What was significant about Lord Macartneys trip to China and his interaction with Qianlong?

Trail

An eighteenth century diplomatic mission yielded exquisite gifts

What was significant about Lord Macartneys trip to China and his interaction with Qianlong?

In the late eighteenth century, China and Britain were worlds apart. The British East India Company had been trading with Chinese merchants for 200 years, but in a strictly limited way. Foreign trading bodies were only allowed into the port of Canton (today Guangzhou) for five months of the year and all trade had to be carried out through Chinese officials who imposed high taxes on foreign trade.

What was significant about Lord Macartneys trip to China and his interaction with Qianlong?

Map of China ©

In 1792, George III (1738–1820) sent an Embassy headed by Earl Macartney of Lissanore (1737–1806) to China in an attempt to negotiate a preferential treaty of commerce and friendship with the Qianlong Emperor (1711–99). Among his requests were the establishment of a British ambassador at the Court of Peking, improved trading conditions in Canton and access to new ports to expand British trade. Members of the Embassy included Macartney’s secretary George Staunton (1781–1859), as well as a watchmaker, a mathematical instrument maker and a ‘Machinist’, whose role was to explain the scientific instruments to the Chinese. Two illustrators and a botanist were also brought along for the secondary aim of the Embassy: the gathering of information.

As part of this mission, the Embassy departed Britain bearing gifts intended both to showcase British scientific achievement and to encourage interest in British trade with exotica such as amber, coral and ivory and European manufactures including cloth from Bolton, brass from Birmingham and linen from Ireland. In response, the Qianlong Emperor gave gifts not only to George III but also to all members of his Embassy. The gifts given exhibited local material and manufacture as well as exquisite workmanship. Many of the objects given by the Qianlong Emperor to George III would later influence the tastes of his son the Prince of Wales (1762–1830).

What was significant about Lord Macartneys trip to China and his interaction with Qianlong?

Red and gold wall panels in George IV's Music Room at Brighton Pavilion depicted scenes from William Alexander's 'Views of China'. RCIN 708000.ai ©

However, the mission failed to achieve its trading aims. In the eyes of the Chinese emperor the British had come to pay tribute to him rather than to establish diplomatic relations as understood in the West. In a lengthy edict addressed to George III, the Emperor refused to allow a permanent British mission to Peking, which was ‘a request contrary to our dynastic usage’. When presented with the king’s gifts, which included a Herschel telescope, a planetarium, artillery pieces, air pumps and carriages, as well as Wedgwood pottery, chandeliers, clocks and watches, he declared:

Qianlong Emperor

What was significant about Lord Macartneys trip to China and his interaction with Qianlong?

Chinese boat model

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The Qianlong Emperor was not alone in his absence of interest in the gifts: Lord Macartney described the objects received from the Chinese in his journal as, 'consisting of lanterns, pieces of silk and porcelain, balls of tea, some drawings, etc. don't appear to me to be very fine, although our conductors affect to consider them as of great value'. At this time Chinese porcelain and silks could be easily acquired in Britain, although red lacquer objects, still imbued with a degree of novelty, were later displayed in the Green Closet at Frogmore House. Many of the gifts were sold at auction as part of Queen Charlotte’s estate after her death in 1818 and only some of these were later reacquired by George IV.

Despite its diplomatic and economic failures, the Embassy did much to demystify British perceptions of the East. Prior to the Embassy, the British had relied on second-hand accounts gleaned mostly from Jesuits and other missionaries. However subsequently, William Alexander, one of the Embassy’s illustrators, published a series of hand-coloured engravings depicting the Chinese Court as well as scenes of everyday life in China. In addition, the return journey from Peking to Canton enabled Macartney and his men to gather botanical, agricultural and geographical information. Macartney wrote in his journal:

Lord Macartney

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

This was the Qianlong Emperor’s response, in part, to British Lord Macartney in September 1793. For a century, the British, like other seafaring Europeans, had been restricted by the “Canton System” that permitted commerce only at the port of Guangzhou (Canton), through official government monopolies, and during a certain season. Industrialists in northern England wanted more access to Chinese markets; it was Macartney’s job to get it.

The details of Macartney’s mission are well known, told recently, and beautifully, by Stephen R. Platt in his 2018 book Imperial Twilight. Macartney and his entourage of more than 400 left England in September 1792, sailing HMS Lion and Hindostan southwest from England toward South America, where they caught prevailing winds that took them back east, around the Cape of Good Hope, then through the Indian Ocean to Southeast Asia. They first made landfall in China in June, and then proceeded up the coast to Tianjin. There, they left their oceangoing vessels to make the rest of the journey on smaller boats, by river and canal, and then overland.

Arriving in the heat of summer, Macartney met the emperor north of the Great Wall at the Qing Summer Palace at Rehe (today in Hebei province). Their arrival on September 8, after almost a year of travel, could well define “anticlimactic.” As Platt describes it, Macartney and his retinue expected a personal greeting from the emperor’s personal representative, but when they reached their destination, “The British traveling party arranged itself in formation in front of the building, waiting ceremoniously…An hour passed that way. Then another hour and still he did not come.”

“After six hours of standing in formation with no sign of the imperial minister, they finally lost heart and went inside for their dinner.”

Nearly a week would pass before the audience with the emperor himself. The intervening days were spent negotiating the details of Macartney’s reception — would he perform the kowtow before Qianlong, as other embassies were expected to? There was disagreement and misunderstanding on this point, but a compromise was reached, allowing Macartney to bow his head and bend a knee, as he would to his own king.

Protocols settled, Macartney, wearing a velvet purple suit, entered the imperial presence on September 14, 1793, and presented George III’s letter outlining his demands for redefining the Qing-British relationship to Qianlong.

It is sometimes assumed that Macartney was uniquely breaking through Chinese isolation, but Macartney was not even the only ambassador from abroad that day. Representatives from western Asia and India were in attendance as well, making their own greetings to the emperor (Macartney made sure to record that they all eagerly performed the kowtow, and also that their dress was much plainer than his own).

The message delivered, Macartney’s embassy packed up and made its way south. Not until it reached Beijing, en route to their vessels awaiting off Tianjin, did Macartney receive Qianlong’s famous reply — quoted at the start of this article — that his empire had no use for anything Britain was offering. The response has become a shibboleth of Western understanding of China’s history. Taught in classes and cited by pundits, “no need to import the manufactures of foreign barbarians” confirms China’s hubris and foolishness at this pivotal moment between the prosperous High Qing and the “century of humiliation” around the corner. It shows China’s failure to recognize the rise of the West and its blindness to the military might they would soon face. Qianlong’s rejection of something as vital as “free trade and diplomatic equality” over refusal to comply with a ceremony demonstrates just how incompatible “traditional” Chinese culture and values were with those of Europe.

But what if this is all wrong?

The story of Qianlong’s reception to Macartney’s Mission has been subject to a great deal of revision by historians, starting especially with James L. Hevia’s 1993 Cherishing Men From Afar. (You can also get a thorough account in Mark Elliott’s 2007 biography, Emperor Qianlong: Son of Heaven, Man of the World.) Oxford historian Henrietta Harrison also makes the claim that Qianlong’s letter to George III has long been gravely misrepresented. In an important 2017 article in the American Historical Review (AHR), she notes that many of these fundamental assumptions about Macartney’s mission seem not to be true.

For one thing, the archival record makes it clear that rather than clinging to hoary ceremonials, Qianlong cared little about the kowtow. The consensus at the Qing court held that the English envoy could not be expected to kowtow. The obsession with the ritual came not from Qianlong, but from Macartney, who blamed Qianlong’s rejection on the perceived slight. This makes sense. Breaches of protocol took on outsized importance during an era of revolutionary fervor like the 1790s were in the Atlantic world. New states challenged the existing order and the behavior of envoys toward sovereigns was a fundamental way of establishing hierarchy.

But if Qianlong was not offended by a breach of etiquette, why did he turn George III down?

It took a few days after the audience for George’s missive to be translated, and once it was, Qianlong saw that he was being asked to reduce tariffs, cede to Britain two territorial bases (colonies?) in China, and receive an ambassador at the capital, circumventing the established Qing hierarchy. These were significant concessions, and rejecting them was hardly the action of a deluded autocrat.

Moreover, the record shows that Qianlong was aware that his refusal to comply might provoke serious consequences. Harrison quotes the emperor’s instructions to his ministers, advising them to prepare their coastal defenses and take care not to provoke the British warships because “England is stronger and fiercer than the other countries in the Western Ocean. Since things have not gone according to their wishes, it may cause them to stir up trouble.” Far from dismissing the English as insignificant, Qianlong feared what they represented.

Although the outcome of the embassy is not changed by these insights, the portrait of Qianlong is. Instead of rejecting modern commerce and science because he was beholden to ancient ways and arbitrary rituals, Qianlong was a practical ruler weighing the best interests of his empire against the demands of a powerful new rival. He is certainly no “oriental despot” opposing Enlightenment values.

So why the misunderstanding?

In her AHR article, Harrison advances several primary reasons. Central to all of them is that Qianlong’s letter itself was largely forgotten until the turn of the 20th century.

Let’s start with the archives themselves. Archives are not neutral repositories of knowledge. They are incomplete, inconsistent, and organized in certain ways rather than others. Use of the archives  is shaped by the priorities of the people who create and enable access to them. In this case, the immense scope of the Qing archives was made accessible to scholars through published collections of documents printed right around the turn of the 20th century. These collections included Qianlong’s letter, which had not been reprinted for 100 years, but was now available to scholars, in Chinese and in English.

Now removed from its context — context that included letters about the need for coastal defense and the unimportance of the kowtow — Qianlong’s letter fit two narratives, one Chinese and one Western.

The Chinese narrative was tied to the rise of Han nationalism against the Manchu rulers. Needing a scapegoat for Qing China’s humiliation at the hands of foreign powers, these nationalists used Qianlong’s letter to present him as the embodiment of shortsighted and xenophobic Manchu mismanagement that had led the Chinese nation to ruin. Just what revolutionaries seeking to discredit–and overthrow–the dynasty wanted.

The European, especially British, narrative used the absurdity of the Qianlong emperor’s attitude to justify colonialism. By 1900, it was widely “known” that Qianlong had rejected Britain’s demands largely because of the refusal to kowtow. The translation of Qianlong’s letter just confirmed that Britain was reasonable to continue working toward “Enlightened” policies in the face of entrenched tradition.

The view of an outmoded and overconfident Qing refusing to understand that their world was changing became conventional wisdom in the West largely because of the work of John King Fairbank, virtually the founder of American China studies and longtime professor at Harvard. Fairbank broke out of the mold of his mentors who relied on Western sources to tell the story of China’s history and was insistent on consulting Chinese archival sources. But as a trailblazer, his view of the archives was shaped by a generation of archivists wrapped up in post-Qing modernization, presenting a view of Qianlong that was, at best, shortsighted.

Writing in the 1950s, Fairbank’s great challenge was to explain the rise of Communism in China. How could a nation that had struggled so long suddenly be a force shaking the world? Qianlong’s letter fit the explanation: Under the Qing, China had been arrogant and ignorant, refusing to adapt to changing times. It had “no need for the manufactures of foreign barbarians.” With the Qing gone, China had charted a new path.

So let’s look back on the past with two takeaways. First, it was never the case that Qing China rejected all foreign contact and had to be pried open by enlightened Englishmen wanting only equality and openness. And second, remember that history is never a self-evident truth, but something that is always understood in the context of the present, mediated through the sources at hand. Let us be ever mindful of the biases we bring to our accounting of the past.

This Week in China’s History is a weekly column.