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Lord Macartney's embassy, 1793
Macartney Embassy
Traditional Chinese馬加爾尼使團
Simplified Chinese马加尔尼使团
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinMǎjiā'ěrní Shǐtuán
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingMaa5gaa1ji5nei4 Si3tyun4

The Macartney Embassy (Chinese: 馬加爾尼使團), also called the Macartney Mission, was the first British diplomatic mission to China, which took place in 1793. It is named for its leader, Viscount Macartney, Great Britain's first envoy to China. The goals of the mission included the opening of new ports for British trade in China, the establishment of a permanent embassy in Beijing, the cession of a small island for British use along China's coast, and the relaxation of trade restrictions on British merchants in Guangzhou (Canton). Macartney's delegation met with the Qianlong Emperor, who rejected all of the mission's requests. Although the mission failed to achieve its official objectives, it was later noted for the extensive cultural, political, and geographical observations its participants recorded in China and brought back to Europe. It came to light in 1796 that a Chinese court official, Heshen, was embezzling state funds and had frustrated the mission.

Background

[edit]
View of Canton, by Jakob van der Schley (1749)

Foreign maritime trade in China was regulated through the Canton System, which emerged gradually through a series of imperial edicts in the 17th and 18th centuries. This system channeled formal trade through the Cohong, a guild of thirteen trading companies (known in Cantonese as "hong") selected by the imperial government. In 1725, the Yongzheng Emperor gave the Cohong legal responsibility over commerce in Guangzhou. By the 18th century, Guangzhou, known as Canton to British merchants at the time, had become the most active port in the China trade, thanks partly to its convenient access to the Pearl River Delta. In 1757, the Qianlong Emperor confined all foreign maritime trade to Guangzhou. Qianlong, who ruled the Qing dynasty at its zenith, was wary of the transformations of Chinese society that might result from unrestricted foreign access.[1] Chinese subjects were not permitted to teach the Chinese language to foreigners, and European traders were forbidden to bring women into China.[2]: 50–53 

By the late 18th century, British traders felt confined by the Canton System and, in an attempt to gain greater trade rights, they lobbied for an embassy to go before the emperor and request changes to the current arrangements. The need for an embassy was partly due to the growing trade imbalance between China and Great Britain, driven largely by the British demand for tea, as well as other Chinese products like porcelain and silk. The East India Company, whose trade monopoly in the East encompassed the tea trade, was obliged by the Qing government to pay for Chinese tea with silver. To address the trade deficit, efforts were made to find British products that could be sold to the Chinese.

At the time of Macartney's mission to China, the East India Company was beginning to grow opium in India to sell in China. The company made a concerted effort starting in the 1780s to finance the tea trade with opium.[3] Macartney, who had served in India as Governor of Madras (present-day Chennai), was ambivalent about selling the drug to the Chinese, preferring to substitute "rice or any better production in its place".[2]: 8–9  An official embassy would provide an opportunity to introduce new British products to the Chinese market, which the East India Company had been criticised for failing to do.[4]

In 1787, Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger and East India Company official Henry Dundas dispatched Colonel Charles Cathcart to serve as Britain's first ambassador to China. Cathcart became ill during the voyage, however, and died just before his ship, HMS Vestal, reached China. After the failure of the Cathcart Embassy, Macartney proposed that another attempt be made under his friend Sir George Staunton. Dundas, who had become Home Secretary, suggested in 1791 that Macartney himself take up the mission instead. Macartney accepted on the condition that he would be made an earl, and given the authority to choose his companions.[2]: 6–8 

Preparations

[edit]
George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney

Macartney chose George Staunton as his right-hand man, whom he entrusted to continue the mission should Macartney himself prove unable to do so. Staunton brought along his son, Thomas, who served the mission as a page. John Barrow (later Sir John Barrow, 1st Baronet) served as the embassy's comptroller. Joining the mission were two doctors (Hugh Gillan[5][6] and William Scott), two secretaries, three attachés, and a military escort. Artists William Alexander and Thomas Hickey would produce drawings and paintings of the mission's events. A group of scientists also accompanied the embassy, led by James Dinwiddie.[2]: 6–8 

It was difficult for Macartney to find anyone in Britain who could speak Chinese because it was illegal for Chinese people to teach foreigners. Chinese who taught foreigners their language risked death, as was the case with the teacher of James Flint, a merchant who broke protocol by complaining directly to Qianlong about corrupt officials in Canton.[7] Macartney did not want to rely on native interpreters, as was the custom in Canton.[8] The mission brought along four Chinese Catholic priests as interpreters. Two were from the Collegium Sinicum in Naples, where George Staunton had recruited them: Paolo Cho (周保羅) and Jacobus Li (李雅各; 李自標; Li Zibiao).[9] They were familiar with Latin, but not English. The other two were priests at the Pontificio Collegio Urbano de Propaganda Fide, which trained Chinese boys brought home by missionaries in Christianity. The two wanted to return home to China, to whom Staunton offered free passage to Macau.[2]: 5 [10] The 100-member delegation also included scholars and valets.[11]

Among those who had called for a mission to China was Sir Joseph Banks, 1st Baronet, President of the Royal Society. Banks had been the botanist on board HMS Endeavour for the first voyage of Captain James Cook, as well as the driving force behind the 1787 expedition of HMS Bounty to Tahiti. Banks, who had been growing tea plants privately since 1780, had ambitions to gather valuable plants from all over the world to be studied at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew and the newly established Calcutta Botanical Garden in Bengal. Above all, he wanted to grow tea in Bengal or Assam, and address the "immense debt of silver" caused by the tea trade. At this time, botanists were not yet aware that a variety of the tea plant (camellia sinensis var. assamica) was already growing natively in Assam, a fact that Robert Bruce was to discover in 1823. Banks advised the embassy to gather as many plants as possible in their travels, especially tea plants. He also insisted that gardeners and artists be present on the expedition to make observations and illustrations of local flora. Accordingly, David Stronach and John Haxton served as the embassy's botanical gardeners.[12]

Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville

Henry Dundas laid out his goals for the mission in Macartney's official instructions. More British subjects had been trading in China than any other Europeans. Despite this, the British had no direct contact with the emperor, in contrast to the Portuguese, whose Jesuit missionaries retained permanent positions at the imperial court. Macartney was instructed to negotiate a relaxation of the Canton System, such that British traders could operate in more ports and markets, and to obtain a small island on the Chinese coast from which British merchants could operate under British jurisdiction. He was also to establish a permanent embassy in Beijing so as to create a direct line of communication between the two governments, cutting out the Cantonese merchants who had served as middlemen. Finally, he was to gather intelligence on the Chinese government and society, about which little was known in Europe at the time.[2]: 9–10 

The instructions from Dundas also stipulated that Macartney should establish trade relations with other nations of the East.[2]: 9–10  To that effect, Macartney was given letters of credence to the Emperor of Japan, to be executed after completing his mission to China. The instructions stated that it may be useful for him to visit Japan to establish trade relations, particularly to enable a trade in tea.[13]

Despite the misgivings of the East India Company about the potential downsides of the mission, the company was compelled by the government to fund the effort.[14] Dundas and Macartney prioritised national interests over those of the company, which feared the loss of its monopoly position, and the possibility that the embassy would strain diplomatic relations instead of improving them.[15] By sending a direct representative of the British crown, British politician and later Foreign Secretary Lord Grenville reasoned that the mission would be given greater attention than if it had been sent "only in the name of a trading company".[4]

One of the goals of the embassy was to demonstrate the utility of British science and technology, in hopes of encouraging Chinese purchases of British goods. In keeping with these objectives, the mission was to bring with it a number of gifts including clocks, telescopes, weapons, textiles, and other products of technology.[14][16] Macartney intended the display of technical prowess to reflect Britain's "national character", one of ingenuity, exploration, and curiosity about the natural world.[17] Nevertheless, Dundas reminded him that the mission was not "a delegation of the Royal Society".[2]: 6–8 

Voyage to China

[edit]

The delegation departed Portsmouth aboard three ships on 26 September 1792. The warship HMS Lion, commanded by Captain Sir Erasmus Gower, led the mission.[2]: 3  The Hindostan, belonging to the East India Company (and later purchased by the Royal Navy as HMS Hindostan), was commanded by Captain William Mackintosh.[2]: 12  These two vessels were accompanied by a brig, the Jackall. A storm soon hit the squadron, forcing it to stop temporarily at Torbay. After making repairs, the Lion and Hindostan resumed their voyage without the Jackall, which had gone missing in the storm. Fortunately, the gifts to be presented to the Emperor were stored on the Lion and the Hindostan. Thomas Staunton spent the voyage studying Chinese with the mission's interpreters.[2]: 3–5 

The squadron stopped at Madeira in early October, and at the Canary Islands later that same month. On 1 November, they arrived at Cape Verde. After waiting five days for the Jackall, they continued on their journey.[2]: 12–20  The crew of Lion and Hindostan believed that the ship was wrecked, but it actually survived and would reunite with the other ships later.[7] The trade winds off the coast of Africa forced them to sail west all the way to Rio de Janeiro, where they arrived at the end of November. Macartney suffered an attack of gout which lasted a month. As young Thomas Staunton studied the Chinese language, Macartney learned everything he could about China from the books he had placed in the Lion's library.[2]: 24–25 

The expedition departed Rio de Janeiro on 17 December and sailed east once more, rounding the Cape of Good Hope on 7 January 1793.[2]: 29–31  They passed Java in February, and reached Jakarta (then known as Batavia) on 6 March.[2]: 34–36  There, they bought a French brig which they christened the Clarence, to replace the Jackall. The Jackall itself, however, rejoined the squadron at Jakarta, after having turned back for repairs after the storm that had struck the ships at the start of their voyage.[2]: 38  The full squadron sailed on to Macau, where they arrived on 19 June 1793. There, George Staunton disembarked to meet with officials of the East India Company.[2]: 43–44  The two Chinese Catholic priests who had been offered free passage to Macau departed there, along with one of the two priests from Naples, leaving only one Chinese interpreter with the mission.[2]: 48  For the next leg of the trip, Macartney and Dundas had intended to avoid Guangzhou altogether. Instead of proceeding overland from there, the plan was for the embassy to continue by sea to Tianjin, the closest major port to Beijing.[18] Such a route had never been charted by European sailors as all trade had been through Guangzhou. Macartney wanted to continue to Tianjin instead of taking the inland route partially because of precious items on the boat, but he also wanted to use the mission to explore the Yellow Sea for future missions.[19]

Arrival

[edit]
A fort near Tianjin, by William Alexander (1793)

Representatives of the East India Company met with the military governor of Guangdong ahead of Macartney's arrival, in order to request permission for the embassy to land at Tianjin instead of Guangzhou. The governor at first refused, as it was considered improper for a tributary mission to select its own port of arrival. The British officials pointed out, however, that the ships carried many large, precious items that might be damaged if taken overland. Moreover, as the governor noted in his report to the Emperor, the embassy had journeyed a great distance, and would be greatly delayed if sent back to Guangzhou from Tianjin. The Qianlong Emperor agreed to the request, and instructed his officials to lead the embassy to him with the utmost civility. The Emperor's response was brought back to Guangzhou by General Fuk'anggan, Viceroy of Liangguang, who had recently returned after fighting in the Sino-Nepalese War.[2]: 44–45 

The embassy departed Macao on 23 June.[2]: 49  It stopped in Zhoushan, where Staunton went ashore to meet with the military governor of Dinghai. The Emperor had sent instructions to every port in China to provide pilots to guide the British visitors, and the governor did so. However, Chinese officials had not anticipated that the British intended to sail the high seas rather than hopping from port to port in shallow waters along the coast, as was typical of Chinese vessels. They expressed surprise at the size and speed of the British ships. Anticipating that these vessels with their deep hulls would not be able to proceed upstream past Tianjin, they hired boats to carry the mission and its cargo to the capital.[2]: 55–66 

The East Indiaman Endeavour was sent to pilot the ships of the embassy to Tianjin, and joined the squadron when it reached the Yellow Sea. The mission arrived at the mouth of the Hai River (known as the Pei Ho in European sources of the time) on 25 July, and dropped anchor, finding the muddy water impassable for the larger vessels.[2]: 67–69  The gifts were unloaded from the British ships and transferred upstream to Dagu by junks. From there, they were unloaded again onto smaller boats to Tongzhou, the endpoint of the Grand Canal. Macartney and his group continued separately to Dagu on the smallest British ships, the Jackall, the Clarence, and the Endeavour.[2]: 76–79  On 6 August, Macartney and Staunton met with Liang Kentang (梁肯堂), Viceroy of Zhili, who had traveled from Baoding to see them. Liang agreed to permit the Lion and Hindostan to return to Zhoushan at Macartney's request. He also informed Macartney that the meeting with the Emperor was to take place at the Chengde Mountain Resort in Rehe (Jehol), rather than in the capital (Beijing) as the British delegation had expected.[20]

The embassy continued to Tianjin, where it arrived on 11 August. Macartney and Staunton attended a banquet with viceroy Liang and the Manchu legate Zhengrui(徵瑞), who stipulated that all gifts were to be brought to Rehe and laid at the Emperor's feet in accordance with protocol. However, Macartney convinced the viceroy to permit some of the gifts to be left in Beijing to avoid damaging them on the journey to Rehe.[21][2]: 93–94  The imperial court had advised Liang not to accompany Macartney to the capital, so as to avoid giving the British too high a sense of their own status. According to Qianlong, "treated too favorably, a Barbarian becomes arrogant".[2]: 84–85  Instead of the viceroy, Zhengrui would act as the mission's liaison. The mission continued up the Hai River on small boats pulled by men along the shore using ropes and harnesses. It landed at Tongzhou on 16 August.[2]: 98–99 

Beijing

[edit]
The Old Summer Palace, where the embassy's gifts were put on display

The embassy reached Beijing on 21 August. It was escorted to a residence north of Beijing, near the Old Summer Palace. The British were not permitted to leave the premises for the duration of their stay. Wanting to be closer to China's political centre, Macartney received permission from Zhengrui to move to a different residence in Beijing, which had been intended to house the embassy after the meeting with the Emperor. In Beijing, responsibility for the embassy on the Chinese side would be shared between Zhengrui and two other officials: Jin Jian (金簡), a minister of public works, and his vice minister Yiling'a(伊齡阿). The gifts brought by the embassy were stored amongst other tribute items in the throne room at the Old Summer Palace, which Macartney was the first Briton to visit. Barrow and Dinwiddie were responsible for assembling and arranging the gifts. The most important item, the planetarium, was so complex that it took 18 days to assemble.[2]: 126–141 

On 24 August, legate Zhengrui brought a letter to Macartney from Sir Erasmus Gower, who reported that the ships of the embassy had reached Zhoushan as ordered. Macartney replied with instructions for Gower to continue on to Guangzhou, but Zhengrui secretly forwarded the letter to the Emperor at Rehe instead of dispatching it to Zhoushan.[2]: 151–152  Several men aboard the Lion had died of disease in August, and the squadron stopped in Zhoushan to recuperate. Having received word that the British ships were beset with illness, Qianlong instructed the viceroy of Zhejiang to ensure the British were quarantined at Zhoushan.[2]: 164  The court reprimanded Zhengrui regarding his forwarding of Macartney's letter. An imperial edict written by Heshen, a member of the Grand Council and a favourite of the Emperor, stipulated that Zhengrui was not to make reports alone without the signatures of Jin Jian and Yiling'a, nor make decisions unilaterally. Heshen is now regarded as the most corrupt official in Chinese history.[22][circular reference] The Jiaqing Emperor realised this in 1796 after the abdication of Qianlong and forced him to commit suicide. As an official, Heshen acquired silver worth an estimated US$270 billion. Heshen's insistence that the British pay for tea in silver would frustrate trade for the next half century. As was typical of imperial edicts, the letter contained commentary in vermilion ink by the emperor's own hand. Calling Zhengrui "contemptible and ridiculous", Qianlong ordered him to send Macartney's letter to the viceroy of Zhejiang so the British vessels could leave Zhoushan.[2]: 166–168 

All members of the embassy except Barrow and Dinwiddie were moved to their new quarters in central Beijing on 26 August, as Macartney had requested.[2]: 151–152 

Crossing the Great Wall

[edit]
The Great Wall at Gubeikou
One of Lieutenant Parish's technical drawings of the Great Wall of China

Having left behind the planetarium and other gifts at the Old Summer Palace, about seventy members of the mission, among them forty soldiers, departed Beijing on 2 September, heading north towards Jehol, where the Qianlong Emperor awaited.[2]: 179–182  The mission proceeded alongside a road reserved for the Emperor alone, stopping each night at one of the lodges prepared for the emperor's use along the way. Guard posts punctuated the route at roughly five mile intervals, and Macartney observed a large number of troops working to repair the road in preparation for the Emperor's return to Beijing later in the year.[23]

The group crossed the Great Wall of China at Gubeikou, where they were greeted by ceremonial gunfire and several companies of troops from the Eight Banners of the Qing military. William Alexander, who stayed behind in Beijing, expressed regret at being unable to see the Wall for himself. Under Macartney's orders, Lieutenant Henry William Parish of the Royal Artillery made a survey of the Great Wall's fortifications with his men, thereby contributing to the intelligence-gathering aspect of the mission, though at the expense of arousing suspicion among their Chinese hosts. Some of the men, meanwhile, took bricks from the Wall as souvenirs.[2]: 183–185  Past the Great Wall, the terrain became more mountainous and difficult for the men's horses to traverse, slowing their progress. The entourage arrived at the outskirts of Chengde on 8 September.[2]: 187–190 

Meeting with Qianlong

[edit]
The Qianlong Emperor
The Approach of the Emperor of China to His Tent in Tartary to Receive the British Ambassador, by William Alexander (1793)

It was the practice of the Manchu emperors of the Qing dynasty to lead a ritual hunting expedition north of the Great Wall each autumn. During the reign of Qianlong's grandfather the Kangxi Emperor, an imperial city was built near the hunting grounds at Chengde to house the emperor and his entourage while he was away from Beijing.[24] It was at Chengde that Qing emperors often greeted foreign dignitaries, particularly Inner Asians who represented vassal states.[25] Here too, Macartney's embassy was to meet Qianlong on the occasion of the Emperor's birthday. Qianlong called off the hunt to return to Chengde for the ceremonies, as he had done previously in 1754 and 1780 for the visits of Amursana and the Sixth Panchen Lama, respectively (the latter on the occasion of Qianlong's 70th birthday).[26]

The kowtow issue

[edit]

Even before Macartney's departure from Britain, he and Dundas had anticipated that there might be some disagreement with the Chinese side on the details of the ceremonies and rituals to be performed at the meeting between Macartney and the emperor of China. Dundas had instructed Macartney to accept "all ceremonials of the Court which may not commit the honour of your Sovereign or lessen your own dignity", and not to let any "trifling punctilio" get in the way of the mission.[2]: 9–10 [27] The ritual of the kowtow, which requires an individual to kneel with both knees on the ground and bow so as to touch their forehead to the ground, presented a particular dilemma. The kowtow was required not only when meeting the emperor, but also when receiving imperial edicts from his messengers. While Portuguese and Dutch merchants in Canton (now Guangzhou) had acquiesced to the ritual, British subjects, who regarded the act as slavish and humiliating,[28] generally avoided kowtowing to the emperor's edicts by leaving the room when such messages were received.[2]: 43–44 

For Macartney, one sticking point was the relative status of the two sovereigns, George III and Qianlong. Macartney believed that Britain was now the most powerful nation on Earth.[2]: 13  However, as a diplomat, he had decided that whatever ceremony he participated in must present the two monarchs as equals, and thus he would only show Qianlong the same level of respect he would show his own king (he saw the Kowtow as too excessive). Throughout his meetings with Chinese officials, Macartney was repeatedly urged to perform the kowtow during his audience with the emperor. In one message to legate Zhengrui and viceroy Liang Kentang during Macartney's stay in Tianjin, Heshen had instructed the two men to inform Britain's representative that he would be regarded as a "boor" and a "laughingstock" if he did not perform the ritual when the time came.[2]: 102  Officials also told Macartney in private that the kowtow was just a "mere exterior and unmeaning ceremony" and he should perform it. Nevertheless, Macartney submitted to Zhengrui a written proposal that would satisfy his requirement of equal status: whatever ceremony he performed, a Chinese official of equal rank would do the same before a portrait of George III.[2]: 169–170  He believed it demeaning that Britain would have to go through the same rituals (and be seen as equal to) Chinese vassal states like Korea.[29]

Zhengrui objected to this proposal, on the grounds that this notion of reciprocal equality was incompatible with the Chinese view of the emperor as the Son of Heaven, who had no equal. According to such a view, the British embassy was regarded officially as a tribute mission like any other. Despite Macartney and Staunton's insistence that the items the embassy brought were "gifts", Chinese officials saw them as "tribute" items.[2]: 138–141  Macartney himself was to be seen as only a "conveyor of tribute", not a "legate of the sovereign" as he had earlier referred to himself which annoyed the emperor.[2]: 87–89 

Qianlong's compromise on the issue, stated in an edict dated 8 September (the day of the embassy's arrival in Chengde), was that Macartney could perform a single prostration in lieu of the nine typically called for.[2]: 192–197  However, Staunton submitted Macartney's proposal to Heshen the day after their arrival, reiterating the British stance on the issue. With no agreement in sight and the ceremony only days away, Qianlong grew increasingly impatient, and considered scrapping the meeting altogether.[2]: 192–197  Finally, it was agreed that Macartney would genuflect before the Emperor as he would before his own sovereign, touching one knee to the ground, although without the usual hand kissing, as it was not customary for anyone to kiss the emperor's hand. He would do this in addition to the single prostration.[2]: 201–202 

The ceremony

[edit]

The meeting with the Qianlong Emperor took place on 14 September. The British set off, with Macartney in a palanquin, from their residence at 3 AM in the darkness, arriving at the imperial encampment at 4 AM. Macartney was accompanied by servants, musicians, and other representatives. The ceremony was to be held in the imperial tent, a large yellow yurt which contained the Emperor's throne at the center of a raised platform. Several thousand attendees were present, including other foreign visitors (from Burma and from Muslim tribes in near the Caspian Sea), viceroy Liang Kentang and the Emperor's son, the future Jiaqing Emperor. The Emperor arrived at 7, presiding as khan over the proceedings. Macartney entered the tent along with George and Thomas Staunton, and their Chinese interpreter. The others waited outside.[2]: 216–221 

Macartney stepped up to the platform first, kneeling once, exchanging gifts with Qianlong and presenting King George III's letter. King George's letter had been translated into Chinese by European missionaries in China. They had made the letter more respectful towards the Emperor by removing references to Christianity and turning the letter into Honorific form (so the word "emperor" is written larger).[30] He was followed by George Staunton, and finally Thomas Staunton. As Thomas had studied the Chinese language, the Emperor beckoned him to speak a few words (Thomas said in his diary that he thanked the Emperor for the gifts). The British were followed by other envoys, about whom little is written. A banquet was then held to conclude the day's events. The British were seated on the Emperor's left, in the most prestigious position.[2]: 225–230 

Outcome

[edit]
The Reception, a cartoon by James Gillray of the reception that he expected Lord Macartney to get from the Qianlong Emperor

Our Celestial Empire possesses all things in prolific abundance and lacks no product within its borders. There is therefore no need to import the manufactures of outside barbarians in exchange for our own produce.

— Qianlong Emperor, Second Edict to King George III of Great Britain, 1792[31]

Despite this dismissal, Qianlong had noted the military superiority implied by several gifts: six brass cannon, a flintlock with an advanced firing mechanism and a model of HMS Royal Sovereign. The gifts that might really have shifted Chinese perceptions were steel and steam: locomotives and steel rails would dramatically increase the productivity of Britain in a few years time. The flexibility of steel swords was noted by courtiers, but the model steam engine was not unpacked.[32] Instead it was given to Dinwiddie to show off in India. China would not acquire advanced steel production until several decades into Mao Zedong's premiership in the People's Republic of China period.

Chinese soldier, by William Alexander

Although ultimately unsuccessful in its primary objectives, the circumstances surrounding the mission provided ample opportunity for both British and Chinese parties to feel totally satisfied about the compromises and concessions they had made. The failure of the primary objectives was not due to Macartney's refusal to kowtow in the presence of the Emperor, as is sometimes believed. It was also not a result of the Chinese reliance on tradition in dictating foreign policy, but rather a result of competing world views which were uncomprehending and to some extent incompatible. After the conclusion of the embassy, Qianlong sent a letter to King George III, explaining in greater depth the reasons for his refusal to grant the several requests presented to the Chinese emperor by Macartney. The requests had included a call for the relaxation of the restrictions on trade between Britain and China, the acquisition by Britain of "a small unfortified island near Chusan for the residence of British traders, storage of goods, and outfitting of ships"; and the establishment of a permanent British embassy in Beijing. However, Qianlong's letter's continuing reference to all Europeans as "barbarians", his assumption of all nations of the earth as being subordinate to China, and his final words commanding King George III to "...Tremblingly obey and show no negligence!"[31] used the standard imperial sign off as if the king were a Chinese subject.

Historians both in China and abroad long presented the failure of the mission to achieve its goals as a symbol of China's refusal to change and inability to modernize. They explain the refusal first on the fact that interaction with foreign kingdoms was limited to neighbouring tributary states. Furthermore, the worldviews on the two sides were incompatible, China holding entrenched beliefs that China was the "central kingdom". However, after the publication in the 1990s of a fuller range of archival documents concerning the visit, these claims have been challenged. One historian characterized the Emperor and his court as "clearly clever and competent political operators", and concluded that they acted within the formal Qing claims to universal rule; they reacted prudently to reports of British expansion in India by placating the British with unspecified promises in order to avoid military conflicts and loss of trade.[33] Qianlong also said that he could have revoked Britain's existing privileges due to the King's behavior, but he would not. He said he felt sympathy for England because it is remote and ignorant of the great Chinese civilization. This angered the King and the public in England.[34]

Critics in England said the problem with the embassy was that it "acknowledged the inferiority of its country [England]". Macartney himself became ridiculed, with caricatures showing him debasing himself before the Emperor. Macartney became more hostile and negative towards China in his later writings, saying China's power was an illusion and that Qing China would decline and eventually collapse. Macartney predicted that China might collapse within his lifetime.[35]

The Macartney Embassy is historically significant for many reasons, most of them visible only in retrospect. While to a modern sensibility it marked a missed opportunity by both sides to explore and understand each other's cultures, customs, diplomatic styles, and ambitions, it also prefigured increasing British pressure on China to accommodate its expanding trading and imperial network. The mutual lack of knowledge and understanding on both sides would continue to plague the Qing dynasty as it encountered increasing foreign pressure and internal unrest during the 19th century.

Although the Macartney Embassy returned to London without obtaining any concession from China, the mission could be termed a success in that it brought back detailed observations of a great empire. Macartney predicted that Indo-British forces could destroy the Chinese in all frontiers in a military conflict, but warned that such an offensive would be against the interests of British trade. He also rightly observed that the empire's internal stability was weak, and there could be a breaking up of the power of China, throwing the international commerce into confusion.[36] The painter William Alexander accompanied the embassy, and published numerous engravings based on his watercolours. Sir George Staunton was charged with producing the official account of the expedition after their return. This multi-volume work was taken chiefly from the papers of Lord Macartney and from the papers of Sir Erasmus Gower, who was Commander of the expedition. Sir Joseph Banks was responsible for selecting and arranging engraving of the illustrations in this official record.[37]

Members

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The Macartney Embassy comprised about a hundred people, including:

See also

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Notes

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References

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Further reading

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The Macartney Embassy was the first official British diplomatic mission to the Qing Empire in China, dispatched in 1793 by King George III and led by George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney, to negotiate with the Qianlong Emperor for expanded trade access, the opening of additional ports beyond Canton, and the establishment of a permanent British diplomatic presence in Beijing.[1][2][3] The mission's objectives stemmed from British frustrations with the restrictive Canton trading system, which limited foreign merchants to seasonal operations under the supervision of monopolistic Chinese guilds, and sought to align diplomatic relations with emerging European norms of reciprocity rather than the Qing tributary framework.[2][3] Accompanied by a retinue of over 200 personnel, including scientists, artists, and soldiers, as well as elaborate gifts such as scientific instruments, clocks, and artillery pieces intended to demonstrate British technological prowess, the embassy departed from Portsmouth in September 1792 and reached Tianjin in June 1793 after a arduous voyage around the Cape of Good Hope.[1][3] Upon arrival, the delegation faced immediate cultural frictions, as Qing officials classified the mission as a tributary envoy bearing homage rather than an equal diplomatic partner, requiring ritual obeisance including the kowtow—a full prostration three times—which Macartney refused, opting instead for a one-knee kneel in deference to British customs of equality among sovereigns.[1][2] The embassy proceeded overland to the emperor's summer palace at Rehe (present-day Chengde), where Macartney presented the gifts and requests in audiences on September 14 and 21, 1793, but Qianlong, viewing China as self-sufficient and the world's civilized center under the Mandate of Heaven, dismissed the proposals as unnecessary and the gifts as curiosities unfit for imperial needs.[1][3] The mission concluded without concessions, returning to Britain in 1794, underscoring a profound clash between Enlightenment-era British commercial rationalism and the Qing's ritualistic, hierarchical worldview rooted in Confucian order, which prioritized symbolic submission over mutual economic benefit.[2] Though a diplomatic failure, the embassy yielded detailed observations of Chinese society, military, and governance through journals and sketches, informing future British policy while exposing the Qing court's underestimation of Western capabilities.[1][3]

Background and Motivations

British Economic and Trade Imbalances

In the late 18th century, Britain's trade with China under the East India Company's monopoly exhibited a marked imbalance, with imports vastly outpacing exports due to burgeoning domestic demand for Chinese commodities, especially tea. Annual tea sales by the Company in Britain rose steadily from 5,858,614 pounds in 1780 to 7,789,314 pounds in 1793, reflecting growing consumption amid the Canton System's constraints that funneled all foreign commerce through the port of Canton via the Cohong guild of merchants.[4] Other imports included silk, porcelain, rhubarb, and spices, while British offerings—such as woolens, broadcloths, clocks, telescopes, and base metals—met with scant demand in a Chinese economy largely self-sufficient and oriented toward silver as currency.[5] This asymmetry resulted in a chronic deficit financed primarily through silver bullion shipments to China, constituting up to 90 percent of the value conveyed to Canton until the mid-18th century and persisting thereafter as exports failed to offset imports.[6] Throughout the century, Britain endured a large and escalating trade deficit with China, covered by silver acquired from European and American sources, which depleted national reserves and raised alarms over long-term economic viability.[5] Chinese insistence on silver payments, rather than barter or British manufactures, underscored the Qing empire's favorable position, where foreign goods offered little novelty or utility compared to domestic production.[7] The accumulating bullion drain, coupled with restrictions under the Canton System—seasonal trade windows, limited ship access, and guild monopolies—prompted British policymakers to seek remedies, including nascent opium exports from India, though these remained marginal before 1800 and did little to immediately reverse the flow.[5] By 1793, the unsustainable export of silver to fund tea and luxury imports had crystallized as a key impetus for diplomatic intervention, highlighting the need for expanded market access to foster reciprocal trade in British industrial products.[8]

Diplomatic Objectives

The Macartney Embassy, dispatched from Britain in September 1792 and arriving in China in June 1793, aimed primarily to address the persistent British trade deficit with the Qing Empire, driven by surging demand for Chinese tea, silk, and porcelain that exceeded exports of British woolens, metals, and manufactured goods, resulting in substantial silver outflows estimated at over £1 million annually by the late 1780s.[8] The mission's instructions, issued by the British government under Home Secretary Henry Dundas and coordinated with the East India Company, sought to negotiate expanded commercial access to mitigate these imbalances without resorting to coercion.[9] Key demands included opening additional ports beyond Canton—specifically Zhoushan, Ningbo, and Tianjin—to enable direct British shipping and trade with interior markets, bypassing the restrictive Canton system and the monopolistic Cohong guild that enforced high fees and limited interactions.[10] A central diplomatic objective was to establish formal, reciprocal relations by securing permission for a permanent British ambassador or resident in Beijing, allowing ongoing oversight of trade and direct communication with the Qianlong Emperor's court, rather than relying on intermittent, tribute-like missions.[3] This would facilitate requests for equitable tariffs, reduced Cohong exactions, and year-round merchant residences outside Canton, potentially including a dedicated offshore island as a secure depot for goods and repairs of British vessels.[2] The embassy also carried broader exploratory mandates to assess potential trade with other East Asian states en route, though China remained the focal point.[9] These objectives reflected Britain's post-American Revolutionary push for global commercial expansion, informed by East India Company reports on Qing restrictions, yet they presupposed a mutual recognition of sovereign equality that clashed with the Qing tributary worldview.[1] Macartney's formal letter from George III, presented in a gold box, framed the requests as proposals for mutual benefit during the emperor's birthday celebrations in 1793, emphasizing scientific and mechanical gifts as tokens of goodwill rather than tribute.[3]

Preparations in Britain

Appointment of Macartney

In 1792, King George III appointed George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney, as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the Qianlong Emperor of China, tasking him with leading the first official British diplomatic mission to the Qing court.[11] The decision followed advocacy from British merchants and the East India Company for alleviating trade restrictions confined to the port of Canton, prompting the government to seek expanded commercial access and diplomatic relations.[8] Henry Dundas, President of the Board of Control for the Affairs of India and overseer of East India Company matters, played a central role in orchestrating the embassy's formation.[11] Macartney's selection stemmed from his proven expertise in diplomacy and colonial governance, positioning him as an ideal representative for negotiations with the Chinese court.[2] His longstanding friendship with Dundas further facilitated his appointment, providing trust in handling the mission's delicate objectives amid Britain's growing imperial interests in Asia.[11] Prior roles, including governorships in Grenada and Madras as well as service as envoy to Russia, equipped Macartney with insights into managing distant administrations and foreign courts, essential for challenging the Qing's tributary system.[1] The embassy, though nominally a royal initiative, received financial and logistical support from the East India Company, reflecting intertwined commercial and state imperatives.[8]

Selection of Gifts and Personnel

The personnel for the Macartney Embassy were chosen to combine diplomatic expertise, linguistic capabilities, scientific knowledge, and artistic skills, reflecting the mission's dual aims of negotiation and observation. The overland delegation consisted of approximately 95 members, while the total expedition, including naval crew, exceeded 600 individuals.[12] [13] Key selections emphasized specialists to demonstrate British innovations and document the journey. George Macartney, appointed ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, was selected for his proven diplomatic record, including service as Governor of Madras (1781–1785) and Chief Secretary for Ireland, along with prior exposure to Chinese customs through historical texts like Du Halde's Description of the Empire of China.[12] His deputy, Sir George Leonard Staunton, a Fellow of the Royal Society with backgrounds in medicine and law, was chosen as commissioner due to his intellectual acumen and prior collaboration with Macartney in Grenada.[12] Staunton's son, 13-year-old George Thomas Staunton, served as page and improvised interpreter after self-studying Chinese during the voyage, compensating for the limitations of initial linguists.[12] Linguistic support initially relied on three Chinese Catholic converts from the College of the Propaganda Fide in Naples—Fathers An, Zhou (known as Paulus), and Li Zibiao (Mr. Plumb)—who communicated via Latin but faced potential dangers upon re-entering China.[12] Technical roles included James Dinwiddie as astronomer and machinist to operate scientific apparatus, watchmakers and instrument makers to maintain gifts, and artists such as William Alexander as draughtsman to produce over 1,000 sketches and engravings of Chinese scenes.[3] Other members encompassed botanists for natural history observations, a military band for ceremonial purposes, and servants, ensuring comprehensive coverage of the mission's exploratory and representational needs.[12] The gifts, totaling over 590 items categorized into 19 groups and costing £15,610, were curated by the East India Company to exemplify British industrial and scientific superiority, with the intent to captivate the Qianlong Emperor and stimulate commercial reciprocity.[14] Selections drew from manufacturers across Britain, incorporating advice from Chinese informants to align with imperial tastes while prioritizing mechanical wonders over mere luxuries.[14] Prominent among scientific offerings were a planetarium, Herschel telescope, orreries, globes, barometers, vacuum pumps, and large focusing mirrors, designed to convey advancements in astronomy and physics.[3] [14] Military demonstrations featured a scale model of the battleship Monarch, muskets, pistols, a steel sword, copper cannons, and howitzers.[14] Manufactured goods included Wedgwood pottery, chandeliers, clocks, watches, carriages, saddles, vases, woolen and cotton textiles, Birmingham brassware, Bolton cloths, Irish linens, and exotic materials like amber, coral, and ivory.[3] Artistic contributions comprised paintings and prints depicting British royalty, urban landscapes, battles, and equestrian events.[14] These items, transported in around 600 crates, underscored Britain's emphasis on utility and ingenuity in diplomacy.[3]

The Voyage to China

Departure and Sea Journey

The Macartney Embassy departed Portsmouth, England, on September 26, 1792, aboard a squadron of three vessels: the 64-gun Royal Navy warship HMS Lion, commanded by Captain Sir Erasmus Gower and carrying Lord Macartney along with key personnel and some gifts; the East Indiaman Hindostan, which transported the majority of the 600 scientific, mechanical, and artistic presents intended for the Qianlong Emperor; and the tender Jackall, a small armed vessel for support duties.[8][12] The expedition comprised approximately 400 members, including diplomats, scientists, artists, and seamen, with the naval component ensuring protection against potential threats during the long voyage.[13] The fleet followed a standard southern route for East Indies voyages, sailing past Madeira in the Atlantic before reaching Brazil by November 30, 1792, where brief stops allowed for provisioning and repairs amid favorable trade winds.[12] Rounding the Cape of Good Hope in January 1793 tested the squadron's resilience against stormy weather typical of the region, though no major losses were recorded at this stage; the convoy then proceeded eastward across the Indian Ocean, stopping at Batavia (modern Jakarta) in the Dutch East Indies around April 1793 to recruit additional crew and acquire the auxiliary ship Clarence for enhanced transport capacity.[8] From Batavia, the vessels navigated the Strait of Malacca, evading monsoon delays, to reach the Chinese coast near Zhoushan Island by early June 1793, completing the sea leg in roughly nine months without significant combat or structural incidents but with routine challenges from scurvy prevention and supply management.[13][12] Throughout the journey, scientific observations were prioritized, with expedition naturalists like George Staunton documenting marine life, weather patterns, and navigational data to support Britain's imperial knowledge-gathering efforts, though disease claimed some lives among the crew as was common in extended wooden-ship voyages of the era.[8] The arrival at Zhoushan marked the transition from maritime to overland travel, as Chinese authorities mandated transferring personnel and select gifts to junks for the approach to Tianjin.[13]

Arrival at Zhoushan and Initial Contacts

The British expedition, comprising the warships HMS Lion and HMS Clarence, the East Indiaman Hindostan, and several smaller vessels, reached the Zhoushan Islands off the coast of Zhejiang province on July 3, 1793, after departing Macau on June 23.[15] The squadron anchored in the secure deep-water harbor of the archipelago, selected for its strategic position near Ningbo and suitability for accommodating large European ships unfamiliar with the intricate coastal navigation northward toward the Bohai Gulf.[16] This stopover was necessary to obtain local pilots, as British hydrographic knowledge of China's northern seaboard was limited, relying on outdated Portuguese charts and avoiding risks from shoals and typhoons.[17] Local Qing officials from Ningbo, including mandarins responsible for coastal defense, promptly boarded the Lion to conduct initial inspections and inquiries.[15] They expressed astonishment at the dimensions of the British vessels—HMS Lion, a 64-gun third-rate ship displacing over 1,700 tons—and the visible armament, which included heavy cannon far surpassing typical tribute ships. The officials, adhering to protocol, demanded details on the embassy's credentials, entourage size (approximately 700 personnel, including servants and artisans), and intent, while prohibiting unauthorized landings to prevent disruptions in the region.[18] Macartney, through interpreters like George Thomas Staunton, conveyed the mission's diplomatic nature as a complimentary visit from King George III to Emperor Qianlong on the occasion of his eightieth birthday, emphasizing peaceful trade expansion rather than tribute.[17] In response to British requests, the officials supplied experienced pilots familiar with the coastal routes to Tianjin, enabling safe passage while relaying reports to Beijing via courier.[15] These early interactions remained formal and restrained, with Chinese authorities enforcing quarantine measures and restricting interactions to official channels, reflecting Qing wariness of unannounced foreign arrivals outside established Canton procedures. No immediate hostilities arose, but the presence of armed ships prompted heightened vigilance, including surveillance vessels shadowing the squadron.[16] By mid-July, imperial instructions arrived, dispatching a commissioner named Yu-stepan (or similar transliteration in accounts) to escort the embassy northward, marking the transition from local to court-level engagement.[15]

Travel Within China and Arrival in Beijing

Inland Journey and Observations

The embassy's ships anchored off Miaotau in Shandong Province on 20 July 1793, before proceeding to the shallow waters near Taku at the mouth of the Pei Ho River.[18] On 5 August 1793, the delegation transferred to Chinese junks for coastal travel along the province of Petcheli, reaching Taku where extensive salt production operations were observed, involving hundreds of junks laden with the commodity.[18] From there, the party boarded river barges towed by haulers to navigate upstream, a method that highlighted the reliance on manual labor for inland transport amid challenging winds and currents.[18] The journey up the Pei Ho revealed flat, intensively cultivated landscapes supporting rice and other crops, interspersed with dense clusters of villages where inhabitants gathered in curiosity to view the foreign procession.[18] Arriving at Tiensing (Tianjin) on 11 August 1793, the embassy received a formal welcome from the local governor, including provisions and a theatrical performance, underscoring the coordinated imperial oversight of their movements.[18] Continuing by barge, they passed through additional waterways, noting the prevalence of military escorts and salutes from cannon along the route, which restricted unguided interactions with locals.[18] By 16 August 1793, the mission reached Tongschu (Tongzhou), accommodated in temple quarters, before commencing the final overland leg on 21 August via a paved road, covering distances of approximately 15 to 26 kilometers daily in carriages.[18] Observations during this phase emphasized the bustling rural economy, with evidence of widespread agriculture, fishing practices including trained cormorants, and occasional sights of coffins along banks signaling cultural attitudes toward death and burial.[18] The embassy entered Beijing on 21 August 1793, greeted by high city walls, ornate gates, and crowded suburbs teeming with merchants and laborers, providing initial impressions of urban density and architectural grandeur under imperial control.[18] Throughout, the delegation remarked on the empire's vast population and infrastructural investments in canals and rivers, though constrained access limited deeper empirical assessments of social conditions.[18]

Crossing the Great Wall and Reception

Following their arrival near Beijing on 21 August 1793, the embassy departed northward on 2 September toward the Qianlong Emperor's retreat at Chengde, crossing the Great Wall at Gubeikou Pass shortly thereafter.[8][19] Gubeikou, a strategically vital Ming-era fortification linking defensive sections amid rugged terrain, impressed embassy members with its scale and construction, including solid brick walls up to 25 feet high and watchtowers spaced at intervals.[20][21] Upon entering through the pass, the British were formally received with honors befitting a tributary mission, including salvos from artillery pieces and a review by several companies of Eight Banner troops, the elite Manchu forces loyal to the Qing dynasty.[19] This ceremony underscored the Chinese court's protocol for foreign delegations, treating the embassy as participants in the imperial tributary system rather than equals.[22] The crossing marked the transition from Chinese heartland provinces into the Emperor's Manchurian hunting grounds, known as Tartary, characterized by barren mountains and sparse vegetation that contrasted sharply with southern China's fertility.[23] Embassy artists, such as William Alexander, documented the Wall's architecture and the surrounding landscape, contributing detailed sketches that later informed European perceptions of Chinese defensive capabilities.[21] These observations highlighted the Wall's role not merely as a barrier but as an integrated system of passes, signals, and garrisons, though Macartney noted its impracticality against modern artillery in private reflections.[22] The reception at Gubeikou thus served as the initial imperial welcome, preceding the more elaborate audiences at Chengde, while reinforcing the cultural and diplomatic gulf between the missions' expectations and Qing ceremonial norms.[20]

Diplomatic Proceedings

The Kowtow Controversy

The kowtow, a ritual of three kneelings each followed by three forehead knockings on the ground (san gui jiu kou), represented hierarchical submission within the Qing empire's tributary framework, required of all foreign envoys presenting tribute to the emperor. Lord Macartney, appointed to lead the embassy in 1792, received explicit instructions from Henry Dundas, President of the Board of Control for India Affairs, to eschew any ceremony implying Britain's subordination beyond equivalents performed before King George III, such as genuflection or hand-kissing. Macartney viewed full prostration as incompatible with British notions of sovereign equality, arguing it would signal vassalage and undermine the mission's diplomatic parity.[15][24] Upon the embassy's arrival in Beijing on September 8, 1793, after an overland journey from Tianjin, Chinese court officials, led by figures like the Vice President of the Board of Ceremonies, insisted on strict adherence to protocol for the formal audience, framing the embassy as a tributary bearing gifts from a distant king. Negotiations over ritual extended for over three months, with Macartney proposing compromises like a single-knee bend or reciprocal ceremony, while some Chinese intermediaries privately suggested flexibility to avoid impasse, though formal demands persisted. These discussions highlighted a fundamental divergence: British emphasis on mutual respect versus Qing insistence on ritual as affirmation of imperial centrality, with officials warning that deviation could preclude imperial sight.[12][1] The issue culminated at the audience on January 14, 1794, at the Yuanming Yuan imperial gardens near Beijing, where Macartney and select suite members approached the throne. Macartney executed a one-knee genuflection, doffed his hat, and extended arms in salute, without prostration or head-knocking, as detailed in George Staunton's embassy account compiled from participant journals. Chinese escorts and records subsequently asserted the rite had been performed adequately to preserve face, claiming auditory confirmation of forehead impacts, though British narratives, including Staunton's, categorically denied any such act, portraying it as a modified European courtesy.[25][12][26] Historians note the controversy amplified perceptions of cultural incompatibility but was not the embassy's sole failure point; Qing archival consensus, per contemporary court deliberations, anticipated ritual accommodation for the "ocean barbarians" yet prioritized substantive rejection of trade expansions over protocol adherence. British post-mission accounts, however, elevated the kowtow as emblematic of Qing intransigence, shaping later narratives despite evidence that Qianlong's worldview—viewing Britain as peripheral supplier rather than equal—drove the outcome.[27][28]

Audience with Qianlong Emperor

The first audience between Lord Macartney and the Qianlong Emperor occurred on September 14, 1793, at the emperor's summer retreat in Jehol (modern Chengde, historically Rehe), where the embassy had been directed after arriving in Beijing.[11] The meeting took place within a grand imperial tent erected amid a vast encampment of Mongolian-style yurts housing the court, which had relocated northward for seasonal rituals and to escape Beijing's summer heat.[2] Macartney, accompanied by a small entourage including interpreter George Thomas Staunton, was escorted through elaborate ceremonies involving ranks of Manchu, Mongol, and Han officials, with the emperor observing the procession from an elevated vantage before entering the tent.[11] During the audience, Macartney presented the credentials in the form of a letter from King George III, kneeling on one knee as a compromise to the demanded prostration, while the emperor, seated on a raised dais at age 82, received the document through intermediaries without direct verbal exchange on substantive matters.[11] Qianlong, described in contemporary accounts as maintaining a composed and authoritative demeanor despite his advanced age, acknowledged the tribute-bearing nature of the mission but deferred discussions of trade or diplomatic expansion, framing the encounter within traditional tributary protocols.[10] The ceremony concluded with the bestowal of imperial gifts to the British party, including silk fabrics, porcelain, and furs, signaling superficial favor but no policy concessions.[11] A second audience followed shortly thereafter at the same venue, involving a banquet and further ceremonial interactions, where Macartney again performed the modified obeisance and observed the court's opulent displays, including theatrical performances arranged in honor of the visitors.[29] These encounters highlighted the Qing court's emphasis on ritual hierarchy over negotiation, with Qianlong viewing the British as distant vassals rather than equals capable of altering established trade restrictions confined to Canton.[2] Following the meetings, the embassy was instructed to return to Beijing, where the emperor later arrived to oversee additional formalities at the Yuanming Yuan gardens, though no further direct audiences with Qianlong occurred.[11] Accounts from the British side, such as those compiled by George Leonard Staunton, noted the emperor's gracious hospitality juxtaposed against an underlying indifference to the mission's objectives.[8]

Presentation of Requests

On 14 September 1793, during the audience at the emperor's summer retreat in Chengde (Rehe), Lord Macartney formally presented the letter of credence from King George III to the Qianlong Emperor, along with a detailed memorial outlining Britain's diplomatic and commercial objectives.[10][11] The document emphasized mutual benefits from expanded trade, noting Britain's export of over 20 million pounds of tea annually from China while seeking reciprocal markets for British woolens, cottons, and other goods.[11] It requested protections for British merchants under their own jurisdiction to avoid subjection to Chinese laws, which Macartney's instructions from Henry Dundas described as potentially harsh and unfamiliar.[11] The core requests included establishing a permanent British diplomatic presence in Beijing to facilitate ongoing relations, ceding a small offshore island such as Zhoushan as a secure trading depot and warehouse near Canton to alleviate logistical burdens from the restricted Canton system, and opening additional northern ports like Ningbo, Zhoushan, and Tianjin to British vessels for direct trade.[10][30] Further provisions sought reduction or equalization of import duties on British goods to address the trade imbalance, abolition of the Cohong guild's monopoly to allow independent British mercantile operations, and permission for a repository in Beijing to store and sell British products.[10][30] To press these points amid delays in imperial response, Macartney submitted a memorandum on 3 October 1793 to Heshen, the Grand Secretary handling the embassy, enumerating six specific demands: (1) access for British merchants to China's interior markets; (2) cession of Zhoushan as a permanent trading base; (3) establishment of a British warehouse in Canton independent of local monopolies; (4) dispatch of a resident British ambassador to Beijing; (5) equalization of tariffs to favor British exports; and (6) liberty for British missionaries to propagate Christianity.[30][31] These were framed as practical adjustments to existing tributary practices rather than impositions, drawing on Macartney's observations of China's self-sufficiency and the embassy's scientific gifts as tokens of goodwill.[11] However, Chinese intermediaries translated and conveyed them within the framework of tributary submission, which the British rejected, leading to no immediate concessions.[10]

Chinese Imperial Perspective

Qianlong's Conception of Tributary Relations

The Qianlong Emperor's framework for foreign relations adhered to the Confucian-inspired tributary system, a hierarchical order centered on China as the cultural and moral apex, where peripheral states dispatched envoys to present tribute, perform the kowtow ritual, and receive imperial dispensation in exchange.[10] This system, managed through institutions like the Qing's Lifan Yuan for outer dependencies and the Board of Rites for inner Asian and maritime tributaries, emphasized ritual deference to the emperor as Son of Heaven, symbolizing acknowledgment of China's universal sovereignty rather than reciprocal equality.[32] Qianlong viewed such missions as opportunities to extend benevolent favor, including regulated trade, while upholding cosmic harmony and dynastic precedents that precluded negotiations altering China's self-perceived superiority.[33] In interpreting the Macartney Embassy's arrival in Beijing on September 14, 1793, Qianlong classified it as a standard tributary venture, with British gifts construed as homage rather than commodities for barter, driven by the envoy's "humble desire" to access Chinese civilizing influence.[10] He asserted China's economic autarky, stating "Our Celestial Empire possesses all things in prolific abundance and lacks no product within its own borders," thereby dismissing the need for British manufactures and framing permitted exports like tea, rhubarb, and porcelain as charitable provisions for foreign necessities under strict Canton oversight by Cohong merchants.[33] This perspective rejected entreaties for permanent diplomatic residency, additional ports such as Ningbo or Zhoushan, or relaxed trade protocols, as they contravened ancestral usages and risked internal disorder by elevating "barbarian" interlopers.[10] Qianlong's edicts post-audience, issued in late September 1793, reiterated that European intercourse had long been indulged at Canton as an act of imperial grace, not entitlement, and ordered the embassy's expeditious return laden with reciprocal gifts to affirm the tributary dynamic without concessions.[33] Underlying this was a causal realism in governance: foreign policy served to preserve domestic stability and ritual propriety, with the emperor's discerning oversight ensuring that tributary exchanges reinforced rather than challenged the Middle Kingdom's preeminence, even as actual Qing trade practices incorporated pragmatic elements like silver inflows for balance.[10] Such convictions, rooted in millennia of imperial ideology, precluded recognition of Britain as a peer power capable of dictating terms.[32]

Court Reactions and Internal Deliberations

Qing court officials submitted memorials detailing the British gifts upon the embassy's arrival in Tianjin on June 26, 1793, prompting Qianlong to comment on their mechanical ingenuity while emphasizing China's self-sufficiency and lack of need for foreign novelties.[34] These items, including a planetarium and orrery, were examined and partially imitated by imperial workshops, reflecting official curiosity but no recognition of technological superiority that warranted policy changes.[35] The emperor's annotations in the memorials underscored a paternalistic view of the British as distant tributaries offering tribute, aligning with longstanding Sinocentric protocol rather than innovative diplomacy.[34] Internal deliberations within the Grand Council focused on the embassy's refusal to perform the full kowtow during audiences, with ministers debating its implications for imperial dignity but ultimately advising tolerance to maintain ceremonial harmony during Qianlong's 60th reign anniversary celebrations in 1793.[36] Influential advisor Heshen, tasked with overseeing the mission's logistics and communications, reportedly influenced proceedings by prioritizing ritual adherence and limiting substantive engagement on trade demands.[10] The council viewed Macartney's requests for a permanent ambassador, additional ports, and relaxed Canton restrictions as incompatible with the tributary system, which presupposed China's centrality and forbade reciprocal equality.[2] Qianlong's personal oversight shaped the consensus, as he rejected notions of British equivalence in edicts prepared post-audience, citing ample existing trade provisions and potential disruptions to domestic order from expanded foreign presence.[10] Memorials from viceroys and interpreters highlighted suspicions of ulterior motives, such as espionage via scientific instruments, though these were downplayed in favor of ritualistic framing over geopolitical threat assessment.[30] By late September 1793, following the Chengde audiences, deliberations culminated in a unified stance affirming the status quo, with no factional push for concessions amid perceptions of Qing prosperity and British deference.[16]

Outcomes and Return

Qianlong's Edict of Rejection

In September 1793, shortly after the British embassy's audience with the Qianlong Emperor at Rehe (modern Chengde), the emperor issued two edicts formally rejecting the requests presented by Lord Macartney on behalf of King George III. These edicts, conveyed through imperial ministers, addressed the core demands for expanded trade access, a permanent diplomatic presence, and missionary freedoms, framing them as incompatible with Qing dynastic precedents and the empire's self-perceived completeness. The first edict, directed to George III, acknowledged the embassy's tribute-bearing intent while dismissing proposals for a resident envoy, citing the impossibility of integrating foreign representatives without violating established protocols for tributary states.[10] The edicts emphasized the Qing empire's vast resources and administrative sufficiency, asserting that "Our Celestial Empire possesses all things in prolific abundance and lacks no product within its borders," rendering additional foreign manufactures unnecessary. Qianlong rejected requests to open ports like Ningpo, Zhoushan, and Tianjin for direct trade, insisting that commerce remain confined to Canton (Guangzhou) via the existing hong merchant system, which had regulated European interactions for over a century. Similarly, demands for a dedicated island or warehouse for British storage and residence were denied, as they would disrupt controlled tributary exchanges and invite unregulated foreign influence.[10][33] Further, the edicts prohibited missionary activities beyond Canton, upholding Confucian orthodoxy and restrictions on "barbarian" propagation within the interior, while critiquing British ignorance of imperial customs. Qianlong instructed that future interactions adhere to the one-sided tributary model, where distant realms demonstrated loyalty through periodic homage rather than reciprocal equality. Despite the rejections, the emperor extended lavish gifts to the embassy members and naval personnel, totaling items like silks and curios, as tokens of benevolence toward compliant tributaries.[10] This response reflected the Qing court's Sinocentric worldview, prioritizing internal harmony and ritual hierarchy over commercial expansion, even as Britain's industrial outputs hinted at emerging disparities.[33]

Embassy's Departure and Voyage Home

The embassy departed Beijing on 8 October 1793, following receipt of the Qianlong Emperor's edict and after preparations to transport the remaining presents and baggage southward.[12] Escorted by Chinese officials, the party of approximately 200 members, including Lord Macartney, Sir George Staunton, and scientific observers, proceeded via sedan chairs, horses, and canal barges, noting the efficiency of the Grand Canal system despite seasonal fog and occasional delays from lock operations.[12] The overland and waterway route covered roughly 1,200 miles, passing through key cities like Tianjin, Dezhou, and Linqing, where the British recorded impressions of dense rural populations engaged in rice harvesting and the prevalence of waterborne transport.[12] By 8 November 1793, the embassy reached Hangzhou after navigating the canal's southern stretches, but found their accompanying ships had shifted anchorage from Ningbo due to Qing directives.[12] This necessitated a brief overland trek to Ningbo, followed by coastal sailing to Zhoushan Island for rendezvous with the HMS Lion under Commodore Sir Erasmus Gower and the East India Company's Hindostan. From Zhoushan, the flotilla proceeded to Canton (Guangzhou), arriving on 20 November 1793, where the British re-engaged with the Canton System's trade factories amid lingering tensions over prior protocol disputes.[12] In Canton, the embassy liquidated some supplies, addressed health issues among the crew—exacerbated by the tropical climate and prior exertions—and awaited monsoon abatement for the transoceanic return. The homeward fleet departed Canton on 21 January 1794, sailing via the Strait of Malacca, around the Cape of Good Hope, and northward to Europe, a distance exceeding 12,000 nautical miles.[23] The voyage encountered standard perils of 18th-century sailing, including gales in the South Atlantic, scurvy mitigation through preserved provisions, and navigational reliance on chronometers tested during the mission.[15] No major shipwrecks occurred, though the Hindostan required repairs for hull stress; Macartney utilized the time to draft reflections on Chinese governance and economy, while Staunton compiled official records. The expedition docked at Portsmouth on 10 September 1794, after 20 months abroad, with Macartney promptly reporting to King George III on the mission's diplomatic rebuff but scientific gains.[15]

Key Participants

British Leadership and Experts

George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney (1737–1806), an experienced diplomat and colonial administrator who had served as Governor of Grenada (1764–1773), Chief Justice of Grenada, and Governor of Madras (1781–1785), led the embassy as Britain's Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.[11] Appointed in 1792 by Henry Dundas, President of the Board of Control for the East India Company, Macartney was selected for his prior successes in negotiating with non-European powers and his personal connections to King George III.[37] The mission, departing Portsmouth on September 26, 1792, aboard the Lion and accompanied by the Indiaman Hindostan carrying most personnel and gifts, totaled around 700 members including diplomats, military escorts, and support staff.[23] Sir George Leonard Staunton (1740–1801), Macartney's close friend and deputy commissioner, served as second-in-command, handling administrative duties and later authoring the official three-volume account of the embassy published in 1797.[12][38] Staunton, trained in medicine and law, had accompanied Macartney to Madras and was tasked with potential residency in Beijing if negotiations succeeded.[8] His 12-year-old son, George Thomas Staunton (1781–1859), acted as page and secretary, uniquely learning basic Chinese during the voyage, which proved invaluable for rudimentary communication as he was the only embassy member with any proficiency.[23][3] The embassy incorporated technical and scientific experts to demonstrate British industrial and intellectual superiority through gifts like orreries, globes, and chronometers.[3] James Dinwiddie (1746–1815), a Scottish astronomer and professor from the Royal Institution, led the scientific contingent, responsible for operating astronomical instruments and conducting demonstrations.[24] Other specialists included watchmakers, mathematical instrument makers, machinists, and botanical gardeners such as David Stronach and John Haxton, who maintained plant specimens for exchange and study.[3][39] Artists like William Alexander documented landscapes and customs, while John Barrow served as comptroller, later recounting experiences in his writings.[8] These experts aimed to facilitate knowledge exchange and underscore Britain's technological edge, though language barriers limited direct interactions.[2]

Chinese Intermediaries and Interpreters

The Macartney Embassy's communication with Qing officials hinged on two Chinese Catholic priests recruited as interpreters from the Collegium Sinicum in Naples: Li Zibiao (also known as Jacobus Li or Li Zibiao) and Paolo Cho (Zhou Baoluo). Li Zibiao, originating from a family of early Christian converts in northwest China and trained in a Catholic seminary before studying in Naples, possessed fluency in Chinese, Italian, and Latin, making him uniquely suited for the role. Recruited in 1792 by George Staunton on Macartney's behalf, Li joined the expedition in Portugal and served as the primary interpreter, handling translations during critical interactions, including the audience with the Qianlong Emperor on September 14, 1793, at Rehe (Jehol). There, dressed in British livery, he knelt behind Macartney and rendered the ambassador's requests from Italian into straightforward, respectful Chinese—eschewing ornate court formalities to emphasize sincerity—while conveying the emperor's replies back in elegant Italian.[40][41][42] Li's mediation extended beyond the imperial audience to negotiations and daily exchanges, where he also assisted in translating for other embassy members into Latin, wielding considerable influence over how British intentions were perceived amid linguistic and cultural asymmetries. His Catholic affiliations, however, drew scrutiny from Qing authorities, who viewed Western religious ties with suspicion, potentially complicating his position post-embassy. Paolo Cho, similarly educated in Naples, supported Li in ancillary interpretation tasks but played a less prominent role in high-level deliberations. The interpreters' efforts were hampered by the absence of standardized diplomatic terminology and the embassy's reliance on them as cultural bridges, with Li's choices in phrasing—prioritizing clarity over protocol—shaping Qing understandings of British overtures.[40][41][42] Beyond interpreters, Chinese intermediaries included escort officials assigned upon the embassy's arrival at Dagu near Tianjin on June 21, 1793, to supervise travel, logistics, and reporting to the court. Key figures were the Manchu grand secretary Zhengrui, who oversaw high-level coordination, and Han Chinese prefects Wang Wenxiong and Qiao Renjie, local officials who accompanied the mission for approximately five months from Tianjin through Beijing to Rehe and back. These intermediaries facilitated practical arrangements, such as provisioning and itinerary adherence, while monitoring British behavior and relaying observations to Beijing, effectively serving as liaisons and de facto spies under imperial directives. Their prolonged proximity provided the Qing court with direct intelligence on embassy dynamics, though interactions were constrained by protocol and mutual wariness.[12][43]

Legacy and Historical Assessments

Immediate British Reflections

The Macartney Embassy returned to British shores in late 1794, with Lord Macartney submitting initial dispatches to Henry Dundas, President of the Board of Control for India Affairs, outlining the mission's diplomatic failure due to the Qing court's rigid adherence to tributary protocols and refusal to recognize Britain as an equal sovereign power. Macartney reported that the Qianlong Emperor's edict of rejection, issued on October 8, 1793, dismissed British requests for expanded trade ports and a resident envoy as incompatible with China's self-perceived centrality, viewing the embassy instead as a ritual submission from a distant "barbarian" state. These early communications emphasized the insurmountable cultural and political barriers, including the insistence on the kowtow ceremony, which Macartney had rejected to preserve British dignity, as per Dundas's prior instructions against any act implying inferiority.[11] In private journals and observations compiled shortly after the voyage, Macartney portrayed the Qing empire as a "vast, top-heavy edifice" hampered by despotic absolutism, bureaucratic inefficiency, and a lack of scientific progress, contrasting it with Europe's advancements in navigation, mechanics, and governance. He noted the Chinese military's obsolescence—relying on outdated matchlocks and bows despite vast numbers—and the populace's subjugation under arbitrary edicts, attributing the mission's outcome to the emperor's complacency amid internal stability rather than any British misstep. These reflections, echoed in companion accounts like Aeneas Anderson's 1795 narrative, highlighted admiration for China's population density, agricultural ingenuity, and artisanal skills in porcelain and silk, but critiqued systemic stagnation and corruption as barriers to mutual exchange.[15] Public dissemination began with Sir George Staunton's An Authentic Account of an Embassy from the King of Great Britain to the Emperor of China in 1797, drawn from Macartney's papers and expedition records, which detailed the journey's logistics, ethnographic observations, and the court's opulence while underscoring the futility of appealing to Qing isolationism without coercive leverage. British discourse, including parliamentary reviews and periodical essays from 1794–1797, expressed frustration over unopened northern ports like Zhili but avoided ascribing blame solely to Chinese intransigence, often faulting inadequate preparation, interpreter limitations, or European rivals' influence instead. Satirical works, such as James Gillray's 1794 etching mocking the prospective kowtow, captured a blend of bemusement and resolve, reinforcing perceptions of Chinese ritualism as anachronistic and incompatible with Enlightenment-era diplomacy.[44][15]

Long-Term Geopolitical Implications

The failure of the Macartney Embassy in 1793 exposed irreconcilable differences between the Qing Empire's hierarchical tributary framework, which positioned foreign envoys as subordinates offering tribute, and Britain's insistence on diplomatic equality and unrestricted trade access. Qianlong's edict of rejection on September 4, 1793, dismissed British requests for additional ports beyond Canton and a resident embassy in Beijing, reinforcing the Qing court's self-conception as the unchallenged center of civilization possessing all necessities, thereby obviating the need for external manufactures or concessions. This stance, rooted in the emperor's assessment of Western technology as mere curiosities, signaled to British observers the Qing regime's detachment from global shifts, including the onset of the Industrial Revolution, which had begun amplifying Europe's military and economic advantages by the late 18th century.[2][45] The embassy's detailed accounts, circulated in Britain upon the delegation's return in 1794, portrayed China as stagnant and despotic, eroding prior Enlightenment-era admiration and fostering a narrative of necessary intervention to "civilize" and open Asian markets. Macartney himself forecasted the Qing Empire's imminent collapse due to internal decay and external pressures, a view that resonated amid Britain's growing trade imbalances—exports to China lagged far behind imports of tea, silk, and porcelain, prompting the East India Company's pivot to opium cultivation in India as a counterbalance. This perceptual shift disillusioned British policymakers with negotiation, convincing them that only coercive measures could compel reciprocity, as evidenced by the repeated failures of subsequent missions like Lord Amherst's in 1816.[46][47] Geopolitically, the mission's rebuff accelerated the transition from diplomatic overtures to gunboat diplomacy, culminating in the First Opium War (1839–1842), where British naval superiority enforced the Treaty of Nanking on August 29, 1842, ceding Hong Kong Island and opening five treaty ports to foreign trade. This pattern of unequal treaties dismantled the Qing's Canton System monopoly, eroding the tributary order's efficacy against industrialized powers and initiating a protracted phase of Western extraterritoriality and territorial encroachments across Asia. In causal terms, the embassy highlighted the Qing's fiscal and military stagnation—exacerbated by Qianlong's lavish expenditures, including 100,000 ounces of silver on European novelties during the mission itself—rendering the empire vulnerable to exploitation rather than adaptation, a dynamic that persisted through the Second Opium War (1856–1860) and beyond.[2][45][46]

Contrasting Historiographical Views

Historiographers have long debated the Macartney Embassy as emblematic of irreconcilable East-West paradigms, with early Western accounts framing the mission's failure as proof of Qing China's ritual-bound isolationism clashing against British rationalism and commercial pragmatism. Contemporary British narratives, drawing from embassy journals, emphasized the Qianlong Emperor's demand for the kowtow—a full prostration—as an intolerable symbol of subservience, interpreting the rejection of trade concessions and a resident embassy as evidence of despotic arrogance and economic self-sufficiency masking underlying stagnation.[2] This view positioned the embassy as a harbinger of necessary Western intervention, influencing justifications for later coercive policies like the Opium War, by portraying China as a static empire blind to global progress.[27] In contrast, Qing court records and subsequent Chinese interpretations recast the event through the lens of tributary diplomacy, viewing Macartney's delegation not as equals seeking reciprocity but as distant "barbarians" compelled to affirm the emperor's universal sovereignty via ritual protocols integral to cosmic order. Qianlong's edict explicitly cited China's material abundance and administrative sufficiency as reasons to confine foreign commerce to Canton, rejecting British requests for expanded ports or extraterritorial rights as disruptive to internal harmony rather than innovative overtures.[10] Modern Chinese historiography amplifies this as an early imperialist probe, attributing the embassy's rebuff to prudent defense against unequal demands that foreshadowed gunboat aggression, though empirical evidence from the period shows Qing prosperity under Qianlong with no immediate military threat from Britain.[42] Revisionist scholarship since the late 20th century challenges both poles by stressing mutual incomprehension rooted in divergent diplomatic epistemologies: British Enlightenment assumptions of sovereign equality versus Qing ritual systems prioritizing hierarchical incorporation of guests to sustain Mandate of Heaven legitimacy. Scholars like James Hevia argue the kowtow controversy was exaggerated in Western accounts, as Qing protocols allowed flexibility for foreigners while British rigidity—fueled by domestic anti-monarchical sentiments—foreclosed compromise, yet causal analysis reveals the core impasse lay in Britain's insistence on privileges without tribute reciprocity, incompatible with Qing managerial control over periphery trade.[36] Recent studies further highlight how embassy artifacts and observations served British self-fashioning, depicting China as autocratic to affirm liberal superiority, while overlooking Qing adaptability in handling prior missions; nonetheless, the empirical outcome—unmet British goals amid Qianlong's eightieth-birthday pomp—underscores a realistic Qing calculus of minimal gains from entanglement with a distant naval power lacking overland leverage.[2]

References

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