Cixi "The Dragon Empress"

Overview

This series of historical accounts profiles strong women who took extraordinary measures to achieve and maintain power—including murder, deception, and black magic—examining the women’s reputations in the context of their eras. Just how wicked were they? The books allow readers to decide for themselves if these infamous ladies were indeed heartless and evil or simply out of touch and making the most of their circumstances.

The last empress of China, Cixi fought ruthlessly to ...

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Overview

This series of historical accounts profiles strong women who took extraordinary measures to achieve and maintain power—including murder, deception, and black magic—examining the women’s reputations in the context of their eras. Just how wicked were they? The books allow readers to decide for themselves if these infamous ladies were indeed heartless and evil or simply out of touch and making the most of their circumstances.

The last empress of China, Cixi fought ruthlessly to isolate her country from the West while cloistered inside her lavish Forbidden City, ignoring the needs of her people. Her extravagant lifestyle, bouts of bad temper, and brutal punishments earned her a reputation as a cruel and ignorant leader. An exploration of Cixi's daily life—including what she ate and how she dressed—this story explains how she became one of the most notorious figures of the Qing dynasty.

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Meet the Author

Natasha Yim is the author of Otto's Rainy Day. She lives in Ukiah, California. Peter Malone has illustrated more than 20 children's books and is the author of Close to the Wind.

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  • Posted November 22, 2011

    fascinating story about one "bad dudette"

    Did you know that the Chinese also had empresses as well as emperors? The last Chinese empress was Cixi, who was born on November 29, 1835, in Shanxi province, northern China, the daughter of a minor government official, and most likely spent her childhood in Anhui province. Not much is known about her early life. She was very secretive about her upbringing, saying only that she did not have a happy childhood. At age sixteen she was chosen by the Emperor Xianfeng as an imperial concubine and waited on the Empress Dowager Ci¿An. In 1856, she gave birth to the Emperor¿s only son, Zaichun and upon Xianfeng's death had her five-year-old son installed as Emperor Tongzhi. Cixi then ousted a group of regents appointed by the late emperor and assumed regency over her young son with Ci'An, consolidating control and establishing near-absolute rule over the Qing dynasty.
    When Cixi¿s son died of smallpox in 1875, she adopted her three-year-old nephew Zaitien and installed him as the Emperor Guangxu, maintaining her regency. She was a conservative ruler who refused to adopt Western models of government, rejecting reformist views and even placing Guangxu under house arrest in later years for supporting reformers. After the Boxer Rebellion, the Eight-Nation Alliance invaded China in 1900, and Cixi fled with her court to Xian. When she returned, much of Beijing was in ruins. The Emperor Guangxu died on November 14, 1908, and Cixi died a day later on November 15, 1908. The Qing Dynasty collapsed a few years after her death, and it is often said that her isolationist ways brought the imperial system of China to its end. Historians from both Nationalist and Communist backgrounds have generally portrayed her as a despot and villain, but in recent years other historians have suggested that she was a scapegoat for problems beyond her control. So, was she really ¿The Dragon Empress¿ as she was nicknamed, or just an out-of-touch ruler who was misunderstood?
    This book is one of ¿The Thinking Girl¿s Treasury of Dastardly Dames¿ series that includes volumes about Cleopatra, Agrippina, Mary Tudor, Catherine de Medici, and Marie Antoinette. Most world history books today include non-Western civilization, but when I was in school we didn¿t learn much about Chinese history, so I was not familiar with Cixi. It is sometimes suggested that she introduced the smallpox to her son when he started to rule on his own, poisoned his wife Alute and her own rival Ci¿An, and finally imprisoned Guangxu and later poisoned him. Others claim that there is no actual evidence for any of this and that Guangxu was not imprisoned in the palace but was recuperating from a serious illness. Both sides are presented, and the reader gets to choose which he thinks. Even if she didn¿t do all the things that she¿s been charged with, just based on what she did do, I would conclude that she was one ¿bad dudette.¿ Cixi: ¿The Dragon Empress¿ is a fascinating story. The only reservation that I have is that it is designed for children 9-13, and while the reading level may fit those ages, I don¿t know that nine and ten year olds need to be reading a lot about concubines, so I would suggest ages 12-16.

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