World Civilizations. The Global Experience. Chapter. Civilizations in Crisis: The Ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and Qing China

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World Civilizations The Global Experience AP Seventh Edition Chapter 27 Civilizations in Crisis: The Ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and Qing China

Figure 27.1 This panoramic scene painted by a Chinese witness to the Taiping Rebellion shows the rebel forces besieging and burning an enemy town and a nearby estate house of a large landlord's family in central China.

Chapter Overview I. From Empire to Nation: Ottoman Retreat and the Birth of Turkey II. Western Intrusions and the Crisis in the Arab Islamic Heartlands III.The Rise and Fall of the Qing Dynasty

TIMELINE 1640 C.E. to 1900 C.E.

From Empire to Nation: Ottoman Retreat and the Birth of Turkey Ottoman decline By early 1700s Power struggles Ayan, land-owning classes Rivalry with the West for trade Results Austrian Habsburgs Ottomans driven from Hungary, northern Balkans

From Empire to Nation: Ottoman Retreat and the Birth of Turkey Results Russians expand into Caucasus, Crimea Christian Balkans challenge Ottomans Greeks, independent, 1830 Serbia, 1867 By 1870, most of the Balkans Capital threatened

From Empire to Nation: Ottoman Retreat and the Birth of Turkey Reform and Survival British support Ottomans v. Russia Selim III Reforms anger Janissaries 1807, deposed, assassinated

From Empire to Nation: Ottoman Retreat and the Birth of Turkey Reform and Survival Mahmud II Professional army Replaces Janissaries, 1826 Tanzimat reforms Universities on Western models Railways 1876, European-style constitution

Figure 27.2 In the courtyard of the Topkapi Palace in Istanbul, Sultan Selim III receives dignitaries from throughout the Ottoman empire in the midst of a splendidly attired imperial entourage.

From Empire to Nation: Ottoman Retreat and the Birth of Turkey Repression and Revolt Abdul Hamid Attempted to return to despotic absolutism Restricted civil liberties Deprived Western elites of power Ottoman Society for Union and Progress Formed in Paris, 1889 Distracted by factional fights

Figure 27.3 This photo features a group of Young Turks who ultimately survived the challenges presented by Turkey's defeat in World War I and the successful struggles of the Turks to prevent the partition of their heartlands in Asia Minor. The man in the uniform in the center is Mustafa Kemal, or Ataturk, who emerged as a masterful military commander in the war and went on to become the founder of modern Turkey.

Western Intrusions and the Crisis in the Arab Islamic Heartlands Muhammad Ali and the Failure of Westernization in Egypt Napoleon Defeats Ottoman Mamluk vassals in Egypt Murad Muhammad Ali Emerges after French withdraw Albanian Ottoman

Western Intrusions and the Crisis in the Arab Islamic Heartlands Muhammad Ali and the Failure of Westernization in Egypt Reforms Military: army, navy Agricultural modernization Khedives

Western Global Dominance and the Dilemmas It Posed Pattern in decline of civilizations Internal differences Threats from outside civilizations Rare for one civilization to play a major part in the demise of another Western Europe changes patterns Scientific discoveries and technology surpasses all other civilizations Dilemmas for Africa and Asia

Figure 27.4 Napoleon's victory in the Battle of the Pyramids led to a short-lived, but transformative, French occupation of Egypt.

Western Intrusions and the Crisis in the Arab Islamic Heartlands Bankruptcy, European Intervention, and Strategies of Resistance Muhammad Ali's successors Drop reform Ayans profit from peasantry Cotton Crucial export crop Indebtedness to foreign creditors Suez Canal, open 1869

Western Intrusions and the Crisis in the Arab Islamic Heartlands Bankruptcy, European Intervention, and Strategies of Resistance University of al-azhar Center of Muslim thinkers Jamal al-din al-afghani, Muhammad Abduh Push for Westernization Underline traditional Muslim rationalism

Western Intrusions and the Crisis in the Arab Islamic Heartlands Bankruptcy, European Intervention, and Strategies of Resistance Ahmad Orabai Revolt against khedive, 1882 British intervene Period of puppet khedives under British

Western Intrusions and the Crisis in the Arab Islamic Heartlands Jihad: The Mahdist Revolt in the Sudan Khartoum Sudan challenges British Can't control camel nomads Muhammad Ahmed, the Mahdi Proclaims jihad against Egyptians, British Controls Sudan Succeeded by Khalifa Abdallahi

Western Intrusions and the Crisis in the Arab Islamic Heartlands Jihad: The Mahdist Revolt in the Sudan General Kitchner Omdurman, 1896 Mahdists crushed

Map 27.1 British Egypt and the Anglo- Egyptian Sudan Although British control over Egypt was quite secure from the time of the defeat of the Arabi revolt in 1882 until World War I, the Mahdist movement in the Sudan delayed the conquest of that vast region along the upper Nile River until 1898.

The Rise and Fall of the Qing Dynasty Nurhaci (1559 1626) Manchu leader Banner armies Drives Chinese south of Great Wall Signification of Manchuria Qing Retain Ming rule Kangxi Confucian scholar and patron of the arts

Visualizing the Past Mapping the Decline of Two Great Empires Map 27.2 Ottoman Empire from Late 18th Century to World War I The vast territories of the Ottoman empire were lost over a period of more than two centuries to external enemies and the assertion of independence by ambitious vassals.

Visualizing the Past Mapping the Decline of Two Great Empires Map 27.3 Qing Empire from Opium War of 1839 1841 to World War I Although much of the traditional Chinese territories remained intact, the Qing and later the government of the Republic of China lost control of regions distant from their capitals in the 19th and the first half of the 20th century.

The Rise and Fall of the Qing Dynasty Economy and Society in the Early Centuries of Qing Rule Qing social system maintained Manchu Rural reforms Infrastructure maintained Burdens lessened Silver influx to 1800

The Rise and Fall of the Qing Dynasty Economy and Society in the Early Centuries of Qing Rule Qing social system maintained Compradors Merchants along coast Tie China to outside

The Rise and Fall of the Qing Dynasty Rot from Within: Bureaucratic Breakdown and Social Disintegration Qing decline Exam system corruption Yellow River dikes not maintained Flooding Unrest: migration, outlaws

Map 27.4 Coastal China and Its Hinterland in the 19th Century By the early 1800s, China's seaports and river deltas had become the main focus of European expansionist efforts. By the end of the century, China's southern coastal regions had also become seedbeds for nationalist resistance to Manchu rule and European domination.

The Rise and Fall of the Qing Dynasty Barbarians at the Southern Gates: The Opium War and After British Import Indian opium to China Chinese react Opium War Lin Zexu Blockades European trade

The Rise and Fall of the Qing Dynasty Barbarians at the Southern Gates: The Opium War and After British invade, 1839 Chinese defeated Hong Kong to British Ports forced to reopen

Figure 27.5 In the second half of the 19th century, the Chinese were forced to concede port and warehouse areas, such as the one in this painting, to rival imperialist powers. These areas were, in effect, colonial enclaves. They were guarded by foreign troops, flew foreign flags, and were run by Western or Japanese merchant councils.

The Rise and Fall of the Qing Dynasty A Civilization at Risk: Rebellion and Failed Reforms Hong Xiuquan Taiping rebellion Calls for social, land reforms Criticize Qing, Manchus Zeng Guofan Self-strengthening movement Crushed by Empress Cixi, 1898

The Rise and Fall of the Qing Dynasty A Civilization at Risk: Rebellion and Failed Reforms Boxer Rebellion Anti-foreign conflict Crushed by Western powers

The Rise and Fall of the Qing Dynasty The Fall of the Qing and the Rise of a Chinese Nationalist Alternative Resistance goes underground Plots to push Westernization Sun Yat-sen 1905, civil service exams ended End of scholar-gentry 1911, rebellions 1912, last Qing emperor, Puyi, removed

Figure 27.6 China's peril in the aftermath of the Boxer Rebellion and the military interventions by the imperialist powers that it prompted are brilliantly captured in this contemporary cartoon showing the aggressive and mutually hostile great powers circling the carcass of the Qing empire.