Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Business
Society & Culture
Health & Fitness
Sports
Technology
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Podjoint Logo
US
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts115/v4/e3/3d/9f/e33d9f08-900a-e46e-1641-bc79e5df7590/mza_2192079081468113604.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
China: As History Is My Witness
BBC Radio 4
10 episodes
9 months ago

Carrie Gracie presents a series exploring what ten great lives from Chinese history reveal about China today

Show more...
Personal Journals
Society & Culture,
History
RSS
All content for China: As History Is My Witness is the property of BBC Radio 4 and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

Carrie Gracie presents a series exploring what ten great lives from Chinese history reveal about China today

Show more...
Personal Journals
Society & Culture,
History
http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/3000x3000/p02r50g3.jpg
Hong Xiuquan - The Rebel
China: As History Is My Witness
14 minutes
13 years ago
Hong Xiuquan - The Rebel

Chinese history can be read as a series of peasant rebellions. One in the 19th Century, led by a man who thought he was Christ's brother, lasted 15 years and caused at least 10 million deaths.

Originally, all Hong Xiuquan wanted was to be part of the establishment. A village schoolteacher, he immersed himself in Confucian scholarship for the civil service exam, but just kept failing.

Some time later he was given a Chinese translation of the New Testament by a Christian missionary. He decided on reading that, that the man he had seen up in the sky was the Christian God, and that he, Hong, was the brother of Jesus, and that the devils he had to exterminate on Earth were the Qing dynasty, which was then ruling China.

The Europeans saw Hong's claim to be the brother of Christ as heresy, but he was not preaching for their benefit. He accompanied his spiritual message with a political one - a vision of equality and shared land, which appealed to poor farmers who were suffering from a sense of hopelessness.

Hong and his disciples took to the road, selling writing brushes and ink and spreading the good news about the heavenly kingdom as they went and their movement grew fast in south-west China.

By 1860, Hong's heavenly kingdom extended across huge swathes of China and his troops were preparing to march on Shanghai. But his luck was about to run out.

The Europeans had decided he was a threat to business and so joined forces with the Qing armies they themselves had just been fighting. In the Heavenly Capital, the Heavenly Kingdom was anything but.

As military victory turned into defeat, Hong became increasingly paranoid, his followers starved and his court spiralled into intrigue and violence.

Presenter: Carrie Gracie Producer: Neal Razzell.

China: As History Is My Witness

Carrie Gracie presents a series exploring what ten great lives from Chinese history reveal about China today