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This is a study about the collapse of Chinese traditional commercial order in the late Qing period. It regards the process as an influence from the prevalence of pro-British Chinese commercial networks in the 1880s. Through the analysis of various Sino-British commercial conflicts after the Arrow war, this book reveals when and where such a commercial network was born and what impact it brought about on the Chinese society.

Produktbeschreibung
This is a study about the collapse of Chinese traditional commercial order in the late Qing period. It regards the process as an influence from the prevalence of pro-British Chinese commercial networks in the 1880s. Through the analysis of various Sino-British commercial conflicts after the Arrow war, this book reveals when and where such a commercial network was born and what impact it brought about on the Chinese society.

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Autorenporträt
EIICHI MOTONO is Assistant Professor at the School of Political Science and Economics, Waseda University, Japan. He formerly taught modern East Asian history and comparative history between late Imperial China, early modern North-Western Europe and Tokugawa Japan at Tokyo University of Fisheries. He studied modern Chinese history at the University of Tokyo and Chinese languages at the University of Hong Kong. After obtaining his MA degree in oriental history at the University of Tokyo, he continued his research work as a Swire Centenary Scholarship student at the University of Oxford. His research topic is modern Chinese socio-economic history, especially that of Shanghai.