The Chinese Opium Wars - BEECHING Jack

KORTE INHOUD

Hardcover, dj, large in-8, 352 pp., illustrated, bibliography, index. After the economic depression of 1837, the British treasury was extremely shaky; tea produced high tax revenue but importing it was a drain on sterling. The solution found was to trade Indian opium for Chinese tea, an exchange that eventually involved a hundred million pounds a year. In this excellent study, Beeching anatomizes the get-rich-quick types, both Chinese and British, who conducted a looting operation that addicted several million Chinese a year. The book also investigates the Canton officials who fought the atrocity, and there is an especially good account of the Taiping "Chinese Lutheran" rebellion. Most important, Beeching shows how the policy was consciously created at the apex of government by the Prime Minister, Lord Palmerston, and, while fully sympathetic to the Chinese victims, shows that China's empire was inherently as cruel as the imperialists. The military history of the struggle is permeated with the weakness of the...
1975Taal: Engelszie alle details...

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1975Uitgever: Hutchinson352 paginasTaal: Engels