriality and foreign military presence had created a reservoir of popular fury. Germany’s seizure of Shandong (1897) — the Boxers’ home province — was the last straw. Foreigners controlled China’s customs, dictated trade terms and operated under laws that Chinese courts could not enforce.
Christian missionaries — protected by extraterritorial treaties — were seen as agents of cultural imperialism. They built churches on sites sacred to Chinese folk religion, intervened in local legal disputes on behalf of Chinese converts (who gained legal advantages through conversion), challenged Confucian family values and ancestor worship, and were perceived as the cultural arm of military conquest. Local conflicts between Christians and non-Christians frequently erupted into violence.
Beliefs & Rituals — The Bulletproof Warriors
The Boxers’ most extraordinary — and ultimately fatal — belief was that through ritual practices, they could become invulnerable to bullets and blades.
Boxers practised elaborate rituals of spirit possession — chanting, meditation, martial arts forms and ceremonies designed to invite gods, heroes and ancestors to enter their bodies. Once “possessed,” practitioners believed they were shielded by divine power against all weapons. They wore red sashes and headbands, carried talismans inscribed with magical characters, and entered trance-like states before combat.
These beliefs drew on deep traditions of Chinese folk religion — spirit mediums, Daoist ritual, Buddhist protective deities and the martial arts culture of secret societies. Early skirmishes in which Boxers survived (often because opponents fled or used inaccurate weapons) seemed to confirm the invulnerability claim, drawing thousands more followers. The movement spread with astonishing speed — from scattered rural bands to a mass movement of hundreds of thousands in less than two years.
The brutal reality of modern military firearms — Maxim guns, artillery, repeating rifles — would disprove these claims at catastrophic cost. But the Boxers’ willingness to charge into gunfire testified to the depth of desperation that drove the movement. These were not stupid people. They were people with nothing left to lose.
The Uprising Spreads — Violence Across Northern China
Through 1899 and into 1900, the Boxer movement spread from rural Shandong into Zhili province (surrounding Beijing) and then into the capital itself. Their targets were systematic: Christian churches were burned, Chinese Christians were attacked and killed (an estimated 30,000 Chinese Christians were murdered), foreign missionaries and their families were hunted (over 200 killed including children), railway lines and telegraph wires were destroyed (symbols of foreign technology), and foreign businesses were attacked.
Chinese Christians (approximately 700,000–1 million by 1900) were considered traitors — “secondary devils” (二毛子) who had abandoned Chinese culture for a foreign religion. The violence against Chinese Christians was the deadliest aspect of the rebellion — ~30,000 killed, far exceeding the number of foreigners killed.
Railways, telegraph lines, foreign-built bridges and modern infrastructure were systematically targeted as symbols of foreign technological intrusion. The Boxers saw these technologies not as progress but as instruments of domination — physical proof that foreigners were reshaping China to serve their own interests.
Over 200 foreign missionaries and their family members — including women and children — were killed. The most notorious incident was the Taiyuan Massacre (July 1900) where the provincial governor ordered the execution of 45 missionaries and Chinese Christians. These killings horrified Western publics and became the justification for military intervention.
Cixi’s Gamble — The Empress Declares War on the World
Empress Dowager Cixi — the most powerful woman in Chinese history, who had dominated Qing politics for nearly four decades — made the most consequential decision of her reign: she officially endorsed the Boxers and, on 21 June 1900, declared war on all foreign powers simultaneously.
Her motivations were a volatile mixture of genuine anti-foreign sentiment, political calculation, desperation and misinformation. Pro-Boxer court officials presented the movement as an unstoppable patriotic force. Rumours circulated (false) that foreign powers had demanded Cixi return power to the Emperor Guangxu, whom she had imprisoned after the Hundred Days’ Reform. Cixi reportedly declared: “China is weak. The only thing we can depend upon is the hearts of the people.”
The decision was spectacularly reckless. China’s military had been humiliated by Japan just five years earlier. Now Cixi was simultaneously declaring war on Britain, France, Germany, Russia, the United States, Japan, Italy and Austria-Hungary — the most powerful military coalition on Earth. It was an act of desperation born of decades of accumulated humiliation, frustration and the catastrophic miscalculation that popular fury could substitute for modern military power.
The Siege of the Legations — 55 Days in Peking
On 20 June 1900, the German minister Clemens von Ketteler was murdered by a Qing soldier while travelling to the Chinese Foreign Ministry — an act that would have enormous consequences. That same day, Boxer forces and Qing imperial troops began the siege of the foreign legation quarter in Beijing.
Inside the compound, approximately 900 foreign civilians (diplomats, merchants, missionaries and their families), 400 soldiers from eight nations, and 2,800 Chinese Christians who had taken refuge were trapped. They fortified the legation buildings with sandbags, rationed food and water, and prepared for a siege that no one knew would last 55 days.
The siege was chaotic and inconsistent. Some Qing commanders attacked the legations aggressively; others, recognising the catastrophe Cixi had unleashed, quietly reduced the intensity. Some Chinese officials secretly smuggled food and messages to the besieged foreigners. The defenders suffered approximately 66 killed and 150 wounded before relief arrived.
An initial relief expedition — the Seymour Expedition of 2,000 troops — was turned back by Boxer and Chinese forces before reaching Beijing. A second, much larger Eight-Nation Alliance force of approximately 20,000 troops was assembled at Tianjin and fought its way to Beijing, arriving on 14 August 1900 to lift the siege.
The Eight-Nation Alliance — The World Invades Beijing
The Eight Nations
The Alliance force — eventually expanded to approximately 100,000 troops — fought its way from Tianjin to Beijing, encountering fierce but disorganised resistance from Boxer and Qing forces. Beijing fell on 14 August 1900. Empress Dowager Cixi, Emperor Guangxu and the court fled the Forbidden City disguised as peasants, escaping to Xi’an in northwest China — a journey of over 1,000 miles.
What followed was a systematic orgy of looting and violence by the “civilised” nations. Foreign troops — from all eight countries — looted the Forbidden City, imperial palaces, temples, libraries, homes and businesses. Priceless Chinese artworks, manuscripts and treasures were stolen and shipped to museums and private collections in Europe, America and Japan — where many remain today. Soldiers from all nations committed rape, murder and destruction against Chinese civilians. German troops, under Kaiser Wilhelm II’s explicit order to “make the name German remembered in China for a thousand years so that no Chinese will ever again dare to even squint at a German” (the infamous “Hun Speech”), were particularly brutal.
The Boxer Protocol — China’s Final Humiliation (7 September 1901)
450 million taels of silver (approximately $333 million — more than the Qing government’s total annual revenue) payable over 39 years at 4% interest, ultimately totalling nearly 1 billion taels (~$750 million). Each tael represented one Chinese citizen — a deliberate symbolism of collective punishment. The indemnity crippled China’s finances for decades and prevented investment in modernisation.
Foreign nations gained the right to station permanent military forces in Beijing and at key points between Beijing and the sea — ensuring they could reinforce the capital at any time without Chinese permission. China’s sovereignty over its own capital was effectively surrendered. These garrisons remained until World War II.
Ten high-ranking pro-Boxer officials were executed. Hundreds more were punished. The Zongli Yamen (China’s Foreign Ministry) was upgraded to a full Ministry of Foreign Affairs — symbolising China’s forced acceptance of Western diplomatic norms. Civil service examinations were suspended for five years in cities where foreigners had been attacked.
The Dagu (Taku) Forts — China’s last coastal defences between the sea and Beijing — were destroyed. Arms imports were banned for two years. China was stripped of its ability to defend even its own coastline — a military humiliation without parallel in the modern history of a sovereign state.
Aftermath — The Path to Revolution
Returning from exile, Cixi — the woman who had crushed the Hundred Days’ Reform in 1898 — now implemented many of the same reforms she had rejected: abolishing the civil service examination system (1905, after 1,300 years), modernising the military, sending students abroad, establishing modern schools, and even promising a constitutional monarchy. But the reforms came too late and were perceived as desperate rather than genuine. Cixi died in November 1908, one day after the imprisoned Emperor Guangxu (widely believed to have been poisoned on her orders).
The Boxer disaster convinced a critical mass of Chinese intellectuals, students and military officers that the Qing Dynasty could neither reform nor resist — it had to be overthrown. Sun Yat-sen’s revolutionary movement gained support among overseas Chinese and inside the modernised military. The 1911 Revolution, which ended imperial rule, was a direct consequence of the Boxer catastrophe’s destruction of Qing legitimacy.
The United States used part of its Boxer Indemnity share to fund Tsinghua University — which would become one of China’s greatest institutions. Other nations similarly redirected portions of the indemnity toward educational programmes. The generation of Chinese students educated with Boxer Indemnity funds became leaders of the nationalist and communist movements that transformed modern China — an ironic legacy of a punitive settlement.
Key Figures
China’s de facto ruler for nearly 50 years. Initially cautious about the Boxers, she endorsed the movement and declared war on all foreign powers — the most consequential miscalculation in modern Chinese history. Fled Beijing disguised as a peasant. Returned to implement belated reforms before her death in 1908.
Boxer leadership was decentralised, emerging from local martial arts teachers, spirit mediums and village leaders. Figures like Cao Futian and Zhang Decheng organised Boxer forces in different regions. The movement’s lack of central command was both its strength (impossible to decapitate) and its weakness (impossible to coordinate).
China’s most experienced diplomat and moderniser. Negotiated the Boxer Protocol — his last and most painful diplomatic mission. Several southern governors, following Li’s lead, declared neutrality (“Mutual Protection of Southeast China”), keeping their provinces out of the war. Li died shortly after signing the Protocol, exhausted and broken.
