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 CHINA AND THE MANCHUS
 THE MING DYNASTY
                
          A. D. 1368-1644.
                 Hung-wu. A. D. 1368-1398.
                   
             Chu Yuan Chang, having been once persuaded to
            accept the Yellow Robe, made no secret of his desire
            and determination to bring back the good old days of Yao and Shun.
            “The Beggar King,” as he is sometimes called, had been left an orphan
            at an early age, and, through the advice given in a vision by his
            dead parents, had entered a Buddhist monastery. From this he emerged, as
            we have seen, to join the ranks of the patriots who, under the
            leadership of Kwoh Tsze I,
            were beginning to make headway against the Mongol domination. The leader
            died soon after and committed the command of the insurrection to the
            ex-monk, whose success was rapid and complete. The new dynasty was
            proclaimed under the name of Ming, or “Bright,” and the new sovereign
            chose for himself, not without right, the name of Hung-wu, or
            “Great Warrior.” Justifying his throne name, he followed the defeated
            Mongols into Tatary, reconquered the Liao-tung peninsula, and established
            himself in Nan-king, the capital of the South. The war continued for some
            time under the conduct of his generals, among whom Suta especially deserves to be named. One incident in the
            war, moreover, brings to light the name of a real hero, Yu-kwang, who has right to his meed of praise. This general, having been captured by the Mongols, was led
            around the walls of Lan chi fu in order that he might
            urge submission. Instead, he cried aloud, “Be of good courage; Suta is on his way to help you.” Then he was cut in
            pieces by his captors and died, conscious of having saved the city from
            surrender. Meanwhile Hung-wu received at
            Nan-king envoys from many lands with presents and many flattering letters.
            Among the presents was a lion, the first, it is said, that had been seen
            in China. The last Mongol claimant to the throne of China died at
            Karakorum in A. D. 1370 and, though invasions were not infrequent for many
            years, all hope of restoring the old dominion was abandoned. Hung-wu set himself vigorously to work to restore
            everything that was Chinese. He compelled the use of the Chinese dress, performed personally the annual ceremonial plowing, and caused the Empress to offer the annual
            sacrifice to the spirit of the mulberry trees. He also reestablished the public schools and libraries and encouraged the arts and industries.
            One of the most important of his achievements was the compilation of the
            Law Code, known as the Pandects of Yung-lu, “which not merely simplified the administration of the
            law, but also gave the people some idea of the laws under which they
            lived.” In all this he succeeded in preserving his early simplicity
            and modesty, and several stories are told of rebukes administered to
            would-be flatterers which are as deserving of remembrance as the answer of
            Canute to his courtiers at the sea-side. On one
            occasion some of the grandees brought him some stalks of wheat which
            showed an extraordinary yield. This they presented as a proof of the
            wonderful virtue of Hung-wu’s rule. The Emperor responded that he did verily desire to see the
            time when all his subjects would enjoy peace and prosperity, but that,
            nevertheless, he was not vain enough to suppose that Heaven had done
            anything so unusual on his own account. On another occasion some Taoist
            priests came to him bringing a book which they declared contained the
            recipe for the famous “Water of Immortality.” The Emperor inquired whether the book and its secret availed for everybody or for
            himself alone. “It is only for your Majesty’s own use,” they replied.
            “That being so,” answered Hung-wu, “it is of no use
            to me, seeing that I will not profit by anything in which my people
            may not participate.” In line with this disinterestedness is the story of
            the Emperor’s having sent fur coats to his
            soldiers for their winter campaign, his instructions to officials
            proceeding to their posts to take particular care of the aged and the orphan,
            and the choice of his grandson as the most fitting successor rather than
            any of his sons. Naturally, from his old association with the bonzes,
            he favored Buddhism, but he seems also to have
            been fair to other creeds. The thirty years’ reign which came to an
            end in A. D. 1398 was on the whole a very
            prosperous one and presents a striking contrast to the contemporary career of
            the great conqueror, Timur, or Tamerlane.
             Hung-wu’s Successors.
                   The succession devolved, as we have seen, upon the
            grandson of Hung-wu, Kien-zven,
            to the exclusion of the sons. Kien-wen, A. D.
            1398-1403, was a youth of sixteen and his inexperience soon tempted a
            revolt which was headed by one of his uncles, Hung-wu’s fourth son, known as the Prince of Yen. The other uncles were degraded and
            one of them committed suicide, but the revolt,
            nevertheless, continued to spread, and soon attained
            alarming proportions. One of the royal generals was most fertile in
            resources for defending his city, dropping iron harrows on the heads of the assailants and hanging out numerous pictures of Hung-wu from the battlements in the belief that the
            Prince of Yen would respect his father’s portrait. But eventually
            Nanking was captured, the victor established himself on the throne as Yung-lo
            (A. D. 1403-1425), and Kien-wen, disguised as a
            monk, fled to Yunnan where he lived for forty years much more happily
            than he had done as Emperor. His identity was revealed at last through the
            publication of a poem and he was removed to Peking where he died. The new
            ruler, in spite of some outbursts of atrocious
            cruelty at the beginning of his reign, proved a capable sovereign. He
            made Peking once again the capital, carried his victorious arms far into
            the deserts of Tatary, and added to his dominions Cochin China and
            Tong-king. Probably by way of reaction against the extreme devotion of his
            predecessors, he renewed the proscription of Buddhism and sent many
            hundreds of priests back to their homes. He also burned the books of the
            Taoists and forbade any further search for the Elixir Vita.
            Notwithstanding his destruction of the books he was
            a patron of literature and produced the “most gigantic encyclopedia”
            ever known, a work which took over 2,000 scholars for its compilation,
            and ran probably to 500,000 pages. It was never printed, but two
            extra copies were made. Of the three transcripts of this great work, two
            perished at the fall of the Ming Dynasty and the third at the burning
            of the Hanlin College on June 23rd, 1900, during
            the Boxer Revolt. Like Hung-wu, Yung-lo received
            envoys and tribute from afar, including a rhinoceros from Bengal. But
            he can hardly have appreciated as much as most the luxury and wealth which
            his elevation to the throne brought within his reach, if the story be
            true that he discouraged the opening of newly discovered mines of precious
            stones in Shansi. “For,” said he, “such things as these can neither
            nourish the people in time of famine, nor preserve them from the rigors of
            cold.”
             Yung-lo was succeeded by his son Hung-hi (A. D.
            1425-1426), who, however, only reigned a few months. He died, it is
            said, as the result of superstitious terror when he learned that
            the stars were unfavorable. His short reign is
            only dignified by his recorded response to the ministers when a
            famine was being severely felt. They advised him that it was impossible to act
            without having recourse to the high tribunals. “No deliberations
              ; and no delays!” he cried. “When the people are dying of hunger
            one must relieve them as promptly as if it were a case of putting out
            a fire or stopping a flood.” Suan-ti, A. D.
            14261436, is remarkable for nothing but for the Ha-roun-al-raschid-like habit of wandering disguised among the
            people to learn their condition, and for the loss of Cochin China which,
            in the year 1428, passed from the rank of a province to the category of
            tribute-bearing countries.
             Cheng-tung, A. D. 1436-1465, reigned with an interruption of seven years, during
            which time he was a prisoner among the Tatars. A descendant of the
            old Yuan family captured and held him in spite of all offers of ransom. During his absence the throne was occupied by a brother, King-ti, A.D. 1450-1457.
               Cheng-hwa, A. D. 1465-1488, and Hung-chi, A. D. 1488-1506, reigned with
            comparative quiet, devoted to the bonzes and even to the superstitions of
            the Taoists. Much public work was attempted at this time. Half a million men
            were employed in working certain gold mines in Central China,
            although the yield must have been disappointing if the total is rightly given
            as thirty ounces. The Great Wall was repaired and
            a canal dug from Peking to the Pei-ho to
            enable the junks to pass from the Yang-tsze-kiang
            to the capital. Unfortunately, however, the realm was more than once
            desolated by famine, and pestilence and cannibalism is said to have become rife in the west.
             Arrival of the Portuguese.
                   The reign of Cheng-te, A.
            D. 1506-1522, is notable on account of the first arrival of Europeans
            by sea to Canton. “During the reign of Ching-tih,”
            says a Chinese work quoted by Dr. S. Wells
            Williams, “foreigners from the West, called Fah-lan-ki (Franks),
            who said that they had tribute, abruptly entered the Bogue, and, by their
            tremendously loud guns, shook the place far and near. This was reported at
            Court and an order returned to drive them away immediately and stop
            their trade. At about this time, also, the Hollanders, who in ancient
            times inhabited a wild territory and had no intercourse with China, came
            to Macao in two or three large ships. Their clothes and their hair
            were red; their bodies tall; they had blue eyes sunk deep in their heads.
            Their feet were one cubit and two-tenths long; and they frightened
            the people by their strange appearance.”
             Raphael Perestrello was the
            first Portuguese to arrive, sailing from Malacca in A. D. 1516.
            The following year came Ferdinand d’Andrade with
            a squadron to Canton and was well received. The trouble came with the
            arrival of his brother Simon and the commission of many high-handed acts
            of outrage. Dr. Andrade was thereupon
            imprisoned and executed by the Emperor’s orders
            in A. D. 1523. Factories and settlements, however, were established
            at Canton, Ning-po, and Macao, which soon became the headquarters of the
            Portuguese trade with China.
             Japanese Invasions.
                    Cheng-te was succeeded by Kia-tsing, A.
            D. 1522-1567, whose reign was disturbed not only by invasions from the
            north on the part of the Tatars, but also from a new quarter, viz:
            Japan. The raids by the Japanese pirates in this reign began to be quite
            serious. Hitherto the inhabitants of the Eastern Archipelago, when they
            came at all, came as vassals; now, under the leadership of the great warriors
            of the Momoyama period, they not only
            considered themselves independent, but pined for new worlds to
            conquer. For three successive years, A. D. 1555, 1556 and 1557, they made
            descents upon the coast of Cheh-kiang with
            varying degrees of success. Twenty-five years later, in the time
            of the famous Hideyoshi, a much more
            deliberate and formidable attack was made. The Taikosama had long meditated the conquest of Korea, to which Japan asserted claims
            of long standing, and he was prepared to extend the reach of
            his ambition to China. In a letter written to the ruler of Korea “as
            a father to a son,” Hideyoshi said: “I will
            assemble a mighty host and, invading the country of the great Ming, I will
            fill with the hoar frost from my sword the whole sky of the four
            hundred provinces. Should I carry out this purpose, I hope that Korea will
            be my vanguard. Let her not fail to do so, for my friendship with
            your honorable country depends solely on your
            conduct when I lead my army against China.” The Koreans, with a more
            adequate knowledge of the resources of the Afiddle Kingdom,
            replied that for Hideyoshi to contemplate the
            invasion of China was like “measuring the ocean in a cockle shell, or a
            bee trying to sting a tortoise through its shell.” Hideyoshi,
            however, was in no wise dismayed. “I shall do it,” he said, “as easily as
            a man rolls up a piece of matting and carries it under his arm.”
            Two armies, one of them commanded by a famous Christian general, Konishi Yushinaga, were
            dispatched and ravaged Korea with fire and sword. Appeals to China led to
            the sending of a small force which was easily defeated by the
            Japanese at Ping-shang. Some futile negotiations
            for peace, in which the Japanese were outwitted by the Chinese
            diplomatists, followed, and the war was renewed in A. D. 1597. A great
            battle was fought in A. D. 1598 in which 38,700 Chinese and Koreans
            are said to have been slain. The ears and noses were pickled in tubs and
            sent back to Kyoto, where they were buried in a mound near the great
            image of the Buddha. The gruesome monument erected on the spot, together
            with the mimizuka, or ear mound, as it is
            termed, remain to the present day and represent
            practically all that Hideyoshi got out of his
            campaigns. Sense of failure weighed upon the great soldier at
            the last. He died with the words upon his lips, “Don’t let my
            soldiers become ghosts in Korea.”
             Meanwhile the throne of China had passed from Kia-tsing to Lung-king in A. D. 1567 and
            from Lung-king to Wen-li in A. D. 1573. While the latter was
            trying to deal in a feeble way with the Japanese menace in Korea, he was
            also endeavoring to placate the Tatar generals in the
            North with the gift of lands and honors.
             The Jesuits.
                  Probably the
            most important event in the reign of Wen-li was the arrival of the famous
            Jesuit, Matteo Ricci. For some years the disciples of Loyola had cast
            longing eyes upon the Middle Kingdom. Francis Xavier, foiled in his
            attempts to set foot in the heart of the country, succumbed to fever on the
            little island of Sancian on Dec. 2, A. D. 1552.
            Thirty years later, Valignani mournfully
            exclaimed, “O mighty fortress, when shall these impenetrable
            brazen gates of thine be broken open?” It was reserved for Ricci in
            A. D. 1582 to learn the way to remain in China without offending too much
            the prejudices of the Chinese. With Michael Ruggiero, who had arrived at
            Macao in A. D. 1580, Ricci obtained leave to stay at Shau-king,
            and, as Dr. Wells Williams tells us, “in their intercourse with the people of all classes they
            won good opinions by their courtesy, presents and scientific
            attainments.” At first the Jesuits dressed as Buddhist priests; later they
            wore the garb of literati; and, when in A. D. 1601, they succeeded
            for the first time in reaching Peking, their knowledge of astronomy and
            mathematics made possible a stay which would have been cut short had
            they appeared as evangelists alone. Nevertheless, their converts were not
            few and some of them, like Paul Su and his
            daughter, who was baptized as Candida, were influential enough
            to protect their teachers from molestation. Ricci died in 1610.
             The Manchu Invasion. The last years of Wen-li were
            under the shadow of impending invasion from the north. The famous
            Manchu chief, Nurhachu, who was born in A. D.
            1559 near the source of the Yalu, in Korea, first appeared as a conqueror
            in the Liao-tung peninsula in A. D. 1582. Three years later all the
            confederation of Tatar chiefs recognized him as their king and we find him preparing for the conquest of China. In A. D. 1617 he
            published his memorable “Seven Hates of the Tatars against the Chinese,”
            concluding with the words, “For all these reasons I hate you with an
            intense hatred and now make war upon you.” This manifesto Tien-ming, or Nur-hachu, burned in the
            presence of the army in order that, thus spiritualized, it might pass into
            the presence of the dead as a witness against the Mings.
            Having thus put in the strongest light the various wrongs from which the
            Manchus asserted themselves to be suffering, the chief advanced into the border
            land, vowing that he would celebrate his father’s funeral with the
            slaughter of two hundred thousand Chinese. He seems to have fulfilled
            his vow only too well, and in A. D. 1625 fixed his capital at Mukden. Two
            years later he died without having led his army into China proper.
            His son carried on the work which had been begun, broke through the Great
            Wall in three places, ravaged the province of Chih-li,
            and advanced far enough to show that Peking was at his mercy.
             The Last of the Mings.
                   Wen-li in the meantime had died, A. D. 1620, of a
            broken heart, and the Ming throne fell with all its burdens upon T'sung-cheng. The Manchu invasion was not the only
            menace of the situation. British commerce made a characteristic appearance
            at Canton in A. D. 1635. The vessels under Captain Weddell proceeded
            to the Bogue forts and, being fired upon at the instigation of the
            Portuguese,—“Herewith the whole fleet being instantly incensed, did
            on the sudden display their bloody ensigns; and weighing their
            anchors fell up with the flood and berthed themselves before the castle,
            from whence came many shot, yet not any that touched so much as hull
            or rope; whereupon not being able to endure their bravadoes any longer,
            each ship began to play furiously upon them with their broadsides.”
             More serious was the insurrection that broke out under
            Li-tsze-cheng and Shang-lco-hi. The whole country, indeed, as an annalist testifies, hummed with the spirit of revolt,
            like a hive of bees in swarming time, but Li-tsze-cheng represented a coalition of rebel leaders known as
            the Eight Kings. Li was a village headman who had turned brigand,
            associated himself with a gang of desperadoes (a gang which included a
            famous female bandit), and had at length risen to the command of a powerful
            army. The Mings were reduced to the direst extremities.
            Kai-feng-fu was straitly besieged by Li, and human flesh was sold in
            the shambles for food. The Imperialist general endeavored to retaliate by cutting the dikes and flooding the country. “China’s
            Sorrow,” the Hwang-ho, was nothing loath to do
            its deadly work, but the inundation did nothing in return to help the
            dynasty in its extremity. Peking was soon invested and the end came not long after. The Emperor,
            with a touch of dignity about his death such as he had never shown during
            his life, committed suicide. He called around him the members of his family, and toasted them in the wine of the country.
            Then he bade his wife slay herself in her own apartment, which she did,
            strangling herself with a silken cord. Forty concubines followed the Queen’s
            example, and the Emperor himself attempted to slay
            with his sword his fifteen year old daughter.3Then he ordered his
            other children to be slain to save their honor, and
            retired to a favorite eminence in the
            palace grounds where he hanged himself. Ere he died he wrote on the
            lapel of his robe his last edict, ending with the words, “Hack my body to
            pieces if you will, but spare my people.” A eunuch who had remained
            faithful to the last stripped the body of the royal robes that it might
            not be recognized, and gave it the best burial that
            was possible under the circumstances.
             The triumph of the rebels was frustrated by the Ming
            general, Wu-san-kicei, who
            at once opened up negotiations with the Manchus,
            inviting them to save the country from the revolting faction and re-establish
            order. Li advanced against him, but was badly
            beaten and forced to retreat upon Peking. Here he placed upon
            the ramparts the heads of the Ming Emperor’s murdered sons, and above the
            principal gate the bloody head of the Chinese general’s father. With
            a great cry, a cry which was at once taken up by all the army, Wu-san-kwei burst into
            the city. Li fled, deserted by most of his men, and died miserably
            soon after at the hands of local militia in the province of Hu-peh. The invited Manchus, nothing reluctant, now
            entered China to lay hands upon the spoil, and Tien-tsung dying in 1644 his son Shun-chi was proclaimed in the same year the
            first Manchu Emperor of China. The words of the proclamation are worth
            quoting:
             “I, Son of Heaven, of the Dynasty Ta Tsing,
            respectfully announce to Your Majesties the Heaven and the Earth, that
            which follows: My grandfather having received the mandate of Heaven,
            founded in the East a kingdom which became mighty. I, the Servant of Heaven,
            although unworthy, have inherited his dominions. The Mings having become corrupt, rebels arose everywhere and
            oppressed the people. China being without government, I, faithful to the
            beneficent traditions of my family, have destroyed its oppressors and
            saved its people, after which, yielding to the universal request, I have
            fixed the seat of the Empire at Peking. Crowned with the blessings of
            Heaven, I announce that I have ascended the throne and have named my
            dynasty Ta Tsing, and my reign Shun-chi. I beg respectfully
            that Heaven and Earth may aid me to put an end to the misfortunes of
            my country.”
             
             II
               THE FALL OF THE MINGS
               
 It is almost a conventionalism to attribute the fall
          of a Chinese dynasty to the malign influence of eunuchs. The Imperial court was
          undoubtedly at this date entirely in the hands of eunuchs, who occupied all
          kinds of lucrative posts for which they were quite unfitted, and even
          accompanied the army, nominally as officials, but really as spies upon the generals in command. One of the most notorious of these was Wei
          Chung-hsien, whose career may be taken as typical of
          his class. He was a native of Sun-ning in Chihli, of profligate character, who made himself a eunuch,
          and changed his name to Li Chin-chung. Entering the
          palace, he managed to get into the service of the mother of the future Emperor,
          posthumously canonised as Hsi Tsung, and became the
          paramour of that weak monarch's wet-nurse. The pair gained the Emperor's affection to an extraordinary degree, and Wei, an
          ignorant brute, was the real ruler of China during the reign of Hsi Tsung. He always took care to present memorials and
          other State papers when his Majesty was engrossed in carpentry, and the Emperor would pretend to know all about the question, and
          tell Wei to deal with it. Aided by unworthy censors, a body of officials who
          are supposed to be the "eyes and ears" of the monarch, and privileged
          to censure him for misgovernment, he gradually drove all loyal men from office,
          and put his opponents to cruel and ignominious deaths. He persuaded Hsi Tsung to enrol a division of eunuch troops, ten
          thousand strong, armed with muskets; while, by causing the Empress to have a
          miscarriage, his paramour cleared his way to the throne. Many officials
          espoused his cause, and the infatuated sovereign never wearied of loading him
          with favours. In 1626, temples were erected to him in all the provinces except Fuhkien, his image received Imperial honours, and he was
          styled Nine Thousand Years, i.e. only one thousand
          less than the Emperor himself, the Chinese term in the latter case being wan
          sui, which has been adopted by the Japanese as banzai. All successes were
          ascribed to his influence, a Grand Secretary declaring that his virtue had actually caused the appearance of a "unicorn" in
          Shantung. In 1627, he was likened in a memorial to Confucius, and it was
          decreed that he should be worshipped with the Sage in the Imperial Academy. His
          hopes were overthrown by the death of Hsi Tsung,
          whose successor promptly dismissed him. He hanged himself to escape trial, and
          his corpse was disembowelled. His paramour was executed, and in 1629, nearly
          three hundred persons were convicted and sentenced to varying penalties for
          being connected with his schemes.
   Jobbery and corruption were rife; and at the present
          juncture these agencies were successfully employed to effect the recall of a really able general who had been sent from Peking to recover
          lost ground, and prevent further encroachments by the Manchus. For a time, Nurhachu had been held in check by his skilful dispositions
          of troops, Mukden was strongly fortified, and confidence generally was
          restored; but the fatal policy of the new general rapidly alienated the Chinese inhabitants, and caused them to enter secretly into
          communication with the Manchus. It was thus that in 1621 Nurhachu was in a position to advance upon Mukden. Encamping
          within a mile or two of the city, he sent forward a
          reconnoitring party, which was immediately attacked by the Chinese commandant
          at the head of a large force. The former fled, and the latter pursued, only to
          fall into the inevitable ambush; and the Chinese troops, on retiring in their
          turn, found that the bridge across the moat had been destroyed by traitors in
          their own camp, so that they were unable to re-enter the city. Thus Mukden fell, the prelude to a series of further
          victories, one of which was the rout of an army sent to retake Mukden, and the
          chief of which was the capture of Liao-yang, now remembered in connection with
          the Russo-Japanese war. In many of these engagements the Manchus, whose chief
          weapon was the long bow, which they used with deadly effect, found themselves
          opposed by artillery, the use of which had been taught to the Chinese by Adam Schaal, the Jesuit father. The supply of powder, however,
          had a way of running short, and at once the pronounced superiority of the
          Manchu archers prevailed.
   Other cities now began to tender a voluntary
          submission, and many Chinese took to shaving the head and wearing the queue, in
          acknowledgment of their allegiance to the Manchus. All, however, was not yet
          over, for the growing Manchu power was still subjected to frequent attacks from
          Chinese arms in directions as far as possible removed from points where Manchu
          troops were concentrated. Meanwhile Nurhachu gradually extended his borders eastward, until in 1625, the year in which he
          placed his capital at Mukden, his frontiers reached to the sea on the east and
          to the river Amur on the north, the important city of Ning-yüan being almost the only possession remaining to the Chinese beyond the Great
          Wall. The explanation of this is as follows.
   An incompetent general, as above mentioned, had been
          sent at the instance of the eunuchs to supersede an officer who had been
          holding his own with considerable success, but who was not a
            persona grata at court. The new general at once decided that no
          territory outside the Great Wall was to be held against the Manchus,
            and gave orders for the immediate retirement of all troops and Chinese
          residents generally. To this command the civil governor of Ning-yüan, and the military commandant, sent an indignant
          protest, writing out an oath with their blood that they would never surrender
          the city. Nurhachu seized the opportunity, and
          delivered a violent attack, with which he seemed to be making some progress,
          until at length artillery was brought into play. The havoc caused by the guns
          at close quarters was terrific, and the Manchus fled. This defeat was a blow
          from which Nurhachu never recovered; his chagrin
          brought on a serious illness, and he died in 1626, aged sixty-eight. Later on, when his descendants were sitting upon the throne
          of China, he was canonised as T`ai Tsu, the Great Ancestor, the representatives of the four
          preceding generations of his family being canonised as Princes.
   Nurbachu was succeeded by his fourth son, Abkhai,
          then thirty-four years of age, and a tried warrior. His reign began with a
          correspondence between himself and the governor who had been the successful
          defender of Ning-yüan, in which some attempt was made
          to conclude a treaty of peace. The Chinese on their side demanded the return of
          all captured cities and territory; while the Manchus, who refused to consider
          any such terms, suggested that China should pay them a huge subsidy in money,
          silk, etc., in return for which they offered but a moderate supply of furs, and
          something over half a ton of ginseng (Panax repens), the famous forked root
          said to resemble the human body, and much valued by the Chinese as a
          strengthening medicine. This, of course, was a case of "giving too little
          and asking too much," and the negotiations came to nothing. In 1629, Abkhai, who by this time was master of Korea, marched upon
          Peking, at the head of a large army, and encamped within a few miles from its
          walls; but he was unable to capture the city, and had finally to retire. The
          next few years were devoted by the Manchus, who now began to possess artillery
          of their own casting, to the conquest of Mongolia, in the hope of thus securing
          an easy passage for their armies into China. An offer of peace was now made by
          the Chinese Emperor, for reasons shortly to be stated; but the Manchu terms
          were too severe, and hostilities were resumed, the Manchus chiefly occupying
          themselves in devastating the country round Peking, their numbers being
          constantly swelled by a stream of deserters from the Chinese ranks. In 1643, Abkhai died; he was succeeded by his ninth son, a boy of
          five, and was later on canonised as T`ai Tsung, the Great Forefather. By 1635, he had already
          begun to style himself Emperor of China, and had
          established a system of public examinations. The name of the dynasty had been
  "Manchu" ever since 1616; twenty years later he translated this term
          into the Chinese word Ch`ing (or Ts`ing), which means
  "pure"; and as the Great Pure Dynasty it will be remembered in
          history. Other important enactments of his reign were prohibitions against the
          use of tobacco, which had been recently introduced into Manchuria from Japan,
          through Korea; against the Chinese fashion of dress and of wearing the hair;
          and against the practice of binding the feet of girls. All except the first of
          these were directed towards the complete denationalisation of the Chinese who
          had accepted his rule, and whose numbers were increasing daily.
   So far, the Manchus seem to have been little
          influenced by religious beliefs or scruples, except of a very primitive kind;
          but when they came into closer contact with the Chinese, Buddhism began to
          spread its charms, and not in vain, though strongly opposed by Abkhai himself.
   In 1635 the Manchus had effected the conquest of Mongolia, aided to a great extent by frequent defections of
          large bodies of Mongols who had been exasperated by their own ill-treatment at
          the hands of the Chinese. Among some ancient Mongolian archives there has
          recently been discovered a document, dated 1636, under which the Mongol chiefs
          recognised the suzerainty of the Manchu Emperor. It was, however, stipulated
          that, in the event of the fall of the dynasty, all the laws existing previously
          to this date should again come into force.
           A brief review of Chinese history during the later
          years of Manchu progress, as described above, discloses a state of things such
          as will always be found to prevail towards the close of an outworn dynasty.
          Almost from the day when, in 1628, the last Emperor of the Ming Dynasty
          ascended the throne, national grievances began to pass from a simmering and more or less latent condition to a state of open and acute
          hostility. The exactions and tyranny of the eunuchs had led to increased
          taxation and general discontent; and the horrors of famine now enhanced the
          gravity of the situation. Local outbreaks were common, and were with difficulty suppressed. The most capable among Chinese generals of the
          period, Wu San-kuei, shortly to play a leading part
          in the dynastic drama, was far away, employed in resisting the invasions of the
          Manchus, when a very serious rebellion, which had been in preparation for some
          years, at length burst violently forth.
   Li Tz{u}-ch`êng was a native of Shensi, who, before he was twenty years old, had succeeded his
          father as village beadle. The famine of 1627 had brought him into trouble over
          the land-tax, and in 1629 he turned brigand, but without conspicuous success
          during the following ten years. In 1640, he headed a small gang of desperadoes,
          and overrunning parts of Hupeh and Honan, was soon in
          command of a large army. He was joined by a female bandit, formerly a
          courtesan, who advised him to avoid slaughter and to try to win the hearts of
          the people. In 1642, after several attempts to capture the city of K`ai-fêng, during one of which his left eye was destroyed
          by an arrow, he at length succeeded, chiefly in consequence of a sudden rise of
          the Yellow River, the waters of which rushed through a canal originally
          intended to fill the city moat and flood out the rebels. The rise of the river,
          however, was so rapid and so unusually high that the city itself was flooded,
          and an enormous number of the inhabitants perished, the rest seeking safety in
          flight to higher ground.
   By 1744, Li Tz{u}-ch`êng had reduced the whole of the province of Shensi;
          whereupon he began to advance on Peking, proclaiming himself first Emperor of
          the Great Shun Dynasty, the term shun implying harmony
          between rulers and ruled. Terror reigned at the Chinese court, especially as
          meteorological and other portents appeared in unusually large numbers, as
          though to justify the panic. The Emperor was in
          despair; the exchequer was empty, and there was no money to pay the troops,
          who, in any case, were too few to man the city walls. Each of the Ministers of
          State was anxious only to secure his own safety. Li Tz{u}-ch`êng's advance was scarcely opposed, the eunuch
          commanders of cities and passes hastening to surrender them and save their own
          lives. For, in case of immediate surrender, no injury was done by Li to life or
          property, and even after a short resistance only a few lives were exacted as
          penalty; but a more obstinate defence was punished by burning and looting and
          universal slaughter.
   The Emperor was now advised
          to send for Wu San-kuei; but that step meant the end
          of further resistance to the invading Manchus on the east, and for some time he
          would not consent. Meanwhile, he issued an Imperial proclamation, such as is
          usual on these occasions, announcing that all the troubles which had come upon
          the empire were due to his own incompetence and unworthiness, as confirmed by
          the droughts, famines, and other signs of divine wrath, of recent occurrence;
          that the administration was to be reformed, and only virtuous and capable
          officials would be employed. The near approach, however, of Li's army at length
          caused the Emperor to realise that it was Wu San-kuei or nothing, and belated messengers were dispatched to
          summon him to the defence of the capital. Long before he could possibly arrive,
          a gate of the southern city of Peking was treacherously opened by the eunuch in
          charge of it, and the next thing the Emperor saw was
          his capital in flames. He then summoned the Empress and the court ladies, and bade them each provide for her own safety. He
          sent his three sons into hiding, and actually killed with his own hand several of his favourites, rather than let them fall into the
          hands of the One-Eyed Rebel. He attempted the same by his daughter, a young
          girl, covering his face with the sleeve of his robe; but in his agony of mind he failed in his blow, and only succeeded in cutting
          off an arm, leaving the unfortunate princess to be dispatched later on by the
          Empress. After this, in concert with a trusted eunuch and a few attendants, he
          disguised himself, and made an attempt to escape from
          the city by night; but they found the gates closed, and the guard refused to
          allow them to pass. Returning to the palace in the early morning, the Emperor caused the great bell to be rung as usual to summon
          the officers of government to audience; but no one came. He then retired, with
          his faithful eunuch, to a kiosque, on what is known
          as the Coal Hill, in the palace grounds, and there wrote a last decree on the
          lapel of his coat:—"I, poor in virtue and of
          contemptible personality, have incurred the wrath of God on high. My Ministers
          have deceived me. I am ashamed to meet my ancestors; and therefore I myself take off my crown, and with my hair covering my face, await
          dismemberment at the hands of the rebels. Do not hurt a
            single one of my people!" Emperor and eunuch then committed suicide
          by hanging themselves, and the Great Ming Dynasty was brought
            to an end.
   Li Tz{u}-ch`êng made a grand official entry into Peking, upon which many of the palace ladies
          committed suicide. The bodies of the two Empresses were discovered, and the
          late Emperor's sons were captured and kindly treated; but of the Emperor himself there was for some time no trace. At length
          his body was found, and was encoffined, together with
          those of the Empresses, by order of Li Tz{u}-ch`êng, by-and-by to receive fit and proper burial at the
          hands of the Manchus.
   Li Tz{u}-ch`êng further possessed himself of the persons of Wu San-kuei's father and affianced bride, the latter of whom, a very beautiful girl, he
          intended to keep for himself. He next sent off a letter to Wu San-kuei, offering an alliance against the Manchus, which was
          fortified by another letter from Wu San-kuei's father,
          urging his son to fall in which Li's wishes, especially as his own life would
          be dependent upon the success of the missions. Wu San-kuei had already started on his way to relieve the capital when he heard of the
          events above recorded; and it seems probable that he would have yielded to
          circumstances and persuasion but for the fact that Li had seized the girl he
          intended to marry. This decided him; he retraced his steps, shaved his head
          after the required style, and joined the Manchus.
   It was not very long before Li Tz{u}-ch`êng's army was in full pursuit, with the twofold object
          of destroying Wu San-kuei and recovering Chinese
          territory already occupied by the Manchus. In the battle which ensued, all
          these hopes were dashed; Li sustained a crushing defeat, and fled to Peking. There he put to death the Ming princes who were in his hands,
          and completely exterminated Wu San-kuei's family, with the exception of the girl above mentioned, whom he
          carried off after having looted and burnt the palace and other public
          buildings. Now was the opportunity of the Manchus; and with the connivance and
          loyal aid of Wu San-kuei, the Great Ch`ing Dynasty
          was established.
   Li Tz{u}-ch`êng,
          who had officially mounted the Dragon Throne as Emperor of China nine days
          after his capture of Peking, was now hotly pursued by Wu San-kuei, who had the good fortune to recover from the rebels
          the girl, who had been taken with them in their flight, and whom he then
          married. Li Tz{u}-ch`êng retreated westwards; and after two vain attempts to check his pursuers, his
          army began to melt away. Driven south, he held Wu-ch`ang for a time; but ultimately he fled down the Yang-tsze, and was slain by local militia in Hupeh.
   Li was a born soldier. Even hostile writers admit that
          his army was wonderfully well disciplined, and that he put a stop to the
          hideous atrocities which had made his name a terror in the empire, just so soon
          as he found that he could accomplish his ends by milder means. His men were
          obliged to march light, very little baggage being allowed; his horses were most
          carefully looked after. He himself was by nature calm and cold, and his manner
          of life was frugal and abstemious.
           
           
 III
              
        THE REIGN OF SHUN CHIH
              
        
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