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A Journal of the First French Embassy to China, 1698-1700 Francois Froger

A Journal of the First French Embassy to China, 1698-1700 By Francois Froger

A Journal of the First French Embassy to China, 1698-1700 by Francois Froger


Summary

This 1859 translation of a reworked journal of the first French ambassadorial party to China seeks to use the precedents found in primary evidence to positively inform contemporary attitudes to the Chinese during the Opium Wars. The lucid and engaging translation makes this an accessible source on nineteenth-century Anglo-Chinese relations.

A Journal of the First French Embassy to China, 1698-1700 Summary

A Journal of the First French Embassy to China, 1698-1700 by Francois Froger

It was not until the early twentieth century that the previously unpublished source of this 1859 work was identified as being itself a reworking of Francois Froger's Relation du premier voyage, fait en 1698, 1699 et 1700, a journal of his experiences as a young engineer while sailing with the first French ambassadorial party to China. This translation by Saxe Bannister (1790-1877) supplements the original official account with anecdotes and notes: the work is therefore based on composite primary evidence. This does not detract, however, from the worth of this book, in which Bannister uses a lengthy introduction and appendices of further primary evidence to apply what can be learned from earlier works to the contemporary context of the Opium Wars, aiming to promote a more peaceful and balanced attitude towards China. It is a useful example of scholarly propaganda in the history of nineteenth-century Anglo-Chinese relations.

Table of Contents

Dedication; Introduction: 1. The urgent need of better intelligence respecting China and Japan; 2. The need of improved principles of intercourse with the Chinese; 3. The Chinese government well disposed in the last two centuries to encourage friendly intercourse with foreign governments; 4. The general opinion, respecting the dislike of foreigners by the Chinese, erroneous; 5. The four British missions to Pekin in 1787, 1792, 1804, and 1816; 6. The Honourable Colonel Charles Cathcart's mission to Pekin in 1787; 7. Lord Macartney's embassy, 1792; 8. The success of Lord Macartney's embassy to Pekin in 1792. The results; 9. Lord Amherst's embassy to Pekin, in 1816; 10. Gio Ghirardini's residence in China in 1698; 11. Father Bouvet, the Jesuit, in China, 1698; 12. British antecedents to the French mission of 1698; 13. The law of administrative justice in China; 14. The corruption of opinion, and of our home colonial administration from 1806 to 1858; 15. British conquests, or British commerce in China; 16. Christianity in China; 17. The ceremony of the Kotou; 18. Japan; The Journal of the First French Embassy to China, in 1698, 1699, and 1700: 1. From La Rochelle to the Cape of Good Hope; 2. Table Bay at the Cape of Good Hope; 3. From the Cape of Good Hope to Achen; 4. Achen; 5. From Achen to Malacca; 6. Malacca; 7. From Malacca to Governor's Strait; 7. [sic] From Governor's Island to the Lunettes; 8. From the Lunettes to the Sancian Island; 9. From Sancian Islands to Macao; 10. Macao; 11. From Macao to Whampoa; 12. Canton River and Canton; 13. Canton and the River Tiger; 14. From Canton River to the Coast of Cambodia; 15. The Coast of Cambodia to Banca and Bantam; 16. Bantam to Java Head by the Straits of Sunda; 17. Java Head to Mauritius and Bourbon; 18. Bourbon to St Helena; 19. St Helena to Fayal; Appendix.

Additional information

NLS9781108045537
9781108045537
1108045537
A Journal of the First French Embassy to China, 1698-1700 by Francois Froger
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2012-08-02
418
N/A
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