一九〇一年のドイツへの清朝「謝罪使」の派遣 : 「謝罪使」観と謁見儀礼問題を中心に
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As one condition of the program instituted under the Boxer Protocol of 7 September 1901, the emperor of China was required to make a formal apology to the emperor of Germany for the murder of Baron von Ketteler in Beijing during the Boxer uprising. However, the Qing Dynasty's decision to send a mission of expiation to Germany was motivated less by the rules of the Protocol than an intention to improve relations between the two countries, while Germany's main intent was to receive a formal apology for Ketteler's murder. This divergence in expectations would greatly complicate negotiations over how the audience between the Chinese ambassador and the German emperor was to be conducted and cause increased friction between the two countries. The problems concerning the audience decorum involved 1) the submission of an official communique, which Prince Chun 醇 was to perform in the presence of Wilhelm II and 2) the German demand that the Chinese "kowtow" at the emperor's feet as a sign of apology. The Chinese vehemently protested the demand to "kowtow" as an act of "national disgrace." As the negotiations bogged down, the original Chinese expectations about the mission were dashed. The Qing government desired the use of a precedent established in 1896 when Li Hongzhang 李鴻章 was granted an audience before Wilhelm II and submitted to him a formal letter; but the German emperor insisted that Prince Chun's Chinese retinue kowtow, despite initial opposition by his own Bureau of Foreign Affairs. Upon the advice of diplomats who had directly experienced life at the Qing Court, the Bureau argued that since the kowtow was a religious act, it was inappropriate within the realm of international diplomacy, showing that there were concerned parties in both countries who were willing to compromise via diplomatic precedents and interpretations. Wilhelm II did heed the criticism offered by his diplomats and public opinion, showing a disposition to compromise, but giving into such pressure also threatened to demean his imperial authority. Therefore, resolving the "kowtow problem" required some gesture from the Chinese, which appeared in the form of a prodigious appeal to the emperor from Prince Chun to graciously excuse his Chinese retinue from kowtowing, which freed the Germans to relent without any loss of face on the part of their emperor. It was in this way that through a compromise between the two countries on the question of diplomatic ceremony, the problems surrounding the mission of expiation were solved prior to the signing of the Boxer Protocol.
- 2009-09-20
著者
関連論文
- ラインハルト・ツェルナー著, 植原久美子訳, 小倉欣一・李成市監修, 明石書店, 『東アジアの歴史-その構築-』, 2009年5月刊, 333ページ, 税込2,940円
- 一九〇一年のドイツへの清朝「謝罪使」の派遣 : 「謝罪使」観と謁見儀礼問題を中心に
- 衞藤瀋吉著, 『近代東アジア国際関係史』, 東京大学出版会, 二〇〇四・八刊, A5, 二七六頁, 三六〇〇円
- 田中正俊著, 『戦中戦後』, (増訂版), 名著刊行会, 二〇〇一・一一刊, 四六, 四〇一頁, 三五〇〇円
- 朝日新聞取材班, 朝日新聞出版, 『歴史は生きている-東アジアの近現代がわかる10のテーマ-』, 2008年11月刊, 351+viページ, 税込2,100円