From Canton to the Treaty Ports: Maritime Trade and Foreign Encounters in China
MTA
A maritime history of Sino-foreign trade, diplomacy, and cultural exchange from the Song to the 20th century
"From Canton to the Treaty Ports" offers a comprehensive maritime history of China, tracing its engagement with the wider world from the Song Dynasty to the mid-20th century. The book argues that China's development was profoundly shaped by its seas and shorelines, which served as conduits for trade, diplomacy, and cultural exchange. It begins by establishing the Song Dynasty's transformation into a significant maritime power, driven by economic dynamism and military pressures on land. Chapters detail the emergence of key ports like Quanzhou, Guangzhou, and Ningbo as cosmopolitan centers within a monsoon-driven trading system, alongside advancements in shipbuilding (like watertight bulkheads and battened sails) and navigation (such as the magnetic compass).
The narrative progresses through the Yuan Dynasty's cosmopolitan maritime empire, exemplified by Quanzhou (Zaytun), and the ambitious but ultimately unsustainable voyages of Zheng He during the early Ming. A significant portion of the book focuses on the Ming's "sea ban" (haijin), which led to increased smuggling and the "wokou" pirate raids, fundamentally reshaping coastal society and the relationship between the state and maritime communities. The arrival of Europeans, notably the Portuguese establishment of Macao and the Spanish galleon trade via Manila, introduces early modern globalization, illustrating how American silver flowed into China, profoundly monetizing its economy and establishing complex multi-centric trade networks across the South China Sea.
The latter half of the book explores the Canton System, which concentrated all foreign trade in Guangzhou under strict Qing regulations, and the destabilizing role of the opium trade, which reversed China's trade surplus and precipitated the Opium Wars. These conflicts heralded the era of "gunboat diplomacy," forcing China to open numerous "treaty ports" and accept extraterritoriality, fundamentally altering its legal and territorial sovereignty. Shanghai's meteoric rise as a global financial and commercial hub, and Hong Kong's development as an entrepĂ´t, exemplify this new order. The book also delves into the lives of ordinary coastal communitiesâfisherfolk, salt workers, and coolie migrantsâhighlighting the social and economic dimensions of China's extensive diaspora and its "Nanyang" connections, which profoundly influenced homeland politics.
Finally, the book examines the turbulent early 20th century, from the 1911 Revolution and the establishment of the Republic to the cataclysm of the Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) and the subsequent Chinese Civil War. These conflicts violently dismantled the treaty port system, as foreign concessions were occupied and China's coastline became a battleground. The conclusion reflects on the enduring legacies of this maritime history, including China's efforts to modernize its navy ("Self-Strengthening"), the pervasive influence of foreign legal and economic frameworks, and the reordering of China's relationship with the sea under the Communist regime, which sought to reclaim sovereignty and rebuild a devastated coastal economy.
This book is essential for students and scholars of Chinese history, maritime studies, and global trade who seek to understand how seafaring shaped China's economic, diplomatic, and cultural development over a millennium. It will particularly benefit readers interested in the intersection of technology, commerce, and cultural exchange in premodern and modern contexts. Those studying diaspora communities, port cities, or the historical roots of China's contemporary maritime ambitions will find valuable insights into the longue durĂŠe of Sino-foreign encounters.
May 15, 2026
English
75,279 words
5 hours 16 minutes
Click to order this paperback:
Buy NowPrint copy is made to order and ships worldwide. Includes the ebook free, ready to read instantly.
$5 account credit for all new MixCache.com accounts, usable toward any ebook purchase!*