
In Our Time The Taiping Rebellion
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Feb 24, 2011 Julia Lovell, a specialist in 19th‑century Chinese cultural and political change; Frances Wood, an expert on Chinese historical sources; and Rana Mitter, a scholar of modern Chinese politics, discuss Hong Xiuquan's rise, Taiping statebuilding, the brutal civil war and foreign involvement. They explore rapid expansion, internal organization, military innovation and the rebellion's vast human and political consequences.
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Qing State Fragility After Population Surge
- Mid-19th century Qing China faced internal fiscal strain and rapid population growth that outpaced taxation and infrastructure.
- Rana Mitter cites population doubling from ~150m to ~300m in a century, creating impoverished young men and social instability.
Christianity's Rapid Entry After the Opium Wars
- Protestant missionary activity was limited before the 1840s treaties and only expanded after the Opium War concessions.
- Frances Wood points out early Protestant work was underground and concentrated around Guangdong and Hong Kong.
Hong's Vision After Exam Failures
- Hong Xiuquan, a Hakka who repeatedly failed the imperial exams, experienced a fever dream that led him to believe he was Jesus’s younger brother.
- Frances Wood recounts Hong reading Liang A-fa’s pamphlet, then having a delirious vision declaring his messianic role.

