Professor Charlene Makley
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Important Dates in the Development of "Modern China"

1644-1911 Qing dynasty; Manchus from north conquer China, administer empire with Chinese-style system, adopt Chinese elite culture. Great prosperity and expansion of some administrative control into Tibetan regions.

1911-1949 Tumultuous period of nation-building; political control collapses into competing warlords and civil war between KMT and CCP. Threats and humiliating defeats from imperialist Japan and western states.

1949 CCP wins civil war under Mao Zedong; establishes the "multinational state" of the People's Republic of China.

1958 Great Leap Forward. Mao Zedong tries to mobilize country to quickly modernize and achieve pure Communism in one step. Mass kitchens, day care organized, women encouraged to work, industry emphasized.

1966-76 The "Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution". In order to re-establish his power in Beijing, Mao encourages radical youth to organize (as "Red Guards) and destroy the "elites", launches "Destroy the 4 olds" Campaign

1976 Death of Mao Zedong.

1978 Rise of new moderate government.

1981 "Reform and Opening Up". Deng Xiaoping emerges as head of state, dismantles many of Mao's policies, decides people needed material incentives, not political campaigns, to modernize.

Spring 1989 Massacre in Tiananmen square. Deng Xiaoping calls in PLA troops to crackdown on massive student and worker protests in Beijing demanding democracy, end to official corruption.

Summer 1992 Deng Xiaoping's famous "Southern tour" to visit booming coastal cities and call for renewed economic development and opening up.

1997 The island of Hong Kong, formerly a British colony, returns to Chinese control.

2000 President Jiang Zemin launches the "Develop the West" Campaign.

2001 China accedes to the World Trade Organization (WTO)

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