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Explain the outcome of the Opium Wars.(1 point)
Responses
The outcome of the Opium Wars were rebellions, such as the Boxer Rebellion. These rebellions succeeded.
The outcome of the Opium Wars were rebellions, such as the Boxer Rebellion. These rebellions succeeded.
The outcome of the Opium Wars were rebellions, such as the Boxer Rebellion. These rebellions were put down by Western powers.
The outcome of the Opium Wars were rebellions, such as the Boxer Rebellion. These rebellions were put down by Western powers.
The outcome of the Opium Wars were rebellions, such as the Opium Rebellion. These rebellions were put down by Western powers.
The outcome of the Opium Wars were rebellions, such as the Opium Rebellion. These rebellions were put down by Western powers.
The outcome of the Opium Wars were rebellions, such as the Boxer Rebellion. These gained Western support.
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Answered by
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The correct response is: "The outcome of the Opium Wars were rebellions, such as the Boxer Rebellion. These rebellions were put down by Western powers."
Brief explanation: The Opium Wars weakened the Qing dynasty, forced “unequal treaties” (opening ports, ceding Hong Kong, extraterritoriality, indemnities), and fueled anti‑foreign unrest (Taiping, later the Boxer Rebellion). Those uprisings were ultimately suppressed with the help of Western (and other foreign) military forces, highlighting China’s loss of sovereignty.
Brief explanation: The Opium Wars weakened the Qing dynasty, forced “unequal treaties” (opening ports, ceding Hong Kong, extraterritoriality, indemnities), and fueled anti‑foreign unrest (Taiping, later the Boxer Rebellion). Those uprisings were ultimately suppressed with the help of Western (and other foreign) military forces, highlighting China’s loss of sovereignty.
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