Chefoo Convention
The Chefoo Convention, known in Chinese as the Yantai Treaty, was an "unequal treaty" between the Qing and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, signed by Sir Thomas Wade and Li Hongzhang in Zhifu (now a district of Yantai) on 21 August 1876. The official reason for the treaty was to resolve the "Margary Affair," but the final treaty included a number of other items. They included extraterritorial privileges of British subjects and trading rules.
Chefoo Convention | |||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 煙臺條約 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 烟台条约 | ||||||
Literal meaning | Yantai Treaty | ||||||
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Contents
The convention consisted of sixteen articles and was divided into three sections. The first section dealt with the resolution of the Margary Affair, calling for the punishment of the people implicated in the murder of Augustus Raymond Margary the year before and stipulating that an indemnity be paid to Margary's relatives. The second section dealt with official intercourse between the two empires and specified the extraterritorial privileges of British subjects in China. The final section dealt with trade, prohibiting the levying of the Lijin in the treaty ports, outlawing other forms of taxes on foreign goods, and opening a number of new treaty ports.
One practical result of the treaty was that the official mission of apology to Britain, led by Guo Songtao, became a permanent diplomatic mission in Britain, opening the way for a permanent foreign representation of China.
Ratification
The Chefoo Convention was ratified immediately by the Qing government, but was not ratified by Britain until July 1885.
See also
- Unequal treaties
References
- Wang Shên-tsu (1940), The Margary Affair and the Chefoo Agreement, Oxford: Oxford University Press.