Review: China and Japan through 1900, Part 1
Across
- 1. A strong feeling of pride in and devotion to one's country.
- 3. Western powers were able to gain greater trading rights in China during the 1800's through the use of force, threats, and setting up unfair _____________.
- 5. In 1900, members of a Chinese secret society attacked/killed foreigners and Chinese Christians, and destroyed everything foreign including railroads and churches; this is now known as
- 8. The British imposed the policy of _________, or immunity of a country's nationals from the laws of their host country, on the newly open ports on the Chinese mainland.
- 10. By the end of the _________________ century, the illegal trade in opium, constituted the most profitable import commodity in China, especially around the area of Canton.
- 11. The Japanese warriors and members of the military class of feudal Japan.
Down
- 1. Chinese naval expeditions were abruptly ended in 1433 because maintaining the fleet was considered a needless waste of ___________ _______________.
- 2. 20-30 million Chinese were killed between 1850 and 1864 in attempt of the Chinese peasants to overthrow the Qing emperor and government, and the Qing dynasty survived.
- 4. In Japan,___________________ made farming difficult and forced most people to live along the coastal plains. The ________ offered plenty of food sources, and Japan developed a thriving fishing industry.
- 5. The difference between how much a nation imports and exports.
- 6. Under the Ming dynasty, only the ________________ was allowed to conduct foreign trade in order to limit outside influences.
- 7. In the view of Chinese Emperor ______________, the trade between China and England was unnecessary to China, and a favor to England.
- 9. The century and a half from 1750 to 1900 marked the structural, cultural and economic decline of the great ___________ ___________ and nowhere was this more evident than in Qing China as its population, the world's largest, grew ever less capable of sustaining its society and as the nation's late imperial policies were increasingly at odds with those of the industrializing and commercially expanding West.