User:Madalibi/New structure for Yongzheng: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
==War and territorial expansion== |
==War and territorial expansion== |
||
===The Dzungar campaigns=== |
===The Dzungar campaigns=== |
||
Continuing his father the [[User:Madalibi/New_structure_for_Kangxi#Russia_and_the_Mongols|Kangxi emperor's efforts]] against the resilient [[Dzungar]]s, Yongzheng sent massive armies to [[Turkestan]] in 1730, but they were routed by the enemy. A small victory the following year allowed the Qing to negotiate a peace settlement. The Qing did not [[User:Madalibi/New_structure_for_Qianlong#The_Dzungar_campaigns|solve the Dzungar problem]] for good until 1759 under the reign of [[Qianlong]]. |
|||
===Tibet and the Mongols=== |
===Tibet and the Mongols=== |
||
===Relations with Russia=== |
===Relations with Russia=== |
Revision as of 13:31, 11 November 2008
Yinzhen, Prince Yong
Succession to the throne
Factional struggles
The Yongzheng emperor
The suppression of cliques
War and territorial expansion
The Dzungar campaigns
Continuing his father the Kangxi emperor's efforts against the resilient Dzungars, Yongzheng sent massive armies to Turkestan in 1730, but they were routed by the enemy. A small victory the following year allowed the Qing to negotiate a peace settlement. The Qing did not solve the Dzungar problem for good until 1759 under the reign of Qianlong.
Tibet and the Mongols
Relations with Russia
Bura Treaty (August 20, 1727) and Treaty of Kyakhta (October 21, 1727). Both went into effect on June 14, 1728.[1]
Colonization of Taiwan
Bureaucratization of the southwest
Political, social, and fiscal reforms
Emergence of the Grand Council
Fiscal policies
"Nourishing thriftiness"
Social policies
The problem of Chinese loyalty
Zeng Jing and the Dayi juemi lu
Literary inquisitions
Death and succession
Legacy
Family
Consorts
Sons
Daughters
Notes
- ^ Bergholz (1993), 335.
References
- Bergholz, Fred W. (1993). The Partition of the Steppe: The Struggle of the Russians, Manchus, and the Zunghar Mongols for Empire in Central Asia, 1619-1758; A Study in Power Politics. American University Studies. New York: Peter Lang.