<p>This study examines the dynamics between charismatic leadership and the Mandate of Heaven (tianming, 天命) in the Boxer Uprising (1899–1901), analyzing how religious authority was constructed, exercised, and ultimately collapsed. Drawing on Max Weber’s theory of charismatic authority and the historical genealogy of tianming discourse, the research develops an integrative “Sacred Mobilization System” (SMS) model identifying three mutually constitutive dimensions: cosmological belief structure, ritual practice, and charismatic leadership. Through a comparative analysis of three principal Boxer leaders—Cao Futian, Zhang Decheng, and Lin Hei’er—the study constructs a typology of charismatic authority: martial-performative (grounded in empirical demonstration), bureaucratic-organizational (bridging supernatural and institutional legitimacy), and mystical-gendered (based on ontological transformation). The findings demonstrate that each type exhibits differential vulnerability to empirical disconfirmation, generates characteristic organizational morphologies, and produces distinct post-collapse memory forms. A process-tracing analysis disaggregates the sequential collapse of charismatic authority into three causal paths: battlefield falsification of martial claims, organizational disintegration through incomplete routinization, and the Qing court’s policy reversal. The study extends Weberian charisma theory by demonstrating that the dynamics of charismatic validation (Bewährung) operate through fundamentally different mechanisms depending on the specific register of divine authority invoked—tianyi, tianyi–tianming hybrid, or tianshen xiafan—revealing that charisma is not a unitary phenomenon but a family of related phenomena with structurally distinct logics of construction, exercise, and decay.</p>

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Charismatic leaders and divine mandate in the boxer uprising: a study of religious authority and social mobilization

  • Gan Tan,
  • Jingjing Yang,
  • Lan Cheng

摘要

This study examines the dynamics between charismatic leadership and the Mandate of Heaven (tianming, 天命) in the Boxer Uprising (1899–1901), analyzing how religious authority was constructed, exercised, and ultimately collapsed. Drawing on Max Weber’s theory of charismatic authority and the historical genealogy of tianming discourse, the research develops an integrative “Sacred Mobilization System” (SMS) model identifying three mutually constitutive dimensions: cosmological belief structure, ritual practice, and charismatic leadership. Through a comparative analysis of three principal Boxer leaders—Cao Futian, Zhang Decheng, and Lin Hei’er—the study constructs a typology of charismatic authority: martial-performative (grounded in empirical demonstration), bureaucratic-organizational (bridging supernatural and institutional legitimacy), and mystical-gendered (based on ontological transformation). The findings demonstrate that each type exhibits differential vulnerability to empirical disconfirmation, generates characteristic organizational morphologies, and produces distinct post-collapse memory forms. A process-tracing analysis disaggregates the sequential collapse of charismatic authority into three causal paths: battlefield falsification of martial claims, organizational disintegration through incomplete routinization, and the Qing court’s policy reversal. The study extends Weberian charisma theory by demonstrating that the dynamics of charismatic validation (Bewährung) operate through fundamentally different mechanisms depending on the specific register of divine authority invoked—tianyi, tianyi–tianming hybrid, or tianshen xiafan—revealing that charisma is not a unitary phenomenon but a family of related phenomena with structurally distinct logics of construction, exercise, and decay.