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Maritime Trade Portuguese and the trade at south Chinese ports in the 16th century settlement 1557); Dutch in the 17th century, and the English in the 18th century( British East India Company), and others H. B. Morse(The Chronicles), 1634 Britains first attempt, 1699 ondon, 1760-1834 Regulated I-the Canton System The Canton Trade (the only city in which Europeans were allowed to trade between 1760-1840) Longs,"licensed Chinese monopolists, Ua Co-hong, the Chinese official merchant guild in Guangzhou after 1759 Lucrative trading: the demand for tea in 18th-century britain chests in 1684-400,000 pounds by 1720-23 million pounds in180 the flow of silver into China: rose from 3 million ounces of sliver per year in the 1760s to 16 million in the 1780sMaritime Trade Maritime Trade „ Portuguese and the trade at south Chinese ports in the 16 Portuguese and the trade at south Chinese ports in the 16th century (Settlement 1557); Dutch in the 17 century (Settlement 1557); Dutch in the 17th century, and the century, and the English in the 18 English in the 18th century (British East India Company), and century (British East India Company), and others. others. „ H. B. Morse ( H. B. Morse (The Chronicles The Chronicles), 1634 Britain ), 1634 Britain’s first attempt, 1699 s first attempt, 1699 “London ”, 1760 -1834 Regulated 1834 Regulated – the Canton System. the Canton System. „ The Canton Trade (the only city in which Europeans were The Canton Trade (the only city in which Europeans were allowed to trade between 1760 allowed to trade between 1760 -1840) „ Co -hong, the Chinese official merchant guild in Guangzhou after , the Chinese official merchant guild in Guangzhou after 1759 – Hongs, “licensed Chinese monopolists licensed Chinese monopolists ” „ Lucrative trading: the demand for tea in 18 Lucrative trading: the demand for tea in 18th -century Britain century Britain (5 chests in 1684 (5 chests in 1684 – 400,000 pounds by 1720 400,000 pounds by 1720 – 23 million pounds 23 million pounds in 1800) in 1800) „ the flow of silver into China: rose from 3 million ounces of sli the flow of silver into China: rose from 3 million ounces of sliver per year in the 1760s to 16 million in the 1780s. per year in the 1760s to 16 million in the 1780s
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