Modern China1839 — 1949
From the Opium Wars to the Communist Revolution
How the world’s oldest continuous civilisation was humiliated, dismembered and plunged into revolution — and how a peasant army led by Mao Zedong rebuilt a nation from the ashes of empire. This is the story of China’s century of fire.
Part 1 of 2 — The Revolutionary CenturyChina Before the Storm — The Qing Empire at Its Peak
To understand China’s modern trauma, you must first understand what was lost. In the 18th century, Qing Dynasty China was the world’s largest economy, producing roughly a third of global GDP. It was a vast, sophisticated, self-sufficient empire of over 300 million people — more than all of Europe combined. Chinese silk, porcelain and tea were the most coveted commodities on Earth. Europeans, not Chinese, were the ones desperate for trade.
The Qing (Manchu) Dynasty, established in 1644, governed through an elaborate bureaucracy selected by civil service examinations — a meritocratic system a thousand years older than anything in Europe. Chinese civilisation considered itself the Middle Kingdom (中国, Zhōngguó) — the centre of the civilised world, surrounded by barbarian peripheries. Foreign envoys were expected to perform the kowtow (nine prostrations) before the Emperor. Trade was a concession China granted, not a right it recognised.
This self-confidence was about to shatter. The collision between an ancient continental empire and the aggressive, industrialised maritime powers of Europe would produce what the Chinese call the Century of Humiliation (百年国耻) — and set the stage for the most radical revolution in human history.
The Opium Wars & the Unequal Treaties (1839–1860)
The First Opium War (1839–1842) was the event that broke China’s world. It was not a war of civilisations. It was a war of narcotics — fought because Britain wanted to keep selling an addictive drug to millions of Chinese people, and China wanted to stop them.
The Problem: Britain was buying enormous quantities of Chinese tea, silk and porcelain — but China wanted nothing in return except silver. This created a massive trade deficit for Britain. The solution? Opium. British traders (primarily through the East India Company) smuggled opium grown in India into China, creating millions of addicts and reversing the silver flow. By the 1830s, an estimated 12 million Chinese were addicted.
China’s Response: In 1839, the Qing Emperor sent Commissioner Lin Zexu to Canton (Guangzhou) to stop the trade. Lin confiscated and destroyed 20,000 chests of British opium — approximately 1,400 tonnes. Britain, defending “free trade” (in reality, the right to deal drugs), declared war.
The Result: China’s outdated military was no match for British steam-powered gunships and modern artillery. The Treaty of Nanjing (1842) — the first of the “unequal treaties” — forced China to: cede Hong Kong to Britain; open five “treaty ports” to British trade; pay 21 million silver dollars in reparations; and grant extraterritoriality (British citizens would be subject to British, not Chinese, law). China had not merely lost a war. It had lost its sovereignty.
Britain and France, seeking to expand their privileges further, launched the Second Opium War (1856–1860). Anglo-French forces marched on Beijing and, in an act of deliberate cultural vandalism, burned the Old Summer Palace (Yuanmingyuan) — one of the greatest architectural complexes in human history, containing priceless art, libraries and gardens. The destruction was intended to humiliate the Emperor personally.
The Convention of Peking (1860) imposed further concessions: more treaty ports, legalisation of opium imports, freedom for Christian missionaries to proselytise, and the cession of Kowloon to Britain. Russia used the opportunity to seize vast territories in Manchuria. China was being carved up.
The Taiping Rebellion — History’s Deadliest Civil War (1850–1864)
Hong Xiuquan, a failed civil service candidate, experienced visions that convinced him he was the younger brother of Jesus Christ, sent to establish a “Heavenly Kingdom of Great Peace” (太平天国) on Earth. This was not merely a peasant revolt — it was a radical social revolution that proposed abolishing private property, distributing land equally, banning opium, foot-binding and slavery, and establishing gender equality. The Taiping movement attracted millions of followers — especially peasants devastated by the Opium Wars’ economic disruption.
By 1853, the Taiping forces controlled much of southern China and captured Nanjing, making it their capital. The Qing Dynasty seemed on the verge of collapse. But the Taiping leadership fractured through internal power struggles, and Western powers — initially neutral — intervened on the Qing side, fearing that a Taiping victory would disrupt trade.
The rebellion was eventually crushed by Qing forces led by Zeng Guofan and his Hunan Army — significantly, a regional militia rather than the imperial army, foreshadowing the warlordism that would later tear China apart. The death toll — an estimated 20–30 million people — makes it the deadliest civil war in history, dwarfing the American Civil War (750,000 dead) occurring simultaneously.
Reform & Resistance — Self-Strengthening to Boxers (1860–1901)
Chinese reformers attempted to modernise the military and economy while preserving Confucian culture — “Chinese learning as the foundation, Western learning for practical use” (中体西用). They built arsenals, shipyards, telegraph lines and a modern navy. But the movement was half-hearted — it modernised technology without reforming the institutions. Its failure was exposed when China was humiliatingly defeated by Japan in the Sino-Japanese War (1894–95) — Japan, a smaller nation that had modernised comprehensively, destroyed China’s new navy in hours.
The young Guangxu Emperor, influenced by reformer Kang Youwei, launched an ambitious 104-day programme to modernise education, government, the military and the economy — a Chinese Meiji Restoration. But the conservative Empress Dowager Cixi staged a coup, placed the Emperor under house arrest, executed six leading reformers, and reversed all changes. The failure of reform from above would make revolution from below inevitable.
The “Boxers” (Yìhéquán — “Righteous and Harmonious Fists”) were a secret society of peasants and martial artists who believed spiritual powers made them immune to bullets. Driven by hatred of foreign missionaries, Christians and imperial interference, they attacked foreigners and Chinese Christians across northern China. In a desperate gamble, Empress Dowager Cixi endorsed the Boxers and declared war on all foreign powers simultaneously.
The result was catastrophic. An Eight-Nation Alliance (Britain, France, Germany, Russia, US, Japan, Italy, Austria-Hungary) invaded China, seized Beijing, and looted the Forbidden City. The Boxer Protocol (1901) imposed crushing indemnities of 450 million taels of silver, execution of pro-Boxer officials, foreign military garrisons in Beijing, and further territorial concessions. China was now effectively a semi-colony — nominally independent but controlled by foreign powers. The Qing Dynasty’s legitimacy was destroyed beyond repair.
The Fall of the Qing — 1911 Revolution
By the early 1900s, the Qing Dynasty was a walking corpse. Military defeats, internal rebellions, failed reforms and foreign domination had destroyed its legitimacy. Revolutionary movements — inspired by Western democracy, Japanese modernisation and Chinese nationalism — spread among students, soldiers and the overseas Chinese diaspora.
On 10 October 1911 (celebrated as “Double Ten Day”), a military uprising in Wuchang triggered a chain reaction of provincial defections from the Qing. Within weeks, most of southern and central China had declared independence. Sun Yat-sen, the revolutionary leader who had been organising anti-Qing movements for years (mostly from exile), was proclaimed provisional President of the Republic of China on 1 January 1912.
But Sun lacked military power. The strongest military figure was Yuan Shikai, the Qing’s most powerful general. In a fateful compromise, Sun resigned the presidency in favour of Yuan in exchange for Yuan persuading the Qing Emperor to abdicate. On 12 February 1912, the six-year-old Emperor Puyi abdicated — ending the Qing Dynasty and, with it, over 2,000 years of Chinese imperial rule.
Yuan Shikai became President — but quickly revealed himself as a dictator. He disbanded parliament, persecuted Sun’s supporters, and in 1915 briefly declared himself Emperor (to universal ridicule). His death in 1916 left China without central authority, plunging the nation into the Warlord Era.
The Warlord Era — China Fragments (1916–1928)
After Yuan Shikai’s death, China collapsed into a patchwork of competing military strongmen — “warlords” — who controlled different provinces with personal armies. There was no functioning central government. Beijing changed hands repeatedly. Provincial warlords fought each other, taxed peasants into destitution, grew opium and conscripted soldiers at gunpoint.
The Warlord Era was a nightmare of fragmentation, exploitation and violence — but it was also a period of intense intellectual ferment. China’s educated elite debated fundamental questions: What had gone wrong? What kind of China should emerge from the wreckage? Should China follow the Western liberal model, the Japanese model, the Soviet model — or something entirely new?
The May Fourth Movement — China’s Intellectual Revolution (1919)
On 4 May 1919, approximately 3,000 students from Beijing universities marched in protest against the Treaty of Versailles — specifically, the decision to transfer Germany’s concessions in China’s Shandong province to Japan rather than returning them to China. China had joined the Allies in WWI, contributing 140,000 labourers to the Western Front. The betrayal at Versailles was devastating — it proved that Western democracy and international law would not protect China.
Student protests spread to Shanghai, Nanjing and dozens of cities. Workers struck. Merchants boycotted Japanese goods. The government was forced to refuse to sign the Treaty. The movement demonstrated the power of mass mobilisation and united intellectuals, workers and merchants for the first time.
May Fourth became a broad cultural revolution — rejecting Confucian tradition (“Mr. Confucius must go”), advocating science (“Mr. Science”) and democracy (“Mr. Democracy”), adopting vernacular Chinese in literature (replacing classical Chinese), and opening China to new ideologies — especially Marxism, which offered an explanation for China’s humiliation: imperialism was the highest stage of capitalism (Lenin).
Sun Yat-sen, the KMT & the Rise of the CCP
The First United Front (1923–1927)
In the early 1920s, an unlikely alliance formed. Sun Yat-sen’s Kuomintang (KMT), desperate for military support, and the newly founded Chinese Communist Party (CCP), under Comintern direction from Moscow, agreed to cooperate against the warlords. The Soviet Union provided military advisors, weapons and training. CCP members joined the KMT as individuals. Together, they planned the Northern Expedition — a military campaign to reunify China by destroying the warlords.
Sun Yat-sen died of cancer in March 1925. Leadership of the KMT passed to his military protégé, Chiang Kai-shek — a right-wing nationalist deeply suspicious of the Communists.
The Shanghai Massacre (12 April 1927)
In April 1927, with the Northern Expedition succeeding, Chiang Kai-shek turned on his Communist allies. In Shanghai, KMT forces, allied with criminal gangs (the Green Gang), launched a sudden, coordinated massacre of Communist Party members, labour organisers and leftist activists. Thousands were killed. The Shanghai Massacre was repeated across other cities. The CCP was nearly destroyed — driven underground and into the countryside.
The Long March & Mao’s Rise (1934–1935)
By 1934, Chiang Kai-shek’s forces had surrounded the Communist base area in Jiangxi province. Facing annihilation, approximately 86,000 Communist soldiers and party members broke through the encirclement and began a desperate retreat — the Long March.
Over the next 370 days, they marched approximately 6,000 miles (9,600 km) through some of China’s most inhospitable terrain — crossing 24 rivers, 18 mountain ranges (including snow-covered passes over 16,000 feet), and vast grasslands where men drowned in bogs. They fought battles, evaded aerial bombardment, endured starvation, disease and desertion. Of the 86,000 who began, only approximately 8,000 survived to reach the new base at Yan’an in Shaanxi province.
During the march, at the Zunyi Conference (January 1935), Mao Zedong outmanoeuvred his rivals and established himself as the undisputed leader of the CCP — a position he would hold for the rest of his life.
The Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945)
On 7 July 1937, Japan launched a full-scale invasion of China following a border clash at the Marco Polo Bridge near Beijing. What followed was eight years of devastating warfare that killed an estimated 15–20 million Chinese and became China’s theatre of World War II.
After capturing the Chinese capital Nanjing, Japanese forces committed one of the worst atrocities of the 20th century — six weeks of mass murder, rape and destruction. An estimated 200,000–300,000 Chinese civilians and POWs were killed. Tens of thousands of women were raped. The massacre remains a deeply emotional and politically charged issue in Sino-Japanese relations today.
Facing Japanese invasion, the KMT and CCP agreed to a second (uneasy) alliance. But cooperation was shallow — both sides fought the Japanese while positioning for the civil war they knew would follow. Chiang Kai-shek bore the brunt of conventional warfare against Japan’s superior military, suffering devastating losses. Mao’s forces fought guerrilla warfare behind Japanese lines, expanding their territory and winning peasant support through land reform.
The Chinese Civil War & Communist Victory (1946–1949)
After Japan’s surrender in August 1945, the truce between the KMT and CCP collapsed almost immediately. Full-scale civil war resumed in 1946.
Corruption: KMT officials enriched themselves while civilians starved. Hyperinflation: Prices doubled every few days — paper money became worthless. Military incompetence: Chiang micromanaged campaigns from afar. Loss of legitimacy: Urban populations and intellectuals turned against the KMT. American frustration: US support (massive in cash and weapons) was wasted through KMT mismanagement. The regime rotted from within.
Land reform: The CCP redistributed land from landlords to peasants — winning the support of China’s vast rural majority. Discipline: The People’s Liberation Army (PLA) treated civilians with respect (Mao’s “Three Rules and Eight Points of Attention”). Guerrilla expertise: Hardened by the Long March and anti-Japanese warfare. Soviet support: The USSR provided captured Japanese weapons from Manchuria. Moral clarity: The CCP offered a clear vision of a new China — the KMT offered only the continuation of a failing status quo.
The Decisive Campaigns (1948–1949)
Three massive campaigns — the Liaoshen, Huaihai and Pingjin campaigns (September 1948 – January 1949) — destroyed the KMT’s best armies and captured northern China. Chiang Kai-shek’s forces collapsed with astonishing speed. City after city fell. Nanjing, the KMT capital, was captured in April 1949. Chiang and the remaining KMT forces fled to the island of Taiwan.
On 1 October 1949, standing atop the Tiananmen (Gate of Heavenly Peace) in Beijing, Mao Zedong proclaimed the founding of the People’s Republic of China. His words echoed across the vast square and across history:
Key Figures of the Revolutionary Century
Founded the Tongmenghui and KMT. Inspired the 1911 Revolution. Briefly served as first provisional President. Proposed the Three Principles of the People (nationalism, democracy, livelihood). Revered by both the KMT and CCP.
Founding CCP member. Led the Long March. Developed Marxism for Chinese conditions (rural peasant revolution). Led the CCP to victory in the Civil War. Proclaimed the People’s Republic on 1 October 1949. The most consequential Chinese leader since the first Emperor.
Succeeded Sun Yat-sen. Led the Northern Expedition. Massacred Communists in 1927. Led China through WWII against Japan. Lost the Civil War through corruption and strategic failures. Retreated to Taiwan where the KMT ruled until democratisation.
Dominated Qing politics for nearly 50 years. Crushed the Hundred Days’ Reform. Endorsed the Boxers. A complex figure — both preserving and dooming the dynasty through her resistance to fundamental reform.
Destroyed 20,000 chests of British opium in Canton, triggering the First Opium War. A national hero in China — remembered as the man who tried to defend Chinese sovereignty and moral integrity against drug-dealing imperialism.
Communist revolutionary from his student days. Survived the Long March. Became Mao’s indispensable partner — brilliant diplomat, administrator and tactician. Later served as Premier of the PRC from 1949 until his death.
