The Qing Dynasty
ebook ∣ A History of China: A History of China, #37 · A History of China
By Hui Wang
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The Qing Dynasty: A History of China, PART THREE, takes you into the lives of emperors, empresses, generals, and officials who defined the empire's final centuries. When I set out to write this book, I wanted to do more than record events—I wanted readers to meet the people themselves: Heshen, the infamous official richer than a nation; the Qianlong Emperor, whose brilliance and vanity left lasting marks; and the cautious Jiaqing Emperor, forced to rule in his father's shadow.
Each chapter brings a turning point. You will see the struggle of succession as Qianlong wrestled with the question of choosing an heir, and later how Yongyan became emperor while still under his father's watchful eye. You will watch rulers who found that being a good emperor was harder than leading an army, and moments when assassins threatened the very heart of the dynasty. Even fate plays its part, sparing lives from lightning strikes and twisting the line of succession until the throne finally returned to the eldest son.
The book also reveals the empire's uneasy relationship with the outside world. The stingy emperor who counted every expense, the Qianlong court that rejected Lord Macartney's British mission, and the fearless Lin Zexu, remembered as the great anti-opium commissioner, all take the stage. These encounters—sometimes proud, sometimes tragic—changed China's path forever, opening Qing's gates to foreign pressure and the opium wars that followed.
Inside the court, power was never secure. Silver drained from the treasury, kindness alone failed to hold the empire together, and "trusted aides" gained more power than emperors themselves. You will meet Empress Dowager Cixi, who rose above ministers and generals, eight ministers who clashed with two empresses, and bandits who won victories that shook the throne. Naval defeats against Asia's rising powers and unprecedented events in the capital revealed just how fragile the dynasty had become.
By the final chapters, the great Qing dynasty collapsed under the weight of corruption, foreign invasion, and its own divided court. From Heshen's meteoric rise to Lin Zexu's defiance, from Qianlong's glory to Cixi's iron hand, this is a human story of ambition, betrayal, loyalty, and downfall. My hope is that these pages bring you close to the voices of the time, so you can feel the grandeur and the tragedy of the last empire of China.
