Zheng Guanying or Cheng Kuan-ying (1842–1922 or 1923) was a Chinese reformist active in the late
Qing dynasty.[1] He was a proponent of fighting economic dominance by Western countries of China[2] through
economic nationalism, of parliamentary
representative democracy, and of women's rights.[3]
He made a career as a
comprador after moving to
Shanghai at 16 years of age;[1] he previously took and failed the xiucai
imperial examinations at that age;[5] he ultimately never passed any such examinations.[1] He first worked for Overweg and Company, a British firm,[5] and later for
Butterfield & Swire.[1] Initially he used his funds to buy official titles. In 1879 he became a
circuit intendant or daotai as an award for his community service, and he received other titles due to his service work.[6] He took
night classes on the English language at the Anglo-Chinese School.[1] He began his own firm after turning 41.[1] He went back to Macau in late 1886.[4]
His employment background differed from those of other Chinese reformers of that era;[1] others had academic or government backgrounds.[3]
Works
In the early 1870s he published essays about politics.[6]
Travels to the South, a travel log, was the result of his 1884 intelligence-gathering mission in
French Indochina.[1]
Legacy and scholarship
Zheng's writings had an extraordinary influence, both in his own time and in later decades. Among those who acknowledge his inspiration were
Mao Zedong,[7] and
Lu Xun.[6]
As of 2011 most English-language journal articles discussing Zheng were published in the 1960s, and few English-language books on him existed. Beginning in the 1980s more articles about Zheng were published in Chinese.[8]
Escola Oficial Zheng Guanying, a government school in Macau, was given its current name in 2011.[9] The 160th anniversary of the birth of Zheng was held in Zhongshan in 2002.[8]
^"Escola Zheng Guanying nega acusações de pais".
Jornal Tribuna de Macau. 2016-03-18. Retrieved 2017-08-15. "Confrontada com a polémica da mudança dos directores, Wu Kit disse que desde a transformação da Escola Luso-Chinesa de Tamagnini Barbosa para a Escola Zheng Guanying em 2011,[...]"
Sources
Guo, Wu. Zheng Guanying, Merchant Reformer of Late Qing China and his Influence on Economics, Politics, and Society.
Cambria Press. May 28, 2010.
ISBN9781604977059.