The Opium Wars: How China Was Forced Open — Fexingo History

The Opium Wars and the American China Trade

4 min · 15 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The Opium Wars and the American China Trade

Descripción

In Episode 159, Lucas and Luna explore a lesser-known dimension of the Opium Wars: the role of American merchants and how they capitalized on the conflict. From the early days of the China trade under the Canton System to the lucrative opium smuggling by firms like Russell & Company, the United States was deeply entangled in the opium traffic long before the war broke out. But when the British forced China open with the Treaty of Nanking, the Americans weren't far behind—they secured their own treaty, the Treaty of Wangxia, in 1844, which granted them equal privileges. Lucas tells the story of Caleb Cushing, the Massachusetts politician who negotiated that treaty, and the strange case of the USS Constitution's 1843 voyage to China. He also discusses the American 'China Trade' in tea, silk, and porcelain, and how the opium trade funded early American fortunes—including those of the Forbes and Delano families. This episode shines a light on a side of the Opium Wars that often stays in the shadows: the quiet, profit-driven involvement of the young American republic. #OpiumWars #AmericanChinaTrade #CalebCushing #TreatyOfWangxia #RussellAndCompany #USSConstitution #CantonSystem #OpiumSmuggling #DelanoFamily #ForbesFamily #19thCenturyHistory #ChinaTrade #MassachusettsHistory #EastAsia #History #FexingoHistory #Canton #Macau Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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166 episodios

Portada del episodio The Opium War Gold Rush at the Bombay Mint

The Opium War Gold Rush at the Bombay Mint

In this episode of The Opium Wars, Lucas and Luna turn their attention from the battlefields of the Pearl River Delta to the hidden engine of the conflict: the Bombay Mint. In the 1830s and 1840s, this single mint in western India processed millions of silver dollars from China, paid as indemnities and for opium. The silver flowed from Canton to Bombay, where it was restruck into rupees to fund the British Raj. Lucas explains the global silver cycle—how Chinese tea and silk were paid for in silver, which then bought opium in Bengal, which was smuggled into China, creating a triangular trade that enriched the East India Company and drained China of specie. The episode also covers the role of the Parsi merchants of Bombay, like the Readymoney family, who acted as middlemen, the introduction of machine-struck coins to China, and the controversy over the 'Bombay dollar'—a coin deliberately designed to resemble the Spanish Carolus. The conversation explores how this monetary manipulation was as devastating as any cannon. Lucas ends by reflecting on how financial engineering, not just military force, pried China open, and how the silver trade's legacy echoes in modern economic power dynamics. #OpiumWars #BombayMint #SilverTrade #BritishRaj #EastIndiaCompany #ParsiMerchants #BombayDollar #CarolusDollar #ChineseSilver #OpiumEconomy #TriangularTrade #CantonSystem #BengalOpium #SpecieFlow #Macau #HongKong #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19 de jul de 20267 min
Portada del episodio The Opium Wars and the Tibetan General Who Defended the Taku Forts

The Opium Wars and the Tibetan General Who Defended the Taku Forts

In 1858, as British and French gunboats prepared to storm the Taku Forts at the mouth of the Hai River, the Qing court turned to an unlikely commander: a Tibetan general named Sengge Rinchen. A veteran of the battlefields of Inner Mongolia and a key figure in the suppression of the Taiping Rebellion, Rinchen was ordered to hold the line against the Western powers. This episode examines the strategic importance of the Taku Forts, the defensive innovations Rinchen implemented, and the brutal assault that shattered Qing resistance. We explore the general's military background, his adaptation of traditional Mongol cavalry tactics to coastal defense, and the critical moment when British ships breached the boom across the Hai River. The conversation also touches on the broader geopolitical context—Russia's diplomatic maneuvering along the Amur River, the Treaty of Aigun, and how the fall of the Taku Forts set the stage for the Convention of Peking. Finally, we reflect on Sengge Rinchen's legacy as a symbol of Qing resistance and the tragic cost of the unequal treaties. #OpiumWars #SenggeRinchen #TakuForts #QingDynasty #BritishEmpire #SecondOpiumWar #HaiRiver #TreatyOfAigun #ConventionOfPeking #MongolCavalry #TaipingRebellion #TibetanGeneral #ChineseHistory #Colonialism #MilitaryHistory #19thCentury #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
Portada del episodio The Opium Wars and the British Opium Factory at Patna

The Opium Wars and the British Opium Factory at Patna

While the battles of the Opium Wars were fought on the Chinese coast, the raw material for the conflict came from a massive, state-sanctioned opium factory in Patna, India. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the British East India Company and private merchants like Jardine Matheson transformed the Bihar countryside into a drug-production powerhouse. They follow the journey of the opium from the poppy fields of the Ganges valley to the factory compound at Patna, where thousands of workers processed balls of raw opium into export-ready chests. The episode also digs into the economic logic that pushed the Bengal government to depend on opium revenue, the role of Indian middlemen like the mahajans, and the little-known Factory Act scandals that erupted in the 1840s. A fresh, supply-side perspective on the war that forced China open. #OpiumWars #PatnaOpiumFactory #BritishEastIndiaCompany #JardineMatheson #BengalOpium #GangesValley #Mahajan #FactoryAct #BiharHistory #OpiumProduction #ChinaTrade #QingDynasty #LintinIsland #OpiumChests #EastIndiaCompany #History #FexingoHistory #SupplyChainHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17 de jul de 20265 min
Portada del episodio The Opium Wars: The Cantonese Pidgin That Changed the China Coast

The Opium Wars: The Cantonese Pidgin That Changed the China Coast

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the rise of Chinese Pidgin English, the hybrid trade language that emerged along the Pearl River Delta during the Canton System and the Opium Wars. They trace its origins to the early 1700s, when Portuguese, British, and other foreign traders converged in Macau and Canton, and examine how words like 'chop' (a seal or stamp), 'joss' (luck or a god), and 'mandarin' (a Qing official) entered the English lexicon. The conversation delves into the social dynamics of the Thirteen Factories, where compradors and Tanka boat women used pidgin to negotiate deals, smuggle opium, and navigate the fraught encounters between Chinese and Westerners. Lucas explains how the Treaty of Nanking and the opening of treaty ports transformed pidgin from a functional argot into a lingua franca that shaped trade and diplomacy for decades. They also discuss the legacy of pidgin in modern English and its role as a tool of both connection and inequality. This episode offers a fresh lens on the Opium Wars through the words the traders themselves used. #ChinesePidginEnglish #CantonSystem #OpiumWars #ThirteenFactories #PearlRiverDelta #Macau #Canton #TreatyOfNanking #Comprador #Tanka #Lintin #LinguaFranca #TradeLanguage #QingDynasty #19thCentury #Linguistics #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17 de jul de 20266 min
Portada del episodio The Opium Wars and the Secret British Opium Fleet

The Opium Wars and the Secret British Opium Fleet

After the Treaty of Nanking opened five treaty ports, the British faced a problem: how to get opium from the hulks at Lintin into the new legal market? The answer was an unofficial fleet of fast, shallow-draft clippers—many built in Chinese yards with Chinese crews—that ran opium up the coast under false flags. This episode follows the story of the 'secret fleet' that evaded Qing patrols, American competitors, and even British customs. We look at the role of the Jardine Matheson firm, the design of the purpose-built opium clippers like the 'Falcon', and the Tanka and Hakka sailors who crewed them. We also examine the 1850s shift when the Qing finally legalised opium, making the smugglers' fleet redundant overnight. A little-known chapter of maritime and economic history that reveals how the drug trade operated between the wars. #OpiumWar #OpiumClipper #JardineMatheson #Lintin #CantonSystem #BritishEmpire #QingDynasty #HongKongHistory #ChinaTrade #MaritimeHistory #Tanka #Hakka #DrugTrade #TreatyOfNanking #FalconClipper #SeaHistory #FexingoHistory #EastAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

16 de jul de 20267 min