Five "treaty ports" (including Shanghai and Canton) were opened to British trade [2, 3].
Silver began flowing out of China to pay for the drug, crippling the Chinese economy [2, 6]. The Breaking Point: Commissioner Lin Zexu
In 1839, the Daoguang Emperor appointed to end the opium trade [1, 5]. Lin took drastic measures: how_britain_went_to_war_with_china_over_opium
The conflict between Britain and China , known as the , was a pivotal moment in history that fundamentally shifted the relationship between the East and the West [1, 2]. The Root of the Conflict: Trade Imbalance
The island was ceded to Britain "in perpetuity" [1, 2]. Five "treaty ports" (including Shanghai and Canton) were
To reverse this deficit, the British East India Company began smuggling , grown in British-colonized India, into China [1, 3]. Although opium was illegal in China, the trade was incredibly lucrative [4, 6].
China was forced to pay 21 million silver dollars for the destroyed opium and war costs [1, 5]. Lin took drastic measures: The conflict between Britain
This conflict marked the beginning of China's "Century of Humiliation" and set the stage for the Second Opium War a decade later [3, 6]. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more