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China / Japan: Japanese troops drive out Chinese near a city gate during bombardment and fall of Peking. Boxer Rebellion, 1900. Japanese ukiyo-e tryptych

China / Japan: Japanese troops drive out Chinese near a city gate during bombardment and fall of Peking. Boxer Rebellion, 1900. Japanese ukiyo-e tryptych

The Boxer Rebellion, also known as Boxer Uprising or Yihetuan Movement, was a proto-nationalist movement by the Righteous Harmony Society in China between 1898 and 1901, opposing foreign imperialism and Christianity.

The uprising took place in response to foreign spheres of influence in China, with grievances ranging from opium traders, political invasion, economic manipulation, to missionary evangelism. In China, popular sentiment remained resistant to foreign influences, and anger rose over the 'unequal treaties', which the weak Qing state could not resist.

Concerns grew that missionaries and Chinese Christians could use this decline to their advantage, appropriating lands and property of unwilling Chinese peasants to give to the church. This sentiment resulted in violent revolts against foreign interests.

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