Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - Resume - Who were the Qing generals who died in the First Opium War?
Who were the Qing generals who died in the First Opium War?
1in July, 840, the company commander Juck Zhang was killed in the Battle of Dinghai, and Yao, the magistrate of a county, drowned himself.

184 1 year, in the battle of Shajiaobao, Chen Liansheng and Chen Changpeng, deputy commanders of Sanjiang guild, were killed in succession.

184 1 February, during the Battle of Humen, Guan Tianpei, the Guangdong Navy's prefect, committed suicide.

184 1 In September, Zhenhai Town Lian Changge, Shouchun Town Company Commander Wang Xipeng and Chuzhou Town Company Commander Zheng were killed in succession.

184 1 year 10. In the Shaxieling War, Xie Chaoen, the main soldier of Langshan Town, was killed, and Yu Qian, the governor of the two rivers, drowned himself.

1March, 842, in the battle of eastern Zhejiang, guerrilla Huang Tai was stationed, and general managers Gu Dejing, Baoyuan Wang, Jiang, A Mu Da, Zhu Gui, Huckley, and foreign military attache Suo were all killed.

1April, 842, in the battle of Wusong, Chen Huacheng, the prefect of Jiangnan, and the garrison were killed.

1842 In May, in the Battle of Zhapu, Deputy Commander Xi was seriously injured and died.

1July, 842, in the battle of Zhenjiang, Du Tonghai committed suicide by throwing himself into the fire.

Extended data:

During the period of 1842, the Qing government was forced to negotiate with the British government in Nanjing Jinghai Temple, and the two sides held about four talks in the temple. On August 29th, the Qing government in China accepted all the conditions put forward by Britain, and formally signed the first unequal treaty in modern China, the British treaty of nanking, on the British flagship "Hanhua", which met most of the requirements of Britain. Main contents:

1, cut Hong Kong Island to Britain. (Loss of territorial sovereignty)

2. Open Guangzhou, Xiamen, Fuzhou, Ningbo and Shanghai as trading ports, and allow British people to set up consulates at trading ports. (Loss of trade sovereignty)

3. China paid compensation of RMB 2 1 10,000 to Britain. 2 1 10,000 yuan consists of: compensation for opium of 6 million yuan, repayment of debts of British businessmen of 3 million yuan, and British military expenditure of10.2 million yuan. (A lot of silver outflow)

4. The taxation of British import and export goods in China is agreed by both China and Britain. (Loss of tariff sovereignty)

British businessmen are free to trade with China businessmen, and are not restricted by "public banks". (Loss of trade sovereignty)

Baidu Encyclopedia-Opium War (1840 Britain launched a war of aggression against China.