Daoguang Emperor Explained

Daoguang Emperor
Succession1:Prince Zhi of the First Rank
Reign1:1813 – 3 October 1820
Reign-Type1:Tenure
Succession:Emperor of the Qing dynasty
Reign:3 October 1820 – 26 February 1850
Predecessor:Jiaqing Emperor
Successor:Xianfeng Emperor
Birth Date:16 September 1782
(乾隆四十七年 八月 十日)
Birth Place:Xiefang Hall, Forbidden City, Beijing
Death Date:
(道光三十年 正月 十五日)
Death Place:Imperial Gardens, Beijing
Burial Place:Mu Mausoleum, Western Qing tombs
Spouse:
    Spouse-Type:Consorts
    Issue:
    Full Name:Aisin-Gioro Minning (愛新覺羅·旻寧)
    Manchu: Min ning
    Era Dates:Daoguang (道光): 3 February 1821 – 31 January 1851
    Manchu: Doro eldengge
    Mongolian: Төр Гэрэлт
    Posthumous Name:Emperor Xiaotian Fuyun Lizhong Tizheng Zhiwen Shengwu Zhiyong Renci Jianqin Xiaomin Kuanding Cheng (效天符運立中體正至文聖武智勇仁慈儉勤孝敏寬定成皇帝)
    Manchu: Šanggan hūwangdi
    Temple Name:Xuanzong (宣宗)
    Manchu: Siowandzung
    House:Aisin-Gioro
    Dynasty:Qing
    Father:Jiaqing Emperor
    Mother:Empress Xiaoshurui

    The Daoguang Emperor (16 September 1782 – 26 February 1850), also known by his temple name Emperor Xuanzong of Qing, personal name Mianning, was the seventh emperor of the Qing dynasty, and the sixth Qing emperor to rule over China proper. His reign was marked by "external disaster and internal rebellion". These include the First Opium War and the beginning of the Taiping Rebellion which nearly brought down the dynasty. The historian Jonathan Spence characterizes the Daoguang Emperor as a "well meaning but ineffective man" who promoted officials who "presented a purist view even if they had nothing to say about the domestic and foreign problems surrounding the dynasty".

    Early years

    The Daoguang Emperor was born in the Forbidden City, Beijing, in 1782, and was given the name Mianning . It was later changed to Minning when he became emperor. The first character of his private name was changed from Mian to Min to avoid the relatively common character Mian. This novelty was introduced by his grandfather, the reigning Qianlong Emperor, who thought it was inappropriate to use a common character in the emperor's private name due to the longstanding practice of naming taboo.

    Mianning was the second son of Prince Yongyan, the 15th son and heir of the Qianlong Emperor. Even though he was Yongyan's second son, he was first in line after Prince Yongyan to his grandfather's throne. This was because according to the dishu system, his mother, Lady Hitara, was Yongyan's primary spouse whereas his elder brother was born to Yongyan's concubine. Mianning was favored by his grandfather, the Qianlong Emperor. He frequently accompanied his grandfather on hunting trips. On one such trip, at the age of nine, Mianning successfully hunted a deer, which greatly amused the Qianlong Emperor. The emperor would abdicate five years after that incident, in 1796, when Mianning was 14. Mianning’s father Prince Yongyan was then enthroned as the Jiaqing Emperor, after which he made Lady Hitara (Mianning's mother) his empress consort. The elderly Qianlong would live three more years in retirement before dying in 1799, aged 87, when Mianning was 17.

    In 1813, while he was still a prince, Mianning also played a vital role in repelling and killing Eight Trigrams invaders who stormed the Forbidden City.

    Reign

    Khoja rebellion in Xinjiang

    In September 1820, at the age of 38, Mianning inherited the throne after the Jiaqing Emperor died suddenly of unknown causes. He became the first Qing emperor who was the eldest legitimate son of his father. Now known as the Daoguang Emperor, he inherited a declining empire with Westerners encroaching upon the borders of China. His era name, "Daoguang", means "radiant path". The Daoguang Emperor had been ruling for six years when the exiled heir to the Khojas, Jahangir Khoja, attacked Xinjiang from Kokand in the Afaqi Khoja revolts. By the end of 1826, the former Qing cities of Kashgar, Yarkand, Khotan, and Yangihissar had all fallen to the rebels.[1] After a friend betrayed him in March 1827, Khoja was sent to Beijing in an iron litter and subsequently executed, while the Qing Empire regained control of their lost territory. The Uyghur Muslim Sayyid and Naqshbandi Sufi rebel of the Afaqi suborder, Jahangir Khoja was sliced to death (Lingchi) in 1828 by the Manchus for leading a rebellion against the Qing.

    First Opium War

    See main article: First Opium War.

    During the Daoguang Emperor's reign, China experienced major problems with opium, which was imported into China by British merchants. Opium had started to trickle into China during the reign of the Yongzheng Emperor, but was limited to approximately 200 chests annually. By the time of the Qianlong era, this amount had increased to 1,000 chests, 4,000 chests by the Jiaqing era and more than 30,000 chests during the Daoguang era.

    The Daoguang Emperor issued many imperial edicts banning opium in the 1820s and 1830s, which were carried out by Lin Zexu, whom he appointed as an Imperial Commissioner to Canton.[2] Lin Zexu's efforts to halt the spread of opium in China led directly to the First Opium War. With China losing the war, Lin Zexu was made a scapegoat. The Daoguang Emperor removed his authority and banished him to Yili. During the war, the Daoguang Emperor ordered 187 British and Indian prisoners of war held captive in Taiwan Prefecture to be summarily executed in 1842 in retaliation for the Chinese defeat at the Battle of Ningpo; the executions were carried out on 10 August by Chinese officials. The Chinese defeat in the war exposed Qing China's technological and military inferiority to European powers, which led China in being forced to cede Hong Kong to the British in the Treaty of Nanjing in August 1842, and also pay a hefty indemnity which left the treasury desperate for funds.[3] Meanwhile, in the Himalayas, the Sikh Empire attempted an occupation of Tibet but was defeated in the Sino-Sikh war (1841–1842).

    Anti-Christianity

    In 1811, a clause sentencing Europeans to death for spreading Catholicism had been added to the statute called "Prohibitions Concerning Sorcerers and Sorceresses" (禁止師巫邪術) in the Great Qing Legal Code. Protestants hoped that the Qing government would discriminate between Protestantism and Catholicism, since the law mentioned the latter by name, but after Protestant missionaries gave Christian books to Chinese people in 1835 and 1836, the Daoguang Emperor demanded to know who were the "traitorous natives" in Guangzhou who had supplied them with books.

    Noble titles

    The Daoguang Emperor granted the title of "Wujing Boshi" to the descendants of Ran Qiu.[4]

    Death and legacy

    The Daoguang Emperor died on 26 February 1850 at the Old Summer Palace, 8 km/5 miles northwest of Beijing, being the last Qing emperor to pass away in that Palace before it was burnt down by Anglo-French troops during the Second Opium War, a decade later. He was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, Yizhu, who was later enthroned as the Xianfeng Emperor. The Daoguang Emperor failed to understand the intention or determination of the Europeans, or the basic economics of a war on drugs. Although the Europeans were outnumbered and thousands of miles away from logistical support in their native countries, they could bring far superior firepower to bear at any point of contact along the Chinese coast. The Qing government was highly dependent on the continued flow of taxes from southern China via the Grand Canal, which the British expeditionary force easily cut off at Zhenjiang.

    The Daoguang Emperor ultimately had a poor understanding of the British and the industrial revolution that Britain and Western Europe had undergone, preferring to turn a blind eye to the rest of the world, though the distance from China to Europe most likely played a part. It was said that the emperor did not even know where Britain was located in the world. His 30-year reign saw rising economic tensions, sectarian instability and foreign interventions which would eventually lead to the collapse of the Qing dynasty in 1911.

    The Daoguang Emperor was interred in the Mu (慕; lit. "Longing" or "Admiration") mausoleum complex, which is part of the Western Qing Tombs,[5] 120 km southwest of Beijing.

    Family

    See also: Consorts of the Daoguang Emperor.

    Empress

    Imperial Noble Consort

    Noble Consort

    Consort

    Concubine

    Noble Lady

    Second Class Attendant

    Lady-in-waiting

    Popular culture

    See also

    References

    Sources

    Further reading

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Zhuozhou Celebrity — Lu Kun (涿州名人-卢坤) . . 15 Jun 2012 . February 21, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130121150339/http://he.xinhuanet.com/zfwq/2012-06/15/content_25399887.htm . 21 January 2013 . dead . dmy-all . zh-CN .
    2. Book: Chang, Jung . Empress Dowager Cixi: The Concubine Who Launched Modern China . Random House . 2013 . 978-1-4481-9142-0 . 6, 22 . en.
    3. https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Nanking Treaty of Nanking
    4. Book: Qin ding da Qing hui dian (Jiaqing chao)0. 1818. 1084.
    5. Web site: Western Qing Tombs, a quiet place to pay tribute to history[1]- Chinadaily.com.cn ]. 2022-12-17 . www.chinadaily.com.cn.