Jlaw
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I respectfully disagree. Apologies for the source, but here is a snippet from Wikipedia's entry on the Qing dynasty:
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So Qing was brought down, fundamentally, by economic mismanagement (and the attending corruption). You've already acknowledged that the USSR was brought down by economic mismanagement. As far as Rome, of course it's never as simple as one factor, but I would assert that, like the others, the primary factor was economic in nature. Money goes a long way towards papering over all of the other flaws.
It would initially appear that exceptions to this rule are autocratic regimes that have the luxury of turning all of their military power inward, such as the dictatorships of the middle east and North Korea. It doesn't require nearly as much economic strength to suppress peasants, but I can also guarantee that those regimes won't last much longer, either.
Qing lasted 300 years. During Qing dynasty , China's territory was the largest in its history. Of course the later Qing dynasty became less wealthy as it was becoming harder to sustain a large landmass without being the world's reserve currency or a stronger military. But if was more of a result of lagging behind the west in military, as suppose to the decrease of wealth.
Look at SU. They disintegrated but due to a strong military no countries were able to invade them. Qing was different as it became weak militarily, than economically. Combine that with internal strife that eventually led to its fall.
Qing disintegrated due to the inability to keep up with modernizing its military. Look at Soviet Union. It dissolved in the 1990s but no countries were able to invade them because they still had a strong modern army.Saying Qing was brought down by economic management is like saying world war I is started because Ferdinand doesn't wear a bullet proof vest. His death maybe a trigger, but the cause of the war is there long before Ferdinand is even born. Qing's fundamental problem is that it is a dynasty founded by a minority race and as a result its ruling concentrated on caste segregation and maintaining a feudal dynasty rather than moving on with industrial revolution. The wealth of Qing empire is also exaggerated because it is agricultural nation instead of industrial nation and its GDP (if you apply the term) is mostly in farmers and locked in the land. You actually have much fewer cash flow. Taking the Boxer Protocol (辛丑条约) for example, it is about the most unequal treaty in Chinese history and the Qing empire has trouble paying for its 450 million taels of fine silver. However, if you compare it to what the French coughed up after Franco-Prussia war you will see that the payment for Boxer Protocol is a little more than half of the settlement for Franco-Prussia war and the French paid it off in three years. This really shouldn't be surprising, because we are comparing industrial nations with agriculture nations. Qing's fall is ultimately before it was lagging behind the tide of history and it got swiped away.
I honestly don't know how you say "China will learn the lesson again" with a straight face when you are an American.
Wikipedia is incorrect as most western sources when it comes to Chinese history.