Abstract
The form of government of the Chinese empire is strictly patriarchal. The sovereign called ‘Ta-hwang-li,’ or the Great Emperor, is regarded as the father of his people, and has unlimited power over all his subjects. The fundamental laws of the empire are laid down in the first of the ‘Four Books’ of Confucius, which prescribe the government of the state to be based upon the government of the family.
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Statistical and other Books of Reference concerning China
1. Official Publications
China Directory for 1865. Sixth Annual Publication. Hongkong, 1865.
Report by Lieutenant-Colonel Neale on British Trade at the nine new Ports opened to Commerce by the Treaty of Tientsin of 1858, and by the subsequent Convention of Peking of October 24, 1860, dated December 20, 1861; in ‘Reports of H.M.’s Secretaries of Embassy.’ No. V. London, 1862.
Commercial Reports from II.AL’s Consuls in China 1862–64. 8. Pp. 187. London, 1865.
Commercial Reports from H.M.’s Consuls in China and Siam. 8. London, 1865.
2. Non-Official Publications
Abel (C.), Arbeiten der Kaiserlich. Russischen Gesandschaft zu Peking über China, sein Volk, seine Religion. Aus dem Russischen. 2 vols. 8. Berlin, 1858.
Dans (J. F.), Description of China and its Inhabitants. 2 vols. 8. London, 1836.
Gützlaff (C. F. A.), China Opened; or a Display of the Topography, History, Customs, Manners, Arts, Manufactures, Commerce, &c. of the Chinese Empire. 2 vols. 8. London, 1838.
Hanspach (Rev. A.), Report for the Years 1863 and 1864 of the Chinese Vernacular Schools, established in the Sinon, Kiushen, Fayuen, and Chonglok districts of the Quangtung province. 8. Hongkong, 1865.
Oliphant (Oscar), China; a popular history. 8. London, 1857.
Osborn (Capt. Sherard), Past and Future of British Relations in China. 8. London, 1860.
Pallu (Lieutenant Léopold), Relation de l’Expédition de Chine en 1860, rédigée d’après les documents officiels, avec l’autorisation de M. le Comte de Chasseloup-Laubat, Ministre de la Marine. 4. Paris, 1804.
Sacharoff (T.), The Numerical Relations of the Population of China during the Four Thousand Years of its Historical Existence; or, the Rise and Fall of the Chinese Population. Translated into English by the Rev. W. Lobscheid. Also, the Chronology of the Chinese, from the Mythological Times up to the present Rules. 8. Hongkong, 1865.
Topography of China and Neighbouring States, with Degrees of Longitude and Latitude. 8. Hongkong, 1864.
Wells (S. Williams), The Chinese Commercial Guide, containing Treatise, Tariffs, Regulations, Tables, etc., useful in the trade to China and Eastern Asia. Fifth ed. 8. Hongkong, 1863.
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© 1866 Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited
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Martin, F. (1866). China. In: The Statesman’s Year-Book. The Statesman’s Yearbook. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230252950_32
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230252950_32
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