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Topic: Panthay


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In the News (Fri 1 Jan 10)

  
 Panthay Rebellion - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Panthay Rebellion (known in Chinese as the Du Wenxiu Qiyi 杜文秀起义 (1856 - 1873) was a separatist movement of the Hui people, Chinese Muslims, against the imperial Qing Dynasty in southwestern Yunnan Province, China.
Later, as the Qing troops began to gain the upperhand versus the rebellion, the rebellion sent a letter to Queen Victoria, asking the British Empire for formal recognition and for military assistance; the fledgling state was turned down by the British.
The leader of the rebellion was Du Wenxiu (杜文秀; pinyin: Dù Wénxiù) (1823 - 1872), an ethnic Hui born in Yongcheng.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Panthay_Rebellion   (440 words)

  
 List of Chinese rebellions: Encyclopedia topic
Panthay Rebellion (Panthay Rebellion: the panthay rebellion (1856 - 1873) was a rebellion by the huis, chinese muslims,...
An Lushan Rebellion (An Lushan Rebellion: the anshi rebellion () occurred in china, during the tang dynasty, from 756 to...
Boxer Rebellion (Boxer Rebellion: the boxer rebellion () was an uprising against western commercial and political influence...
www.absoluteastronomy.com /reference/list_of_chinese_rebellions   (167 words)

  
 Encyclopedia :: Qing Dynasty
Taking advantage of the political instability and popular rebellions convulsing the Ming Dynasty, the highly organized military forces of the Manchus swept into the Ming capital of Beijing in 1644, and there remained until the Qing dynasty was overthrown in the Xinhai Revolution of 1911, with the last emperor abdicating early in 1912.
The Taiping Rebellion in the mid-nineteenth century was the first major instance of anti-Manchu sentiment threatening the stability of the Qing dynasty, a phenomenon that would only increase in the following years.
The rebellion would be known in Chinese history as the Revolt of the Three Feudatories.
www.hallencyclopedia.com /Qing_Dynasty   (7310 words)

  
 Famous Ancient Chinese People Topic Center: History and story - Chinese
Panthay Rebellion The Panthay Rebellion (1856 - 1873) was a rebellion by the Huis, Chinese Muslims, against the Qing Dynasty in Yunnan Provin...
White Lotus Rebellion cleanup The White Lotus Rebellion (白蓮教起義) (1796-1804) was a Chinese anti-Manchu upr...
An Lushan Rebellion The Anshi Rebellion (zh-cpc=and#23433;and#21490;and#20043;and#20098;p=an1 shi3 zhi1 luan4) occurred in China, dur...
www.famouschinese.com /topic/Famous_Ancient_Chinese_People?sub=History_and_story   (252 words)

  
 Dictionary of Chinese Law and Government
The Chinese Sultanate: Islam, Ethnicity, : The Muslim-led Panthay Rebellion was one of the...
Decisive Encounters: The Chinese Civil W : The Chinese Civil War was one of the key conflic...
www.bigoldbuilding.com /283176.html   (326 words)

  
 Category:Chinese rebellions - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
People and events related to rebellions throughout the history of China.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Category:Chinese_rebellions   (57 words)

  
 Table of contents for The Chinese sultanate
All the Fish in the Pond: The Kunming Massacre and the Panthay Rebellion 000 Chapter 7.
Table of contents for The Chinese sultanate : Islam, ethnicity, and the Panthay Rebellion in southwest China, 1856-1873 / David G. Atwill.
Rebellion's Roots: Hanjian-ism, Han Newcomers, and Non-Han Violence 000 Chapter 5.
www.loc.gov /catdir/toc/ecip0511/2005012304.html   (216 words)

  
 China By Demetrius Charles Boulger (1893)- Chapter 22 from Nalanda Digital Library at NIT Calicut
The Mohammedan outbreaks in southwestern and northwestern China resulted, therefore, in the gradual suppression of the Panthay rebellion, which was completed in the twelfth year of Tungche's reign, while the Tungan rising, so far as the Central Asian territories were concerned, remained unquelled for a longer period.
The Panthays and the Tungani were either indigenous tribes or foreign immigrants who had adopted or imported the tenets of Islam.
The Panthay rising calls for description in the first place, because it began at an earlier period than the other, and also because the details have been preserved with greater fidelity.
www.nalanda.nitc.ac.in /resources/english/etext-project/history/china1/chapter22.html   (12819 words)

  
 Islam in China - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Numerous Hui rebellions, such as the Panthay Rebellion, sprung up during the Qing Dynasty in reaction to repressionist policies.
In the first decade of the 20th century, it has been estimated that there were between 3 million and 50 million Muslims in China proper (that is, China excluding the regions of Mongolia and Xinjiang), with the true number probably lying closer to 20,000,000 or 30,000,000.
Muslims suffered a decline of their status during the Qing Dynasty.
www.pole.ws /nph-proxy.pl/010110A/http/en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_in_China   (935 words)

  
 China Chapter XVIII - Taoukwang And His Successor
But from the growing Taeping Rebellion, which we have now followed down to the year 1856, our attention must be directed to the more serious and important foreign question which had again reached a crisis, and which would not wait on the convenience of the Celestial emperor and his advisers.
But none of these troubles assumed the extreme form of danger in open rebellion, and there was still wanting the man to weld all these hostile and dangerous elements into a national party of insurgents against Manchu authority, and so it remained until Taoukwang had given up his throne to his successor.
One of the Chinese officers had the courage to write and tell the emperor that "the outlaws were neither exterminated nor made prisoners." Notwithstanding the enormous expenditure on the war and the collection of a large body of troops the imperial forces made no real progress in crushing the rebels.
www.enotes.com /china-text/72520/print   (7093 words)

  
 East Asian Civ. II - essay 1
Continuing rebellions during the self-strengthening years included the Muslim (Panthay) rebellion of 1853-73 in the Northwest of China and the further Muslim (Tunghan) rebellion of 1862-74.
His role after the defeat of this rebellion was that of the suppression of the Nian rebellion (1853-68).
All these rebellions were not only a military inconvenience they also serve to demonstrate the deep social unrest within the various strands of Chinese society.
boblindsay.tripod.com /eac2_1.html   (2722 words)

  
 Chapter 11, Section a12- Domestic Uprisings
In Yunnan, the Muslim Panthays unsuccessfully rose against the Manchus.
While the Manchu (Ch'ing, Quing) government was preoccupied with the Taiping Rebellion in the south, the Nien bands formed armies, notably under the leadership of Chang Lohsing (d.
In the early 1850s, the Chinese living in the Yellow River (Huang Ho) valley suffered famine because of repeated flooding of the river; many of them joined outlaw bands, called nien, which had been plundering the provinces of Anhwei, Honan, and Shantung during the first half of the century.
www.ibiblio.org /chinesehistory/contents/c11sa12.html   (654 words)

  
 Richard S. Horowitz International Law and State Transformation in China, Siam, and the Ottoman Empire during the Nineteenth Century Journal of World History, 15.4 The History Cooperative
The Muslim Panthay rebellion in Yunnan in the 1850s and 1860s and the Northwestern Muslim rebellions in the 1860s and 1870s were unable to attract foreign support.
Invasions, rebellions, and even long-term occupations do not destroy the boundary as a concept or a political instrument, at least within the conceptual universe of international law.
Foreign debt became a serious problem only after 1895, when the immense indemnity from the war with Japan had to be financed with an international loan and required mortgaging the customs revenues and expanding the foreign customs service to oversee taxation of "native customs" on the still-flourishing coastal junk trade.
www.historycooperative.org /journals/jwh/15.4/horowitz.html   (14657 words)

  
 Saudi Aramco World : Muslims in China: The People
They lost their special status and under the Ch'ing, or Manchu, Dynasty were so oppressed that they rebelled repeatedly - most notably in the Panthay Rebellion which lasted from 1855 to 1873, but was crushed with great cruelty.
Descendants of Turkic and Mongol tribes, the Kazakhs of China still live a semi-nomadic life, driving their herds into the mountains in summer in search of pasture, and retiring to their camps in the valleys when winter comes.
In fact, Uighur troops helped the Chinese recapture the imperial city of Ch'ang-an (today Xian) in 757 during the An Lu-shan rebellion, and after 822 were instrumental in driving the Tibetans out of the Tarim Basin - through which passed the old Silk Road.
www.saudiaramcoworld.com /issue/198504/muslims.in.china-the.people.htm   (2620 words)

  
 Chiang Mai hotels - chiang mai resorts directory, Chiang Mai Thailand accommodation online booking
Many of the latter were Muslims who had fled to the hills after the brutal Chinese suppression of the Panthay rebellion in Yunnan in 1873.
The second half of the 19th century saw a large influx of overseas Chinese coming up from the South, as well as Haw Chinese coming overland from Yunnan.
www.phuketroom.com /chiangmai/people.htm   (396 words)

  
 CPAmedia.com: The Crescent in North Thailand - Muslims of Chiang Mai
The Muslim community expanded during the course of the 19th century with the arrival from Yunnan of Hui Muslim refugees from the failed "Panthay Rebellion" of Tu Wen-hsiu.
The Japanese, inveterately anti-Chinese to the point of ignoring the basic economic realities of imperialism, attacked and destroyed the affluent Panthay community at Panglong, dispersing the settlement's Yunnanese Muslim inhabitants throughout the Shan States and beyond.
Some displaced Panthays settled at Tachilek on Burma's frontier with northernmost Thailand; others crossed into Chiang Rai and Chiang Mai provinces, where they built mosques at Mae Sai, Chiang Rai, Fang and other lesser towns.
www.cpamedia.com /history/north_thailand_muslims   (1816 words)

  
 History of the Bais
The most important of them was the Muslims lead Panthay Rebellion that in the 19th century created a country seeking recognition by the European powers.
After more than a decade of rule over Yunnan, the Panthay regimen was overturned in one of the bloodiest wars in the province.
During the dynastic times have been some occasional uprisings.
www.chinaviva.com /eng/Bai/baihist.htm   (263 words)

  
 SELECTED RECENT PUBLICATIONS
The Chinese Sultanate: Islam, Ethnicity and the Panthay Rebellion in Southwestern China, 1856-1873, Stanford University Press, forthcoming.
"Blinkered Visions: Islamic Identity, Hui Ethnicity, and the Panthay Rebellion in Southwest China, 1856-1874,” Journal of Asian Studies, 62 4, November 2003.
Jonathan E. Brockopp, Islamic Ethics of Life: Abortion, War and Euthanasia.
jbe.la.psu.edu /histrlst/grad15.htm   (555 words)

  
 UCLA International Institute :: Avantgo Calendar Event
Among his works is the forthcoming book The Chinese Sultanate: Islam, Ethnicity and the Panthay Rebellion in Southwestern China, 1856-1873 (Stanford University Press).
Pillsbury is a cultural anthropologist specializing in the comparative study of Islam around the world and Muslims in China.
His research has focused on Muslim communities in Southwestern China.
www.isop.ucla.edu /showevent_avantgo.asp?eventid=3075   (530 words)

  
 Yunnan --  Britannica Concise Encyclopedia - The online encyclopedia you can trust!
In 1855–73 it was the scene of the great Panthay (Muslim) rebellion.
Discusses Abu Jaffar, Liu Chih, and the Panthays of Yunnan.
Short essay on the Muslim presence in China during the reign of the Tang, Sung, Yuan, and Ming dynasties.
www.britannica.com /ebc/article-9383242   (891 words)

  
 CHINA BOOKS: *History: Modern
The Muslim-led Panthay Rebellion was one of five mid-nineteenth-century rebellions to threaten the Chinese imperial court.
The Chinese Sultanate: Islam, Ethnicity, & the Panthay Rebellion in South-west China, 1856-1873
Traditional interpretations of the rebellion have emphasised the political threat posed by the Muslim Yunnanese, but no prior study has sought to understand the insurrection in its broader multi-ethnic borderland context.
www.chinabooks.com.au /newbooks/histmod.htm   (1708 words)

  
 D_Tracing_Muslim_Roots.doc
In the Southwest, the Great Panthay rebellion from 1855 to 1873 almost depopulated Yunnan.
The first major uprisings occurred toward the end of the eighteenth century, but the worst bloodshed took place in the second half of the nineteenth century, centering in two regions.
In the Northwest, from 1861 to 1877, what are called the Muslim Rebellions devastated Shaanxi, Gansu, Xinjiang, and parts of Mongolia.
www.world-affairs.org /globalclassroom/curriculum/BeyondIslam/Unit3_China/D_Tracing_Muslim_Roots.doc   (2085 words)

  
 News and Events: Department News - History and Religious Studies Penn State
David Atwill, assistant professor of history, has recently published The Chinese Sultanate: Islam, Ethnicity, and the Panthay Rebellion in Southwest China, 1856-1873 (Stanford University Press, 2005).
The brutal suppression of the Panthay Rebellion takes on new meanings in this analysis.
He finds that indigenous sources yield a very different view of the conflict than the conventional one, which is based primarily on the Qing court’s viewpoint.
php.scripts.psu.edu /dept/history/newsAndEvents/departmentNews.php   (623 words)

  
 UH News
David Atwill, "Muslim Yunnanese and the Panthay Rebellion, 1855­1873." Adviser: Harry Lamley, History.
www.hawaii.edu /ur/News_Releases/NR_August98/fellowships.html   (230 words)

  
 newbooks02.txt
DS 793.Y8 A79 2005 Chinese sultanate : Islam, ethnicity, and the Panthay Rebellion in southwest China, 1856-1873 / David G. Atwill.
www.kl.oakland.edu /find_books/new_books/newbooks02.txt   (11178 words)

  
 Book Emporium - History > China - Browse book categories
Islam, Ethnicity, And The Panthay Rebellion In Southwest China, 1856-1873
A Young Girl's Journey From Hitler's Hate To War-torn China
www.bookemporium.com /bookbrowse.cfm?cat=HIS008000   (56 words)

  
 Library Journal clear
Chinese Sultanate: Islam, Ethnicity, and the Panthay Rebellion in Southwest China
www.libraryjournal.com /clear/CA6316632.html   (1833 words)

  
 Honors Seminar Brings Software to the Classroom
Jonathan Schlesinger, "The Panthay Rebellion and the Acceleration of British Imperialism in Burma, 1867-1886" (Adviser: Crossley)
Ariel Rubin, "The Land of Cockaigne Meets the New World: Dutch Exploration and Its Impact on Dutch Culture" (Adviser: Simons)
www.dartmouth.edu /~history/newsletter/spring03/classroom.html   (673 words)

  
 Colloquy on Asia in the Era of Globalization
Reading: Atwill, “Blinkered Visions: Islamic Identity, Hui Ethnicity, and the Panthay Rebellion,” Journal of Asian Studies 62(4) November 2003, 1079-1102.
Title: Holy War in China: The Muslim Rebellion and State in Chinese Central Asia Author: Hodong Kim Publisher: Stanford University Press (2004) ISBN: 0804748845
February 15* - Yakub Beg Reading: Kim, Holy War in China: The Muslim Rebellion and State in Chinese Central Asia
complit.la.psu.edu /CAEG/islamsorient_course_spring2005.htm   (785 words)

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