Notes of Proceedings and Occurrences, during the British Embassy to Pekin, in 1816 Cambridge Library Collection - Perspectives from the Royal Asiatic Society Series
Langue : Anglais
Auteur : Staunton George Thomas
A valuable document, first published in 1824, in the understanding of the background to Anglo-Chinese relations into the twentieth century.
Sir George Thomas Staunton (1781?1859), Sinologist and politician, was a key figure in Anglo-Chinese relations, as had been his father. In 1798 he began working for the British East India Company in Canton (Guangzhou), where he was the only Englishman who could understand Chinese, having begun learning it as a child. By 1815, British trade with China was worth over £4 million in tea duties alone, and there was immense pressure for the Chinese to relax their restrictions. In 1816, following earlier failed missions, an embassy, including Staunton as second commissioner, was organised to seek better trading conditions and to press the emperor for the opening up of a second harbour. Chinese mistrust and British arrogance led to the failure of the embassy, with no imperial audience given. This account, privately published in 1824, is a valuable document in the understanding of the historical background to Britain's relationship with China into the twentieth century.
Advertisement; Occasion of the embassy; Notes of proceedings on the British embassy to the court of Pekin, in the year 1816.
Date de parution : 03-2013
Ouvrage de 494 p.
14x21.6 cm
Thème de Notes of Proceedings and Occurrences, during the British... :
© 2024 LAVOISIER S.A.S.