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Friday, May 2, 2025

Boxer Rising-The Price of Tea



“Not for all the tea in China” was an expression when I was a child. Also, “As far back as the Chinese.” These were Victorian echoes and they are gone now. All the tea in China indicated colossal wealth. As far back etc indicated the lack of modernity in China. Gone are the days.

In the 19th Century the British working poor were greatly immiserated. Only one thing brought any comfort. It was tea. Tea was great, it soothed the masses and didn’t inflame or excite them. Gin had been tried previously and hadn’t worked at all.

The Poor had a discerning taste in tea. We are told they would not accept inferior product. A small price to pay you might think for peace of mind of the Rulers. Alas, it was not so.

The Chinese would only sell tea for Silver. This is where the seeds of the Boxer Rising take root.  We must tell the tale if we are to understand the Righteous, Harmonious Fists and the like.


The British didn’t have sufficient silver to sustain the trade. Suspending the trade was unthinkable. The Poor were pacified give or take Transportation and Starvation. They might, denied tea, revolt. Something had to be done.

With some skill and a great deal bribery the British managed to smuggle tea plants out of China to India. All very well but it would take time for production to meet need.

Bengal Opium looked like an option. Enjoying opium was a well-known international recreation. The Chinese Government was well aware of its dangers. Consequently while a senior Mandarin might puff away a peasant farmer couldn’t, save as a pain killer or a rare treat. Importing Opium into the Celestial Empire was forbidden.


The British needed to flood China with cheap opium to break the Tea for Silver paradigm. This they did in a series of wars. The French joined in and the victors got inventive. The Chinese would pay for the cost of the British and French military actions. Also, territorial concessions would be made. Free Trade including opium would replace Chinese Regulations. 

The destruction to Chinese society was truly immense. Should you ever have lived or worked in an area with a serious drug problem you will understand precisely what happened.


At the top of Chinese society sat the Manchu providing Emperor and aristocracy. Below sat the Han Chinese and various minorities.  It was from the Han that the Boxers arose. The last great conflict to wrack China had been the Tai Ping. Mainly a non Han enterprise.

By the time of the Rising China’s predators had multiplied and the future looked bleak. As is the way of things the cost of paying off the predators fell increasingly on the common folk.


Enter the Boxers. 

16 comments:

  1. Nice figures OB, you must have a massive collection of periods and figures?

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    1. I do Ray. Accumulated over decades. I'm currently deciding what to keep and what goes.

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    2. It should be OK Ray. I have some stuff that seldom sees daylight so I won't miss it. I have been steadily giving stuff away for the last couple of years without regret.

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  2. Lovely looking miniatures OB and a very interesting read too.

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  3. Interesting historical background OB....I have been vaguely aware of the so called Opium Wars for a while, and of course, slightly later, there was "Chinese " Gordon (of Khartoum). I have a feeling I read a book once about the British fighting their way up a major river ( the Yangtze maybe?) with gunboats and assaulting various forts along the way....anyway, time for a cup of char!
    Oh, and nice figures too, BTW!

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    1. Thanks Keith. People know about the opium. They tend not to know about the tea. Yeah, Yangtze sounds familiar. Taku Forts campaign?

      The figures are mainly Old Glory. Many dislike that brand. I think they can be good.

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    2. Taku Forts rings a bell! I have a lot of OG 25mm in specific collections. Their early Napoleonics are so-so, to be honest, but my largest collections are War of 1812 - pretty good figures - and late Victorian Colonial - NW Frontier augmented with Boer War Brits - they are very nice in my opinion and as good as many other brands.

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    3. Yes, the Chinese won the first Taku and lost the second one. I always fancy doing 1812. I'd buy Old Glory if I did. I'm not though, too much stuff already.

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  4. I like the look of these Boxers

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    1. Thanks Neil and me too on the Old Glory Boxers.

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  5. Great read. Not a period of British and European history to be proud of.
    I recently read a history of tea which supports your post. Indeed, for many working class a sweet cup of tea was often their entire breakfast and/or lunch.

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    1. Thanks Richard. Yeah, "half a pound of tuppeny rice, half a pint of treacle" as the song went. Not much of a diet to go to work on.

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  6. Nice Boxers, a fair bit of my 25/28mm great Italian Wars figures are old glory and they're pretty good I think, one of the worst bits of British Empire history, which is saying something! My brother was in a musical in the west end called Poppy which covered all this in a pantomime style, pretty good show!
    Best Iain

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  7. Thanks Iain. Yeah it was a bad one right enough.

    The Show sounds interesting and a laugh. When I was a kid Chemists still sold a patent medicine called Collis Brown Compound- Liquid Opium. Also known as Laudanum I think. Herself also remembers it and thinks they still sell it.

    Laudanum was popular way back when as "A Bottle of Smoke" like the song.

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