Boxer Indemnities
![]() The Boxer Indemnities (simplified Chinese: 庚子赔款; traditional Chinese: 庚子賠款; pinyin: Gēngzǐ Péikuǎn) was an indemnity to which the Qing Empire of China committed itself in writing on 7 September 1901 in relation to thirteen Western countries in the Boxer Rebellion. Reasons of the compensationThe reasons of the western countries for the compensation payments from Qing Empire of China are:
Amount of indemnities
Repair payments have been defined: 450,000,000 tael fine silver (approx. 67,5 million British pounds; Three hundred million US$ dollars) plus 4% annual interest. Over 39 years, these were total 982,238,150 tablets (approx. 34.683 tons of silver) for the loss that China had caused to the Eight Nations Alliance. The compensation payments were distributed as follows:[1]
History![]() As the United States had demanded less compensation than was then stipulated in the Boxer Rebellion, they converted the overcompensation received into a scholarship for Chinese students, which known as the Boxer Rebellion Indemnity Scholarship Program.[2] Subsequently, The Empire of Japan and French Third Republic also used part of the compensation for young Chinese students to finance their studies. After the First World War, China's claims against defeated German Empire and Austria-Hungary were counterbalanced. After the October Revolution, the Soviet government granted an indemnity waiver in the 1920's regarding the Boxer Indemnities. When China's compensation payments for the Boxer Indemnities ended in 1938, the actual compensation amount amounted to more than six hundred million silver dollars, converted to around one billion yuan.[3] References
|