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Embassies in the East: The Story of the British and Their Embassies in China,
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Embassies in the East: The Story of the British and Their Embassies in China, Japan and Korea from 1859 to the Present Hardcover - 1999

by Hoare, J E (Author)/ Hoare, J. E. (Author)

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Curzon Pr, 1999. Hardcover. New. 1st edition. 238 pages. 9.50x6.50x1.00 inches.
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From the publisher

This text traces the history of three Far Eastern embassies through the vicissitudes of war and revolution against the background of an apparent steady decline of Western influence in Asia. Dr Hoare tracks the key events and people shaping the British view of Asia.
Key 'dramatis personae' are Sir Harry Parkes, British Minister to Japan, China and Korea; Sir Ernest Satow, the student interpreter who became Minister in Tokyo and Peking, and in more recent years, Sir Charles Eliot, lover of big cars and scholar of Buddhism.
This book will interest those wishing to know more about all aspects of Britain in East Asia, whether in the tense years of the Boxer troubles in China, during the wartime repatriation of Britons from Japan and the Japanese Empire, in the traumas of the Korean War, or during the excess of China's Cultural Revolution.

First line

It was the Treaty of Nanjing (Nanking) of 1842 which 'opened' China to the West and which established diplomatic relations between Britain and China.