- Canton System
The Canton System (1760-1842) served as a means for
China to control trade with the west within its own country.History
Despite Chinese efforts to keep
Europe an traders and citizens within the area ofMacau , European trade spread throughout China and threatened to virtually take over the country through the practice ofSphere of Influence imperialism . The Canton System limited the ports in which European traders could do business in China. It also forbade any direct trading between European merchants and Chinesecivilian s. Instead, the Europeans, generally employees of major trading companies (most importantly theEnglish East India Company ) had to trade with an association of Chinese merchants known as the "Cohong ". The European (soon to include American) presence was restricted to theThirteen Factories on the harbour of Canton during the trading season, but the foreign traders were permitted to remain on Chinese soil atMacau in the off-season (a mitigation of earlier Chinese restrictions on trade, which had banned foreign residence in the off-season).The first trade that existed with China was for
silk s, porcelain ("fine china") and most lucratively tea. It was the incredible financial deficit caused by the European demand for tea that spurred the British to begin importing opium (grown in its colonies in India) - the only commodity besidessilver bullion that the Chinese merchants would accept in bulk.Despite Britain's growing apprehension with the Canton System, the selling of opium appeased British resentment for the system, and it remained intact until the
Opium Wars , which established "treaty ports" in accordance with theTreaty of Nanjing , which were ruled not byChinese laws but rather the laws of the specific country that controlled each port.Legacy
By the time
Hong Kong became a full-fledgedBritish Colony , many of the merchants would be led by a newer generation of western hong merchants. Many of these hong companies would become the back bone of the young Hong Kong economy.ee also
*
Colonial Hong Kong
*English East India Company
*Danish East India Company
*Dutch East India Company
*Swedish East India Company
*Old China Trade Further reading
* Louis Dermigny, "La Chine et l'Occident: le commerce à Canton au XVIIIe siècle, 1719-1833". Paris: SEVPEN, 1964.
* Liu Yong, "The Dutch East India Company's Tea Trade with China, 1757-1781". Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2007. ISBN 9004155996
* Hoh-cheung Mui and H. Lorna Mui, "The Management of Monopoly: A Study of the East India Company's Conduct of Its Tea Trade, 1784-1833". Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 1984. ISBN 0774801980
* Zhuang Guotu, "Tea, Silver, Opium and War: The International Tea Trade and Western Commercial Expansion into China in 1740-1840". Xiamen: Xiamen University Press, 1993.
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