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Description

Detailed map showing the route taken from Hang-Tchoo Foo to Quang-Tchoo-Foo (Canton), from Staunton's An Authentic Account of an Embassy from the King of Great Britain to the Emperor of China.

The map details Geroge Macartney's Embassy to China, the first British embassy to that country, undertaken between 1792 and 1794. During the second half of the 18th century the British were eager to open up further trade with the Chinese Empire. Since 1757, international trade had been restricted to the port of Canton in southern China. In 1792, Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger dispatched George Macartney, an Anglo-Irish diplomat, on a mission to the court of the Emperor Qianlong in Beijing in an effort to gain trade concessions.

The map shows the second part of Macartney's return from the summer palace at Chengde, north of Beijing, after meeting the Emperor. He returned to Beijing overland, before travelling south to Hangzhou (Hang-Tchoo Foo) on the Yangtze River delta via the 1000-mile Great Canal of China. Diplomatically, the mission was a complete failure, as the Emperor proved entirely unwilling to consider trade concessions, however, the trip yielded Europeans valuable new information on China's geography and social customs.