Friday 22 March 2013

Famous Individuals in Shanghai & Surrounds, 1842 to 1911


For the purposes of this listing, in the case of Western or ‘foreign’ individuals, the surname is given first and in capitals; Chinese and other Oriental individuals’ names have been left in their more recognisable form (to Western readers) but with the family name capitalised for reference, except in the case of individuals who are Manchu in origin: such people never used their real names in adulthood and went by public titles instead. Fictional characters are designated with an ‘F’. The spelling of Chinese and other non-Western names follows the accepted Nineteenth Century Anglicisation format.

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BURGEVINE, Henry Andrea (1836 - 1865)

An American adventurer, Burgevine supported Frederick Ward in his efforts to create a defense force to protect the city of Shanghai and its surrounds. The Ever Victorious Army (EVA) as it became known attracted many European adherents and the ability and glamour of this unit grew over time. Burgevine usually acted as quartermaster during the engagements led by Ward and was intimately acquainted with the force’s finances.

After the death of Ward, Burgevine was promoted to leader of the unit and immediately demanded more money both for himself and his men. The financing Patriotic Association headed by Li Hung-chang, had already arranged to reduce the wages of the EVA after Ward’s death in response to shifting attitudes from the Imperial Court and refused to accede to the demand. In response, Burgevine took a contingent of men into Shanghai and attacked the Association’s bank, striking a banker and making off with a substantial amount of money, which they took back to the EVA’s headquarters. He was inevitably dismissed from his post after this and replaced by a Captain Holland, who had been Burgevine’s Second-in-Command. Burgevine, immediately went to Nanking where he signed on as a commander in the Taiping Army. Meanwhile, the British offered the Patriotic Association the services of George Gordon as the new leader of the EVA, an opportunity which they leapt at enthusiastically.

Burgevine served several more years with the Rebels and was known as a daring if somewhat erratic commander. The tide of Chinese antipathy against foreigners was against him however and he was ultimately flayed alive by the very troops he’d chosen to lead.

Dr Fu Manchu (F) (1840 - ?)
“Imagine a person, tall, lean and feline, high-shouldered, with a brow like Shakespeare and a face like Satan, a close-shaven skull, and long, magnetic eyes of the true cat-green ... one giant intellect, with all the resources of science past and present ... Imagine that awful being, and you have a mental picture of Dr. Fu-Manchu, the yellow peril incarnate in one man.”

–Sax Rohmer, The Insidious Dr. Fu Manchu

Arch-villain of a long series of thrilling novels by the British author Sax Rohmer, the ‘Devil Doctor’ is an archetype of the sinister Triad leader and eminently suitable for Keepers to establish as a nemesis for their Investigators. The name ‘Fu Manchu’ gives an indication as to the character’s heritage and has been suggested to actually be a title of honour, meaning ‘the Warlike Manchu’.

In the early novels Fu Manchu works as a subordinate leader in a deadly secret society called the Hsi Fan. As the stories progress, he rises in rank until, ultimately, he rules the tong completely and commits their efforts to the expulsion of the Communists and the reinstatement of the Ch’ing Dynasty. During the Boxer Rebellion, Fu Manchu is tentatively identified as part of the Imperial household and disappeared as the Dowager Empress fled Peking at the lifting of the Siege.

Fu Manchu’s schemes are byzantine and terrifying, slow to unwind but deadly in their effect. He spends much time outside of China plotting to overthrow governments and to destabilize economies. He targets his foes with a bewildering array of subtle weapons - "pythons and hamadryads... fungi and my tiny allies, the bacilli; ... my black spiders" – and regularly recruits such assassins as the Thugs and the Dacoits, along with his own tong minions. Notorious amongst his arsenal are the ‘Zayat Kiss’ and the ‘Flower of Silence’ both of which reveal his dominance over the arts of Chinese alchemy and herbalism. Fu Manchu is supposedly one of very few practitioners to have unlocked the secrets of the life-extending Chinese elixir vitae, as revealed in the ancient texts.

Whether Investigators would encounter the ‘Devil Doctor’ himself in Shanghai is up to their Keeper; however, the insidious presence of the Hsi Fan is a constant threat hanging over the treaty port.

GILES, Prof. Herbert Allen (1845 – 1935)

Professor Giles was a sinologist and diplomat educated at Charterhouse; his greatest contribution to Anglo-Chinese relations was the modification of the Romanisation system of Chinese transliteration, initially established by Sir Thomas Wade, into the Wade-Giles System of Romanisation. This system was later rejected as too cumbersome for use by anyone not in academic circles but a modified system is still in use today in Taiwan.

Giles arrived in China in 1867. He was British Vice-Consul at Pagoda Island from 1880 to 1883; Vice-Consul at Shanghai from 1883 to 1885 and Consul at Tamsui and Ningpo from 1885 to 1891 and 1891 to 1893 respectively. He later returned to Aberdeen in Scotland and then became Cambridge’s second lecturer in Chinese after Wade’s retirement. In 1902 he moved to Columbia University to lecture there in Chinese until his death.

GORDON, Major-General ‘Chinese’ Charles George, CB (1833 - 1885)

Prefiguring Thomas Edward Lawrence (‘Lawrence of Arabia’), Gordon was one of those British officers who skated somewhat too close to the wind in terms of his seeming to ‘go native’ for the complete comfort of his superiors. Gordon always seemed to exist on a somewhat loftier plane than his fellow mortals and this garnered him no shortage of enmity. It also gave him uncanny insights into the Chinese mind.

After the death of Frederick Ward and the dismissal of Henry Burgevine, the British legation in Shanghai offered to engage Gordon as leader of the Ever Victorious Army (EVA). This offer was gratefully accepted by the Chinese backers of this force and Gordon was diverted from his current activities, building defences near Shanghai for the Royal Engineers. The first thing he did was to insist on regular payment for himself and his men: since, under Ward and Burgevine, the men took their own wages by looting after their victories - a situation that the Chinese enjoyed because essentially their fighters came for free - the Patriotic Association under Li Hung-chang began a protracted negotiation with Gordon that saw him increasingly frustrated and angry with the arrangement. After some of his men, whom he’d had arrested while looting, were summarily executed instead of being brought to trial, Gordon resigned his commission with the EVA. At the last minute however, while waiting to catch his ship home to England, word reached him of the impending defeat of the EVA at the hands of the Taipings; he raced back to the front, took over command and saved the day. This act earned him the rank of titu, the highest military rank in the Chinese Imperial army; he was also awarded the yellow jacket of nobility. At no point during his career in China did he wield anything other than a riding crop while in battle.

Gordon returned to Britain shortly afterwards and was greeted with the nickname ‘Chinese’ Gordon. He was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel and placed in command of the Royal Engineers building defences for the River Thames in Gravesend in Kent, where he also set up a Boy’s Club. Gordon was the archetypical ‘muscular Christian’ adopting dozens of homeless boys across the world during his life, with whom he kept up correspondence and financed their educations and careers. His evangelical outlook was tempered by the fact that he was a probable alcoholic, shipping crates of brandy with him wherever he went in the world. He was an eccentric who believed, amongst other things, that the Earth was enclosed in a hollow sphere with God's throne directly above the altar of the Temple in Jerusalem and the Devil (Cthulhu?) inhabiting the opposite point of the globe near Pitcairn Island. He also believed that the Garden of Eden was sunk in the sea near the Seychelles (R’lyeh, anyone?). He was killed in the massacre that broke the Siege of Khartoum and his severed head was placed in the fork of a tree, where it became a favourite target for stone-throwing boys.

HART, Sir Robert, 1st Baronet, CMG, KCMG, GCMG (1835 – 1911)

Robert Hart was born in Ireland and attended Queen’s University in Belfast from where he graduated in 1853. He left for Hong Kong as a student interpreter in the China consular service where he served as secretary to the Governor, Sir John Bowring, in the Superintendancy of Trade. He was sent from there to Ningpo where he worked as supernumerary interpreter to the British vice-consulate. Owing to a dispute between the Portuguese and the British Consuls, he was placed in charge of the Consulate for several months and proved himself a level-headed and efficient administrator. He was sent to Canton to work under Sir Harry Parkes and subsequently was promoted to work as Interpreter for the British Consulate under Sir Rutherford Alcock. He quit in 1859 to assume the post of local Inspector of Customs, working up through the ranks until his appointment to Inspector-General of Foreign Customs, his role until his retirement in 1907.

Whilst leading the Imperial Maritime Custom Service (IMCS), Hart worked to improve the port and navigation facilities at many of China’s busiest ports including Shanghai. He was known for his managerial and diplomatic capabilities and made many friends within and without the Chinese Court and amongst the foreign delegations. To some people he was seen as perhaps too friendly with members of the Manchu Court, especially Tzü Hsi the Empress Dowager, who, it was intimated, could bend him to her will: he is blamed almost entirely for the foreign legation’s inability to anticipate the threat of the Boxer’s rebellion, accepting wholeheartedly Tzü Hsi’s assertions that the foreigners in Peking were safe from them. Ultimately, he was one of the besieged during the Rebellion and conducted himself with honour throughout.

Along with the titles awarded to him by his own country, he was effusively decorated by the Chinese Court, receiving a red button and peacock feather, along with the Order of the Double Dragon and the title, Junior Guardian of the Heir Apparent. He was offered the role of plenipotentiary minister to Great Britain in 1883 after the retirement of Sir Thomas Wade but, as this would have been a conflict of interests, he declined. He retired from his post in 1907 and returned to Queen’s College in Belfast where he took up tenure until his death in 1911.

Jong Lu (1836 - 1903)

A Grand Councillor and military administrator in the Manchu Court, Jong Lu was a moderate voice in opposition to the Empress Dowager’s strident anti-foreign sentiments. During the mobilisation of troops in the lead-up to the Siege at Peking, he spent a deal of time crossing the Chihli Plain attempting to reign in a full-scale opposition to the foreign occupants. Consequently, he was absent from the Council wherein war was declared against the foreign Legations in Peking and was not there to lend his opposition to the plan; luckily for him, as other moderates who expressed such intent were ordered to their deaths by the Empress Dowager.

War being declared, it fell to Jong Lu to pass the order along to the generals beneath him, including Tung Fu-hsiang. After the Boxer Rebellion, Jong Lu was not sought by the foreigners for punishment and in fact got off relatively lightly. This was for the single reason that, although the Chinese had more than enough newly-purchased heavy artillery in Peking to wipe out the Legations and their defenders utterly, Jong Lu forbade any of his generals to use it. By thus preventing outright slaughter of the foreigners to take place and giving time for their reinforcements to arrive, he allowed the possibility of a negotiation for the end of hostilities.

LI Hung-chang, Marquis Suyi of the First Class, GCVO (1823 – 1901)

A noted and highly decorated diplomat within the Ch’ing courts, Li Hung-chang was instrumental in many important negotiations with the West during the latter half of the Nineteenth Century.

His rise to power began with his attempts to oppose the Taiping rebels in his home province of Anhwei by raising a military force: his efforts brought him to the attention of his superiors and he was given greater responsibilities and scope for action. He was sent to Kiangsu to marshal that province’s defence which brought him into the presence of the foreign Legations at Shanghai. After seeing the possibilities of Frederick Ward’s Ever Victorious Army (EVA), he formed a Patriotic Association to raise funds from both Imperial and foreign sources with which to bankroll the unit. Problems with the force’s second leader Henry Burgevine and later, with George Gordon, arose from the Manchu’s decision to distance themselves from Western organisations; the EVA was disbanded after Gordon’s retirement as leader. As a reward for his efforts he was made governor of Kiangsu.

These experiences instilled in Li the idea that China needed to become a stronger, more militarily-capable nation if further negotiations with the West were to be successful. He saw that the foreigners felt less than intimidated by Chinese armed might and decided upon a long-term policy of ‘self-strengthening’ for his country. The way to do this, he felt, was to shore up relations with the Westerners and begin a process of modernisation for his people. His efforts in this regard were often hampered by the actions of the Imperial Court.

His life was chequered by a series of delicate negotiations and the defusing of serious diplomatic breaches, for which History has largely condemned him as a collaborator. He negotiated the end of hostilities with the French after the Tientsin Massacre, in which an orphanage of French nuns were murdered by a mob led by a Manchu mandarin and his bodyguard and he signed and helped to ratify the Chefoo Convention of 1876 with Thomas Wade resolving an incident prompted by the murder of an English businessman in the province of Yunnan. He successfully arranged treaties with Peru and Japan and effectively ran all Chinese foreign policy regarding Korea; all this despite a rising swell of anti-foreign sentiment within the government and at the highest levels of the Imperial Court.

His efforts towards foreign appeasement were oftentimes derailed by his need to shore up his connexions with the Dragon Throne and this occasionally makes his actions seem erratic to the outsider. For instance, his decision to depose the Tung Chih Emperor with the assistance of the Dowager Empress Tzü Hsi seems bizarre, given that the Emperor’s views about modernisation and reform largely coincided with his own. At one stage he executed a group of EVA troopers whom Gordon had had imprisoned for looting, against Gordon’s express wishes; in one of the few instances where Gordon picked up a weapon, Li Hung-chang was forced to flee when the EVA’s incensed commander came after him with a rifle. The incident says more about Chinese views on the value of human life and Li’s concerns with expediency than his willingness to work with the ‘foreign devils’.

Militarily, Li was never very successful when it came to fighting invading forces. This has made him seem ineffectual in the eyes of historians but closer inspection reveals that he was, for the most part, not at fault. His engagements with the Japanese in the First Sino-Japanese War of 1895, for example, were woefully unbalanced: the Japanese had a modern navy and precision-drilled soldiers; Li was fielding a force largely armed with bows and arrows and his fleet consisted of worn out, hand-me-down ships purchased from the foreign powers. Along with this, bureaucratic corruption saw most of his war funds diverted into the pockets of Court officials, most notably the budget which was apportioned to buy bullets. When at war with internal forces, on the other hand, Li’s military record is a resounding success, with clear wins against the Taipings and with General Yüan Shih-k’ai in the Nian Rebellion.

In his role as diplomat he visited America and England to negotiate foreign policy and to represent his nation. Queen Victoria conferred upon him the title of Knight of the Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order. In China he was raised to the position of Royal Tutor, awarded the rank of Earl along with the yellow jacket of nobility and decorated with many-eyed peacock’s feathers. After the Boxer Rebellion his services were invaluable for negotiating the cessation of hostilities; sadly, two months after his work there, he died from exhaustion.

LITTLE, Mrs Alicia (nee BEWICKE) (1845 – 1926)

Alicia Helen Neva Bewicke was born in Madeira in 1845. She spent her childhood abroad, later returning to England, where her first novel, Flirts and Flirts; or, A Season at Ryde (1868), was published when she was only 23. Writing as A E N Bewicke, she produced nine more novels in the next seventeen years, the central theme of them being the position of women in a society where their chief concern was finding someone to marry them and in which men had little occupation other than simply being ‘gentlemen’. The importance of meaningful work for both sexes is central to all her works of this period and those of her characters who are not searching for this are doomed to hollow existences.

In 1886, at the age of 41, Alicia Bewicke married Archibald Little (1838-1907), a long-term resident of China and a successful taipan; he was the first to navigate the Yangtsze by steamship in 1898. Like his wife, he was also a noted writer on China, completing a number of non-fiction titles, including Through the Yangtsze Gorges: Or Trade and Travel in Western China (1888).

Alicia Little arrived in Shanghai in 1887 but she didn’t stay there long and so did not lead the life of a typical expatriate wife in a large city. She moved with her husband to Chungking, in the far west of the country, where she studied Chinese, taught English, took up photography and travelled extensively with her husband up and down the Yangtsze river, visiting parts of the interior of China not normally accessible to foreign women other than missionaries. Unusually for a Westerner in China, she made an effort to get to know the Chinese people with whom she interacted and whose domestic lives interested her greatly. She also made a study of the Chinese political and education systems.

She began to write again in the mid-1890s, this time publishing under the nom-de-plume of ‘Mrs Archibald Little’. She wrote ten books about China during the twenty years she lived there, three of them novels. The first and best, of these was A Marriage in China (1896). As in her earlier books, she uses the novel to explore women’s work and took the opportunity to savage expatriates who did not get to know the country in which they were guests. More importantly, she examines the prevailing attitudes towards race, exposing the hypocrisy displayed by expatriates towards the offspring of mixed race couples and the cruelty of the Eurasian schools in insisting that such children be taken from their mothers before being allowed attendance. Only the most sincere missionaries escape her criticism; even then, she sharply questions the overall value of their work.

It was during this time that she began to campaign vigorously against the Chinese custom of footbinding. She and a group of other expatriate women founded the Ti’en Tsu Hui, or ‘Anti-Footbinding Society of China’ in 1895, with Mrs Little as its first president. Until then, anti-footbinding had been largely a missionary effort; Mrs Little was determined to establish a secular organisation that would consequently be more widely influential.

The Society began producing anti-footbinding tracts translated from English into Chinese; a number of Chinese officials immediately lent their support by writing tracts in Chinese. Poems by Chinese women about their footbinding experiences were also published and the Society sought to gain the support of the Empress Dowager and the Emperor by sending them a petition. Mrs Little spoke all over the country at gatherings of Chinese officials and to the general public, even managing to enlist the support of the widely respected and influential viceroy Li Hung-chang, which undoubtedly helped the cause. The Society was eventually handed over to a committee of Chinese women in 1908 and ceased to function shortly after that, its work at an end as the custom fell into widespread disfavour and was outlawed in 1912.

The Littles left China in 1907 and returned to Britain. Archibald Little died in Cornwall the following year and his widow moved to London, where she continued her active life. She died on 31 July 1926, at the age of 81, after a full and active life as a writer, traveller and social reformer.

MORRISON, Dr George Ernest ‘Chinese’ (1862 – 1920)

“He combined flair with unscrupulous accuracy to an extent which sometimes irked the Foreign Office in London; it was he who provoked Lord Curzon to coin his phrase about ‘the intelligent anticipation of events before they occur’ which (wrote The Times), ‘though not primarily intended as a compliment, was perhaps the most genuine tribute ever wrung from unwilling lips to the highest qualities which a correspondent can bring to bear upon his work.”

-Peter Fleming, The Siege at Peking

Born in Geelong, Australia, Morrison proved himself to be an adventurer par excellence. At the age of eighteen he began the first of many extraordinary walks, the first from Melbourne to Adelaide (about 600 miles) shortly after completing his first year of medical training. Failing his next exams he shipped out to the South Seas as a journalist and wrote a scathing exposé of the kanaka or ‘blackbird’ slave trade there. After this he walked across Australia, covering 2,043 miles in 123 days before leading an expedition to New Guinea where he was attacked by natives and left for dead with two spears in his body. Finding his way back to civilisation, he recovered and completed his medical degree, shipping out to the Rio Tinto copper mines in Spain shortly afterwards to work as a company doctor. After a short stint as personal physician to a Moroccan sheikh, he took to walking again, this time walking from Shanghai to the Burma frontier. In 1895 he joined The Times, in Shanghai, becoming its Peking correspondent two years later. In 1900, he fought his way to Peking through Boxer-protected lands, entering the Legation quarter shortly before the Siege began. Believed killed during the fighting in Peking, he was able to read his own death notice in The Times.

After the Siege, Morrison devoted his life to the emerging Chinese nation. He fought with the Nationalist troops during the Northern Expedition and later took up the role of foreign representative to China in many diplomatic summits including the Treaty of Versailles. He continued to travel extensively across China, Russia and Europe, managing to find time for his wife and three sons, to write medical papers on the hereditary nature of disease, fight to halt the spread of plague in Manchukuo and amass the largest collection of books in Chinese in the world (which later became the basis of the Oriental Library in Tokyo). At the end of a very full life, he died and was buried in Devon, England.

NAYLAND SMITH, Commissioner Sir Denis (F) (1883 - ?)

“...A tall, lean man, with his square-cut, clean-shaven face sun-baked to the hue of coffee, entered...it was Nayland Smith – whom I had thought to be in Burma!”

-Sax Rohmer, The Mystery of Dr. Fu Manchu (1913)

Nayland Smith is the implacable opponent of the ‘Devil Doctor’, Fu Manchu. He holds a roving government commission to unearth the evil international machinations of the Hsi Fan and is able to commandeer a wide array of resources to help him in his work. Less of a brilliant deductive genius than a doggedly determined plodder towards the truth, he and Fu Manchu both share the belief that their word, once given, cannot be foresworn, a trait that inclines them both towards a grudging, mutual respect.

In the early novels, Nayland Smith comes off as a racist and a jingoistic mouther of platitudes; his biases tone down somewhat later on but the modern reader is forewarned before embarking upon background research. The Commissioner is a great one for going forth in disguise, in the ludicrous fashion of fin de siecle detective novels and, as such, the Keeper may wish to embroil his Investigators in Nayland Smith’s midnight wanderings ‘on assignment’ whilst in Shanghai...

PARKES, Sir Harry Smith (1828 - 1885)

Sent to China as a diplomat after the war of 1860, Parkes undertook the ratification of the treaties outlined in the Second Opium, or Arrow War, which allowed the extraterritorial powers to establish embassies within the walls of Peking. To this end he set off to Peking from Shanghai with Sir Thomas Wade (who left him at Tientsin) and endeavoured to establish a camping ground outside of Peking to accommodate the Foreign Legations and their troops. En route to Peking, Parkes and his aide de camp, Loch, were captured and imprisoned, tortured and left to rot in a Chinese gaol. Due to an internal disagreement within the Imperial Court, they were quietly released an hour before their execution orders arrived in Peking and made it back to safety.

The harsh treatment experienced by Parkes and Loch, as well as the atrocities committed at the Tientsin Massacre led to the ratification of all outstanding treaties with the foreign powers at the Chefoo Convention attended by Wade and Li Hung-chang in 1876.

PETRIE, Dr Dexter Flinders (F) (1884 - ?)

Dr Petrie plays ‘Watson’ to Nayland-Smith’s ‘Holmes’ throughout the series of thrillers penned by Sax Rohmer which detail the outlandish plots of Fu Manchu. Petrie narrates the exploits of the other characters with the same wide-eyed naiveté that Watson brings to Holmes’ adventures and is arguably just as annoying and pompous. He encounters and falls in love with, an agent of Fu Manchu’s, an Egyptian slave-girl named Kâramanèh, whom he eventually marries and with whom he has a daughter, Fleurette. Note that, in none of the canon material is Petrie’s first name ever given; the name above is derived from Rohmer’s correspondence and interviews. In various television and movie incarnations, he is known as ‘John’.

Rohmer’s splashy narrative is truly world-spanning and individual Keepers may wish to have their Investigators consult with Dr Petrie either in London, or on the trail of the Hsi Fan in Shanghai, as they see fit.

SASSOON, David (1792-1864)

“Early in 1871, the Sassoon group was acknowledged to be the major holder of opium stocks in India and in China; they were owners and controllers of 70 per cent of the total of all kinds..."

- Edward LeFevour, Western Enterprise in Late Ch'ing China

Following in his father’s footsteps, David Sassoon a Sephardic Jew, built up a huge enterprise in Baghdad around a counting house, carpets and opium. A scandal forced him to move to Calcutta from where he took the opium trade to China, exporting in the realm of 30,000 chests per year. Sassoon dealt heavily with the East India Company and gained many accolades back in England. He gained a baronetcy and allowed his sons to adopt Western fashions, his eldest son, Abdullah, marrying into the Rothschild family (after changing his name to ‘Arthur’). With the English decision to step down opium importation after 1860, Sassoon and Co. took up the responsibility of providing the ‘foreign mud’ and went from strength to strength. More than anyone else by the end of this period the Sassoon Company was the main provider of opium to China.

Dr SUN Yat-Sen (1866 - 1925)

Born into a farming family in Kwangtung, Sun Yat-sen was sent to a Christian Boy’s School in Honolulu and earned his medical degree in Hong Kong where he practised for many years while plotting to overthrow the Ch’ing Imperial Dynasty and replace it with a modern form of government. He fled from China in 1895 after an abortive coup and spent several years touring the world, drumming up financial support and refining his views of a new Chinese Republic. In 1905 he organised a revolutionary party in Japan – the T’ung Meng Hui – and crystallised his political theory, the ‘Three People’s Principles’, around mainstays of democracy, nationalism and the people’s livelihood. During the Revolution in 1911 he was named president-elect of the Chinese Republic (despite being absent) but was ousted two months later by Yüan Shih-k’ai. Sun returned to his colleagues at the T’ung Meng Hui which had been transformed in the interim into a federated political party called the Kuomintang; Sun became its director.

Opposition to Yüan’s dictatorial rule prompted Sun to launch a revolt in 1913 which failed; he was forced to seek asylum in Japan where he reorganised the structure of the Kuomintang and awaited the chance to return to China. While in exile he courted Soong Ch’ing Ling of the famous Shanghai Soong dynasty, eventually marrying her in 1914; they returned to China in 1917. In 1921 he was named leader of a self-proclaimed national government in Kwangtung and established the Whampoa Military Academy, with Chiang Kai-shek as its commandant, to hone the military might which they needed to oppose the strength of Peking. In 1924 Sun also accepted the assistance of the Chinese Communist Party, with their connexions to the USSR, to help further refine the Kuomintang and to aid in the takeover of China.

After his death, the Communists and the Kuomintang parted ways and an uneasy ideological tension lay between them. Nevertheless, both organisations revered Sun Yat-Sen and claimed to be his ideological heirs, the Kuomintang supporting almost cult-like reverence around his tomb in Nanking. His widow, Ch’ing Ling, went on to become a high-placed leader of the Chinese Communist Party.

TUNG Fu-hsiang (1839 – 1908)

A Moslem, Tung Fu-hsiang commanded the second army of the North China military forces achieving this post in 1898. The majority of his forces were also Mohammedan, mainly deriving from the province of Kansu. They were renowned for their unruly and disorderly conduct. Openly anti-foreign in sentiment, Tung quickly became a favourite of the Empress Dowager and was even allowed at one stage, during the lead up to the Boxer Rebellion, to appear before her seated on his horse within her court. Acting on her implicit encouragement, Tung’s men murdered the Japanese Chancellor, Mr Sugiyama, hacking him to pieces in a crowded street: they sent his heart to Tung Fu-hsiang as evidence of the deed. Two days later, Tzü Hsi allowed the Boxers to enter and sack Peking by royal assent, accompanied by Tung’s troops.

On June 20th when the Dowager Empress formally declared war on the foreign legations, overruling any moderate voices in the Tsungli yamen (who were all later decapitated for their disloyalty), Tung led the charge and torched the Hanlin Library which abutted the British Legation: this thousand-year-old library which held the irreplaceable jewels of Chinese learning was lost forever, save for a handful of charred texts which the besieged British sinologists manage to save. Only the fact that Grand Councillor Jong Lu kept modern heavy artillery from Tung Fu-hsiang’s men spared the lives of the foreign legatees. After the Rebellion, Tung fled into Mongolia and was not pursued; his official sentence for crimes committed during the Rebellion was lifelong banishment, a fate considered unacceptable by the foreign delegations but one which they wore in the light of other gains to be made during reparations. He died in exile in 1908.

Tzü Hsi (Yehonala), The Dowager Empress (1836 - 1908)

“When her young son became Emperor, she encouraged him in the debaucheries which hastened his death and her return to power; his pregnant widow died, in mysterious circumstances, shortly afterwards. When her sister and rival ‘ascended the fairy chariot for her distant journey [to Heaven]’, Tzü Hsi was strongly suspected of having helped her into it. She deposed her nephew and ... is thought to have practised on his life with poison.

These are some only of the more unnatural crimes imputed to the Empress Dowager. There is not a shred of proof that she committed them. There can be almost equally little doubt that she was capable of them.”

-Peter Fleming, The Siege at Peking

Before the age of twenty, Yehonala was brought to Peking as one of the 28 girls selected from the eight noble households of the Manchus to form part of the harem of the Emperor Hsien-feng. Starting as a third-grade concubine she strove to become a favourite of the Emperor and, in time, bore him (or otherwise produced) a son. She was promoted to the first rank and soon, although barely in her twenties, became a force to be reckoned with in the Court. She assumed the name ‘Tzü Hsi’ which means ‘motherly and auspicious’.

With the death of the Emperor, Tzü Hsi stepped in as Regent for her infant son Kuang Hsü; she thereafter indulged his life of debauchery, ensuring that his reign was short and that power returned to her after his death. On the question of succession, Tzü Hsi used her influence to deflect the claims of Hsien-feng’s adult nephew, who had a legitimate claim to the position, and installed her adopted infant son Tung Chih instead, again ensuring her status as Regent. With Tung Chih’s ascension to the Dragon Throne in 1889, Tzü Hsi conspired with Li Hung-chang to depose him and had him confined to the royal city. She continued to reign unopposed as Empress Dowager for the last nineteen years of her life.

Essentially a political opportunist, Tzü Hsi was gifted political tactician with the ability to smile in the faces of her enemies while slipping poison in their cups. She sided, tacitly at first, with the Boxers and later, openly directed the Imperial troops to support their efforts; simultaneously, she held tea parties and other diplomatic functions with the foreign legatees in Peking right up until the Siege. In her later years, her superstitious nature came to the fore and she had become convinced of the supernatural powers of the Boxers to the point where she saw them as invaluable in the fight to force the foreign powers from China.

Tzü Hsi was a renowned beauty and possessed of a powerful personal magnetism. She loved pug dogs, boat picnics and theatricals and felt a common sympathy with Queen Victoria, whose portrait graced her private apartments. The British diplomat Sir Robert Hart was a great admirer of the Empress Dowager and was largely her creature: his complete acceptance of Tzü Hsi’s statements of benignity towards the Legations most likely contributed in the foreign powers being so unready for the possibility of the Boxers’ attack. She fled from Peking during the breaking of the Siege (throwing, it is said, her son’s favourite concubine down a well en route) but, such was the force of her personality, she was accorded a standing ovation by the occupying forces – the very people she had ordered to be massacred - upon her return a year later.

Given her insidious dealings, the baroque nature of her lifestyle within the Forbidden City and her association with black magical forces, individual Keepers may wish to portray Tzü Hsi as an incarnation of Nyarlathotep, spreading madness and destruction across the land; or even that avatar known as the Bloated Woman, shielded behind a mask of beauty by Mythos magic. As such she may be the ideal focus for a long-term campaign of unfolding horror. Other Keepers may feel that the Empress Dowager as a character is already bizarre enough...

WADE, Sir Thomas Francis, GCMG, KCB (1818 - 1895)

Sir Thomas Wade was an important diplomat for Britain in China at the end of the 19th Century as well as being the foremost sinologist of his day. He wrote the first syllabary of the Mandarin language which began the system of Romanisation of the Chinese language that was later refined by Herbert Giles and which became known as the Wade-Giles System of Romanisation. He was married to Amelia Herschel (1841 - 1926), daughter of the astronomer John Herschel.

Born in London to a military family, Wade’s father bought him a commission in the 81st Foot Regiment in 1838 but he transferred to the 42nd Highlanders who were stationed in Greece in 1839. He spent his spare time there learning Italian and Modern Greek. After his promotion to lieutenant in 1841 he transferred to the 98th Regiment of Foot at that time stationed in China at the end of the First Opium War. He saw battle at Chinkiang in the advance towards Nanking.

In 1845 he was sent to Hong Kong as an interpreter and then became secretary to the Secretary for Trade, Sir John Francis Davis. Shortly thereafter, in 1852, he was appointed as the British Vice Consul at Shanghai. The collection of Customs duties was in disarray in the city at this time due to the Taiping Rebellion and Wade undertook to form a committee to ensure that the collection and processing of these taxes and levies continued unabated. The committee consisted of three members with Wade as the chief; it later became the Imperial Maritime Customs Service.

In 1855, Wade went back to Hong Kong to act as Chinese secretary to Sir John Bowring who had succeeded Davis as Trade Secretary. With the outbreak of the Second Opium War he was attached to Lord Elgin’s staff and was present at the negotiations leading up to the signing of the Treaty of Nanking. He was attacked with Sir Frederick Bruce the following year while travelling back from the Taku Forts to Peking, to ratify the treaty. Thereafter, he was indispensable in facilitating embassies and legations in Tientsin and Peking and accompanied Sir Harry Parkes on his first journey to Peking. He was knighted in 1875.

After the murder in Yunnan of Mr Raymond Margary, Wade undertook the negotiations with Li Hung-chang to outline a cessation of hostilities and reparations: this treaty was known as the Chefoo Convention. He also advocated the cessation of the execution method of ‘slicing’ by Chinese officials and campaigned strenuously for its termination

Wade returned to England in 1883 and began a career as an academic. He donated over 4,000 works in Chinese to the libraries at Cambridge and was appointed their first Professor of the Chinese Language, a post he held until his death in 1895.

WARD, Frederick Townshend (1832 - 1862)

"He was a brave, clear-headed man, much liked by the Chinese Mandarins, and a very fit man for the command of the force he had raised."

-Major-General Charles ‘Chinese’ Gordon

Born in Salem Massachusetts, Ward was an adventurer who arrived in Shanghai just as the rising tide of the Taipings seemed set to overthrow the city. Ward approached the taipans and offered to raise a fighting force to oppose them if only they would bankroll the endeavour. They agreed and Ward set out to deliver the goods: his first engagement at Songjiang, south of Shanghai, was an exercise in farce as his troops had drunk too much the previous night. The majority of his force survived however and in later actions, Ward’s troops became instrumental in maintaining the 30-mile radius exclusion zone around the city. The Imperial Army officials and the Empress Dowager were so grateful for his efforts that they conferred upon the force the title of the ‘Ever Victorious Army’ (EVA), a name which had little to do with the unit’s initial track record but which conveyed a certain glamour nonetheless. In later years the Army became funded by Li Hung-chang through a Patriotic Association which received contributions from Chinese and foreign sources alike.

Within the foreign legation settlements Ward’s force caused a frisson of anger: the Americans, whose policy had been to adopt a stance of neutrality in dealing with China, were uncomfortable with Ward’s aggressive activities; the British were incensed because the glamorous reports of the EVA began to lure British sailors away from their ships. At one stage Ward was dragged before an American military tribunal to answer charges of inciting desertions amongst the British troops but he escaped prosecution by claiming Chinese citizenship. By this stage he had ‘gone native’ completely, dressing in native style and marrying a Chinese woman. Like Gordon, he only ever rode to battle carrying a riding crop. In 1860, he received a wound to his face – a bullet pierced his jaw and exited through his right cheek – leaving him scarred and with a speech impediment for the rest of his life.

Towards the end of his career, his Manchu supporters began to distance themselves from Ward, distrusting his decision to not shave his head, wear the queue or to wear his Chinese military garb into battle. At the age of 30, Ward was killed by a stray bullet to the abdomen in an engagement at Tz’u-ch’i south of Shanghai. He was buried with his dog in a lavish temple raised to his memory at Songjiang; however this grave was removed at a later stage and today, the whereabouts of his remains are unknown.

General Yüan Shih-k’ai (1859 - 1916)

“Sometimes [the Emperor, whilst in exile after the Siege at Peking,] would draw a large tortoise, write the name of Yüan Shih-k’ai on its back and stick it on the wall. With a small bamboo bow he would shoot at the picture, then take it down and cut it to pieces with scissors, and throw it into the air like a swarm of butterflies. His hate of Yüan Shih-k’ai was apparently very deep.”

-Wu Yung, The Flight of an Empress

A notable Manchu general in the war with Japan over control of Korea, Yüan Shih-k’ai was a protégé of the Empress Dowager and used her support to advance himself politically at the end of the 19th Century. Working with Li Hung-chang in the Shantung area, he was a ruthless administrator who enacted widespread military reforms and, while tacitly supporting the Manchu court, suppressed the Boxers in the areas under his control, supporting the foreigners in his territories. With the death of Li and the Dowager Empress, he openly switched sides and supported the Reform movement for the modernisation of China, eventually replacing Sun Yat-sen as First President of the Chinese Republic. He is infamous for acceding to all but the most radical of Japan’s ‘21 Demands’ in 1915 and for attempting to establish a new Imperial dynasty with himself at its head: time has shown that, in the light of the twelve years of chaos that followed his death, his reforms might have been a better alternative for the nascent Republic. Inevitably however, he is remembered as a cunning, turncoat strategist, with designs on the Dragon Throne...


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