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This paper critically re-examines the historical trajectory of the Self-Strengthening Movement in late Qing China, arguing that it should not be understood merely as a complete failure, but rather as a localized technical success coupled with a profound institutional failure. Contrary to traditional narratives, Qing officials were not entirely ignorant of Western technology before the movement began. Early encounters with European science, the devastating defeat in the First Opium War, and reformist proposals by prominent figures such as Lin Zexu and Wei Yuan demonstrated a growing awareness of China's acute military weakness. Consequently, the Self-Strengthening Movement produced tangible achievements, including the establishment of the Ever-Victorious Army, the Jiangnan Arsenal, the Fuzhou Shipyard, and the Chinese Educational Mission. These ambitious projects successfully introduced Western weaponry, industrial production methods, naval construction, and technical education into China. However, these modernization efforts remained highly fragmented, heavily dependent on the initiative of provincial officials, financially unstable, and ideologically constrained by traditional bureaucratic frameworks. Ultimately, the Qing state modernized isolated components of its military and industry without transforming the fundamental political institutions required to organize, finance, and sustain modern state power. The disastrous Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895 starkly exposed this inherent contradiction. Although China possessed modern warships and dedicated reformist officials, it critically lacked a coherent, centralized national system comparable to that of Meiji Japan. Therefore, the war's outcome revealed not the absence of reform, but the severe limitations of technological modernization without comprehensive institutional transformation.
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