FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   23   24   25   26   >>  
ich was finally reconquered in 1683, was made part of the province of Fuhkien, and so remained for some two hundred years, when it was erected into an independent province. Thus, for a time China Proper consisted of nineteen provinces, until the more familiar "eighteen" was recently restored by the transfer of Formosa to Japan. In addition to the above, the eastern territory, originally inhabited by the Manchus, was divided into the three provinces already mentioned, all of which were at first organized upon a purely military basis; but of late years the administration of the southernmost province, in which stands Mukden, the Manchu capital, has been brought more into line with that of China Proper. In 1677 the East India Company established an agency at Amoy, which, though withdrawn in 1681, was re-established in 1685. The first treaty with Russia was negotiated in 1679, but less than ten years later a further treaty was found necessary, under which it was agreed that the river Amur was to be the boundary-line between the two dominions, the Russians giving up possession of both banks. Thus Ya-k`o-sa, or Albazin, was ceded by Russia to China, and some of the inhabitants, who appear to have been either pure Russians or half-castes, were sent as prisoners to Peking, where religious instruction was provided for them according to the rules of the orthodox church. All the descendants of these Albazins probably perished in the destruction of the Russian college during the siege of the Legations in 1900. Punitive expeditions against Galdan and Arabtan carried the frontiers of the empire to the borders of Khokand and Badakshan, and to the confines of Tibet. Galdan was a khan of the Kalmucks, who succeeded in establishing his rule through nearly the whole of Turkestan, after attaining his position by the murder of a brother. He attacked the Khalkas, and thus incurred the resentment of K`ang Hsi, whose subjects they were; and in order to strengthen his power, he applied to the Dalai Lama for ordination, but was refused. He then feigned conversion to Mahometanism, though without attracting Mahometan sympathies. In 1689 the Emperor in person led an army against him, crossing the deadly desert of Gobi for this purpose. Finally, after a further expedition and a decisive defeat in 1693, Galdan became a fugitive, and died three years afterwards. He was succeeded as khan by his nephew, Arabtan, who soon took up the offensive against
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   23   24   25   26   >>  



Top keywords:

Galdan

 

province

 
Arabtan
 
Russia
 
Russians
 

succeeded

 

treaty

 

established

 

Proper

 

provinces


murder

 

establishing

 

Turkestan

 

Kalmucks

 

orthodox

 
position
 

attaining

 
Khokand
 

Legations

 
Punitive

college

 

Albazins

 
destruction
 

perished

 

Russian

 

expeditions

 

Badakshan

 

confines

 

borders

 

empire


brother

 
descendants
 

carried

 

frontiers

 

church

 

desert

 

deadly

 

purpose

 

crossing

 

Emperor


person

 

Finally

 

expedition

 

nephew

 

offensive

 

fugitive

 
decisive
 
defeat
 
sympathies
 

Mahometan