A Documentary Chronicle of Sino-Western Relations, 1644-1820: Translated textsLo-shu Fu Documents translated from Chinese offer a more balanced history of East Asian international relations. |
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Page 203
... regulations , making the taxes in Chekiang larger than in Kwangtung so the barbarians will make no profit by trading there . Thus we achieve prohibition without a formal ordinance of exclusion . We do not do this because we wish to ...
... regulations , making the taxes in Chekiang larger than in Kwangtung so the barbarians will make no profit by trading there . Thus we achieve prohibition without a formal ordinance of exclusion . We do not do this because we wish to ...
Page 321
... regulations were discussed and decided , including one article stating that everything should be done according to the former regulations . Hereafter , if a murder takes place on the frontier , no matter whether the culprits are ...
... regulations were discussed and decided , including one article stating that everything should be done according to the former regulations . Hereafter , if a murder takes place on the frontier , no matter whether the culprits are ...
Page 413
... regulations to control foreign barbarians . They are not allowed to go beyond these regulations . To these barbari- ans who obey our regulations , we offer kindness ; to those who violate our regulations , we demonstrate our power . The ...
... regulations to control foreign barbarians . They are not allowed to go beyond these regulations . To these barbari- ans who obey our regulations , we offer kindness ; to those who violate our regulations , we demonstrate our power . The ...
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A Documentary Chronicle of Sino-Western Relations, 1644-1820: Translated texts Lo-shu Fu No preview available - 1966 |
Common terms and phrases
according allowed already ambassador appointed approved army arrived asked barbarians Board bring capital carefully cause Celestial Chekiang chief China Chinese command communication Court customs dare deliberation delivered dispatch Dutch edict embassy Emperor decreed Empire England English enter envoy escaped fear foreign frontier Fukien given governor Grace grand council Hei-lung-chiang hong horses hundred immediately Imperial instruct Interior k'a-lun Khan Kiakhta King Kwangtung land letter Li-fan live Lo-ch'as Macao magistrates Majesty matter memorial merchants military ministers month Moreover native never obey officials opium original Peking permitted person petition places present princes prohibition provinces punished received region regulations religion reported River Russian sail saying secretly sent servant serve settle ships silver soldiers subjects submit territory Thereupon thousand To-er-chi trade transmit tribe tribute Turgots various viceroy violate wait Westerners wish Yüan