The I. G. In Peking: Letters Of Robert Hart, Chinese Maritime Customs, 18681907 (2 Volumes)-new

The I. G. In Peking: Letters Of Robert Hart, Chinese Maritime Customs, 18681907 (2 Volumes)-new

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Robert Harts Fortyfiveyear Administration Of Chinas Customs Service Was A Unique Achievement. In These Letters Hart Speaks To Us Directly From A Time Long Past In China, But A Time That May Seem Only Yesterday To A Western Reader. The Result Is A Primary Source For The History Of Modern China And The Era Of Foreign Privilege There.Bearing Sole Responsibility For The Chinese Maritime Customs As Its Inspector General, Hart Built Up An International Staff Of Thousands, Facilitated Foreign Trade, Gave The Lateching Court Its Principal New Revenues, And Fostered Chinas Modernity In Administration, Schools, Naval Development, Postal Service, And Many Other Lines. Behind The Scenes Hart Was Also A Diplomat Who Settled The Sinofrench War, Changed Macaos Status, Got Boundaries Delimited With Burma And India, And Mitigated The Disasters Of Imperialism. His Career At Peking, Coinciding With That Of The Empress Dowager Tzuhsi, Represented The Constructive Side Of The Unequal Treaty System And Victorian Britains Informal Empire In East Asia.The Publication Of The Great I. G.S Weekly Or Fortnightly Letters To His Confidant And London Commissioner, James Duncan Campbell, Gives Us An Intimate, Inside View Of Harts Problems And Methods. He Appraises His Employers In Chinas Foreign Office, The Tsungli Yamen, And Comments Pithily On The Complex Flow Of Events And Personalities. He Quotes The Confucian Classic But, Even More, The Latin Poets. His Personal Life Is Revealedstanding Long Hours At His Writing Desk, Finding Solace In The Violin, Keeping His Own Counsel, Constantly Isolated By His Responsibilities. Having No Confidant In Peking, He Explains Himself To His Loyal Agent In London.The Hartcampbell Letters, After Five Years Editing And Annotation And With An Informed Introduction By Harts Final Successor As Foreign I. G., L. K. Little, Thus Take Their Place As One Of The Great Historical Treasures That Bring A Vanished Era Back To Life.

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