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				Opium War  
			Name of either conflict 
			fought between 
 
China and England between 1839-42 and 1856-60 over the rights to import 
				
				opium from India. 
			Both conflicts are often referred to together in the plural, i.e. Opium 
			Wars. 
By the 1830's, the English had become major players in the global opium trade. 
Growing opium in India, the East India Company shipped tons of it into Canton 
which it traded for Chinese manufactured goods and for 
			
			
			tea. In the early part of 
the 19th century this trafficking had produced a China filled with drug addicts, 
causing the imperial government to declare opium illegal, in 1836. Lin Tse-hsü 
(fig.), 
the Imperial Commissioner at Canton, thus began to aggressively crack down on 
the trade by enforcing the new opium laws and closing down smoking dens (fig.), as well 
as 
rooting out corrupt Cantonese officials, whom the British generously bribed in 
order to keep the opium traffic flowing. Deeply concerned about the opium menace 
Lin Tse-hsü set out to cut off the opium trade at its source and wrote a letter 
to Queen Victoria with the request that the British cease their export of opium 
to other countries, suggesting that trade should only be in beneficial goods. 
The English however, who, because of its harmful effects had made opium 
consumption and trade illegal in England, refused to back down from their 
overseas trade in opium. In response, Lin Tse-hsü threatened to cut off all 
trade with England and expel all English from Chinese soil. When Chinese junks 
attempted to turn back English merchant vessels in November 1839, the English 
responded by sending warships. Thus war broke out in June of 1840. Due to the 
technological superiority of the British the Chinese suffered a humiliating 
defeat and were forced into signing an ignomious peace agreement under the 
Treaty of Nanking. The treaty stipulated that no restrictions were placed on Englsih trade, and, as a consequence, the opium trade more than doubled in the 
following decades. But, even with the Treaty of Nanking in place, trade remained 
rather restricted, thus angering the English who felt this was clear treaty 
violation. The Chinese, for their part, were incensed at the wholescale export 
of Chinese nationals, sent overseas to work at what was no better than slave 
labour. In 1856, these differences escalated into a series of skirmishes that 
ended in 1860 with a second set of treaties that further humiliated and weakened 
the imperial government. The most disgracing of clauses in these new treaties 
was perhaps the complete legalization of opium throughout China. Also called the 
Anglo-Chinese War and in plural when referring to both conflicts. 
			
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