Tzu Hsi

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Tz'u Hsi

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Tz'u Hsi   Tsu Hsi, or Tse Hsi , 1834-1908, dowager empress of China (1861-1908) and regent (1861-73, 1874-89, 1898-1908). Her failure to realize the gravity of the foreign threat to China kept her from wholeheartedly supporting modernization, thus driving reformers into opposition to the Ch'ing dynasty. She was a consort of Emperor Hsien Feng (d. 1861) and bore his successor, T'ung Chih. On her child's death (1875) she named her infant nephew Kuang-hsu to the throne, although he was not in the direct line of succession. In 1898 she resumed the regency after he had attempted to institute political reforms against her wishes, and thereafter she ruled directly. She resisted foreign encroachment by encouraging the unsuccessful Boxer Uprising (1898-1900). In her last years Tz'u Hsi abandoned her conservatism to some extent and consented to several modernizing measures; schools were established, the traditional civil service examinations were discontinued, the army was reorganized by Yüan Shih-kai , railroad building was encouraged, and opium cultivation was suppressed. Her last official act was the appointment of Pu Yi, a remote claimant, as emperor.

Bibliography: See biographies by Princess Der Ling (1929), C. Haldane (1965), and M. Warner (1972).

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Tzu Hsi

World Encyclopedia | 2005 | © World Encyclopedia 2005, originally published by Oxford University Press 2005. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Tz'u Hsi Alternative transliteration of Cixi

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Review - Features: Empress of all she desired Rumours of Tzu Hsi's sexual exploits and wild intrigues amazed foreigners a century ago. Diana Preston, previewing her new book, gives an intimate portrait of China's last Empress Dowager
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 9/12/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...with the elderly Empress Dowager, Tzu Hsi, in the early 1900s. Yet Backhouse's imaginative portrayal of Tzu Hsi chimed with the views of the foreign...attempted to lead a reform movement. Tzu Hsi began her career as an Imperial concubine...
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Nov 15 1908: the death of Empress Tzu-hsi.(MONTHS PAST)
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TAIPEI COUNTY MAGISTRATE CHOU HSI-WEI, LIEN HO CREWMEMBERS VOLUNTEER AT HOME OF COMPASSION
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 8/8/2008; 509 words ; ...release: Taipei County Magistrate Chou Hsi-wei and Ho Hung-yi, the captain of...carefully to grandpas Tseng A-huan and Chen Tzu-hsien on how to plant seeds in the earth...thoughts on doing volunteer work with some Tzu Chi volunteers who were at the Home to attend...
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Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 5/26/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...story of China's final empress, Tzu Hsi, who ruled the nation for nearly...2004 novel, "Empress Orchid," Tzu Hsi's power arose from the fact that...murderess" by contemporary journalists, Tzu Hsi, whom Min calls Orchid, is typically...
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Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 4/10/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...volume epic about the dowager empress Tzu Hsi, the author has set out to reject...the second of the two novels about Tzu Hsi, who ruled China from the mid-19th...not assume full power for years, Tzu Hsi, also called Orchid, governed the...
A revisionist approach to the history of China.(Daily Break)
Newspaper article from: The Virginian Pilot; 4/29/2007; 700+ words ; ...volume epic about the dowager empress Tzu Hsi, the author has set out to reject...the second of the two novels about Tzu Hsi, who ruled China from the mid-19th...not assume full power for years, Tzu Hsi, also called Orchid, governed the...
The last of everything.(The Last Empress )(The Last Chinese Chef )(The Last Communist Virgin )(Book review)
Magazine article from: The Women's Review of Books; 1/1/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...novelization of the life of Empress Dowager Tzu Hsi, The Last Empress, it's a heartbreaking...researched effort to rehabilitate Tzu Hsi's reputation, which has been clouded...Orchid--now the Dowager Empress Tzu Hsi--makes her final public appearance...
The Chinese monster who never was
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 4/26/1992; ; 700+ words ; ...the Yellow Peril, and above all Tzu Hsi, the Dowager Empress. "The simple...journalists . . . has been to explain how (Tzu Hsi) survived politically for nearly...to document their statements about Tzu Hsi, it is now clear that not a single...
No hiding the grotesque amid the grandeur
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 2/8/2004; ; 500 words ; ...Min charts the 19th century rise of Tzu Hsi, China's last empress - remembered...in violence, but she cannot tell Tzu Hsi's story without linking the royal...fainted. ..." The novel opens with Tzu Hsi's backward glance at her long reign...
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