http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~dee/CHING/TAIPING.HTM


While the Chinese entered
into conflict with Europe and European culture during the Opium War and
after, it was also convulsed by a number of rebellions in mid-century.
With rebellion in Nien (1853-1868), several Muslim rebellions in the
southwest (1855-1873) and northwest (1862-1877), and, especially, the
Taiping rebellion, the consequences for China during this period were devastating.
In the Taiping rebellion alone, which lasted for twenty years, almost
twenty to thirty million died as a direct result of the conflict. In fact,
the period from 1850 to 1873 saw, as a result of rebellion, drought, and
famine, the population of China drop by over sixty million people. Along
with humiliating defeats at the hands of European powers, the
mid-nineteenth century in China was truly tragic.
The Taiping rebellion, though, is, as an internal
disturbance, and odd compliment to the conflicts with the west. It
combined both European and Chinese cultural patterns in a unique and
volatile mix. The person in which this strange mix fermented was Hung
Hsiu-ch'üan (1813-1864), the leader of the rebellion.
Hung Hsiu-ch'üan
Hung Hsiu-ch'üan was the
son of a poor farmer near Canton. He was a promising young student, but
repeatedly failed the civil service examination in Canton. After one such
failure, he overheard a Christian missionary speaking and brought home
several Christian treatises. The next year he again failed the exam and,
according to some historians, had a nervous breakdown. Whatever happened,
Hung had several visions in which an old man told him that people had
stopped worshipping him and were worshipping demons; in another, the man
appointed him as a slayer of demons. Hung believed that the man in the
visions was God the Father and that a younger, middle aged man that
visited him in visions was Jesus Christ, his Elder Brother. He himself was
the Younger Brother and had been sent by God to earth in order to
eradicate demons and demon worship.
Hung, however, did nothing with these visions until
seven years later when he began to study with Issachar J. Roberts, a
Southern Baptist minister who taught him everything he would know about
Christianity. With the Christianity of Roberts, Hung, some relatives, and
some followers formed a new religious sect, the God Worshippers, that
dedicated itself to the destruction of idols in the region around Canton.
The movement attracted followers for a variety of
reasons. Western historians argue that the famines of the 1840's inspired
the Chinese to join various movements that were successfully feeding and
taking care of themselves. Chinese historians stress the anti-Manchu
rhetoric of Hung's early movement. While the God Worshippers were
dedicated to the destruction of idols and the stamping out of demon
worship, it's clear that they felt that the Manchu rulers were the primary
propagators of demon worship. In Hung's early philosophy, he seems to have
arrived at the conclusion that the overthrow of the Manchus would help
bring in the Kingdom of Heaven on earth.
The movement, however, did not become open revolt until
the government started to harass the God Worshippers systematically.
Combined with his belief that the Kingdom of Heaven would be established
on the ruins of the Manchu government, the God Worshippers were also
militantly organized to destroy and eliminate demon worship. In the late
1840's, Hung reorganized his movement into a military organization. He and
other leaders systematically began to build up a treasury (all believers
had to give their property to the movement), consolidate forces, and lay
up a store of weapons. In December of 1850, Hung was attacked by
government forces and, since he had spent so much time preparing for war,
he successfully turned back the attack. In 1851, Hung declared that a new
kingdom had been established, the Kingdom of Heavenly Peace; he himself
was the Heavenly King and the era of the Taiping, or "Great
Peace," had begun.
The Kingdom of Heavenly Peace was a theocratic state
with the Heavenly King as Absolute Ruler. Its objective, as implied by its
name, was the achievement of peace and prosperity in China with all people
worshipping the one and only one god. It consisted of a single hierarchy
which undertook all administrative, religious, and military duties. The
movement was founded on a radical economic reform program in which all
wealth was equally distributed to all members of society. Taiping society
itself would be a classless society with no distinctions between people;
all members of Taiping society were "brothers" and
"sisters" with all the attendant duties and obligations
traditionally associated with those relationships in Chinese society.
Women were the social and economic equal of men; many administrative posts
in the new Kingdom were assigned to women This social and economic reform,
combined with its passionate anti-Manchu nationalism, made the Kingdom of
Heavenly Peace a magnet for all the Chinese suffering under the
dislocations and disasters of the mid-century.
The Rebellion
From a military standpoint,
the rebellion got off to an impressive start. The army itself was
uncannily disciplined; after elaborate initiation rituals, Taiping
believers became fanatically disciplined and devoted soldiers, willing to
die without hesitation in God's cause against demonic forces. The army of
the Taipings roared northward through the central Yangtze valley to
Nanking. In many ways, however, this dramatic progress of the Taipings was
no progress at all and explains why they lost so easily despite their
impressive start. The central reason they advanced so quickly was that
they avoided large urban centers and so encountered little resistance.
When they conquered a territory, they made no effort to consolidate the
conquest by setting up an administrative mechanism, but instead roared on
northwards. There was no room for disagreement in the military hierarchy;
not only did the Heavenly King gain his authority directly from God, but
the military generals themselves claimed to be guided by God the Father in
a series of visions. There was little room, then, for serious strategic
thinking in this environment.
The Taipings occupied Nanking in March of 1853; they
renamed the city, T'ien-ching, or "Heavenly Capital." From
T'ien-ching, they attacked Beijing, but their army, after making rapid
progress north, was defeated. For the next ten years, the Taipings
occupied themselves with conquering Western territories and fighting
continuously to maintain their territory in the central Yangtze valley.
The rebellion swung from one side to another, now a defeat, now a victory,
now a defeat.
Under the pressures of war and an inefficient
administration, the Heavenly Kingdom of Peace slowly began to unravel. The
leaders of the Kingdom failed to consolidate their authority in conquered
territories, preferring instead to rule over major cities. In reality,
then, Taiping rule only extended over major cities in the conquered
territories rather than the territories themselves. The Taipings had very
few competent officials; efforts to recruit scholar-officials were usually
unsuccessful since most educated Chinese were deeply disturbed by the
theocratic nature of the state and the lack of education among its
leaders.
Most significantly, the Taiping administration began to
disintegrate when Hung himself withdrew from active participation in
administrative and military affairs. Believing that the Heavenly King
should rule only by his divine virtue and not by active engagement in
politics, Hung seems, in reality, to have grown steadily more unbalanced.
Rather than dedicating himself to divine virtue, he plunged into the
sensual pleasures of the palace and the sexual pleasures of the harem of
women he had collected around himself. Hung's withdrawal from Taiping
administration sent cracks all through the Taiping administration.
By 1864, the Kingdom of Heavenly Peace was coming to an
end. Chinese forces had threatened T'ien-ching for months when Hung's
central general fled to the south. Hung himself believed that God would
defend the Taipings, but in June, 1864, he seems to have lost his
certainty of God's protection and poisoned himself. The imperial forces
discovered his body, wrapped in the color of the emperor, yellow,
wallowing in a sewer beneath the city. At a cost of nearly thirty million
lives over a period of twenty years, the Heavenly Peace had come to an
end.



©1996, Richard Hooker
For information contact: Richard
Hines
Updated 7-14-1999
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