1st Edition
Britain's Imperial Cornerstone in China The Chinese Maritime Customs Service, 1854-1949
By Donna Brunero
Copyright 2006
216 Pages
8 B/W Illustrations
by
Routledge
216 Pages
8 B/W Illustrations
by
Routledge
This is an in-depth account of the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs Service, a uniquely cosmopolitan institution established in the wake of China's defeat in the Opium Wars (1842 to 43), and a central feature of the Treaty Port system.
The British-dominated service was headed by the famous Robert Hart who founded a far-reaching customs administration that also encompassed other... Read more
Preface Acknowledgements 1. Introduction 2. An Institutional Review 3. Gunboats and Revenue 4. Nationalist Ascendancy and the Politics of being Inspector General 5. Charting a New Course: The Proposed Hong Kong – China Trade and Customs Agreement, 1929-30 6. A Service in Decline 7. ‘Steadfast and fearlessly persistent’: the CMCS in the face of War 1937-45 Bibliography
Biography
Donna Brunero is a Research Fellow in the Department of Historical Studies, University of Bristol.
"Brunero takes the lead in the publication of her doctoral dissertation in the face of the newly accessible collection of abundant archival materials. Despite the recent historiographic development of decolonisation and China-centered perspective, Brunero's book purposefully and bravely takes an Anglocentric approach utilising the vast English documentation produced by the British-dominated bureaucracy in China in order to gain insight into the function and mindset of the inspectorate." -- Yuehtsen Chung, Itinerario 2007






