TREATY P ORTS IN CHINA - 1928



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Copywrite 1999 and 2001 by Philip R. Abbey - Permission to use for educational purposes granted provided credit is given and copywrite holder notified by email of intended use and user. Uploaded June 1, 1999. Revised November 12, 2001.

Note that areas are approximate. The source data is expressed variously as acres, square meters, mow, tsubo , square yards and square miles. It also is not precise and variable from one reference to another. Little data is available for Belgium's concession at Tientsin except dates. Apparently development of that concession was stunted until approximately 1924. There may also have been other concessions and settlements, such as the Legation Quarter, not reported.

Dates of Establishment are somewhat open to interpretation. For example, following the Boxer Rebellion 1900 several foreign nations established concessions at Tientsin by force of arms. These claims were later changed from de facto to de jure as agreements were worked out between the nations involved. The International Settlement at Shanghai was founded as the British Concession in 1843 and then merged with the American Concession in 1863.

Termination dates are also variable. Japan took over the British concessions at Tientsin and Canton December 8, 1941 by force of arms. On January 11, 1943 Great Britain relinquished it's special treaty rights to the Nationalist Government in Chungking.

Populations are close estimates at best.

More information on treaty ports is available at http://www.oocities.org/treatyport01/TREATY01.html .
 

Location
Year Established
Year Terminated
Size (Acres)
Foreign Population
Chinese Population Total Population
Shanghai
International 1
French

1863
1849

1942
1946

5,584
2,504

30,565
7,811

802,000
289,261

832,565
297,072
Hankow
British
French 2
Japanese
1861
1886
1898
1929
1943-1946
1945
115
60
32
712
306
1,284
7,288
5,200
1,115
 

8,000
5,506
2,399
Tientsin
Belgian
British 3
French 2
Italian 4
Japanese
1900
1861
1861
1902
1895
1929
1941-1943
1943-1946
1943-1945
1945
217
1,012
434
108
391
*
2,045
1,500
407
5,104
*
33,172
36,000
7,000
21,347
*
35,217
5,100
7,470
26,451
Canton
British 3
French 2
1859
1859
1941-1943
1943-1946
62
12
427
150
803
260
1,230
410
Kuikiang
British
1861
1929
640
*
*
*
Amoy
Kulangsu
1842
1945
960
240
27,500
27,740
Chinkiang
British
1861
1930
160
30
1,200
1,230
Newchang
Japanese
1900
1945
1.2
2,316
2,019
4,335

1The International Settlement was formed by merger of the British Concession, established in 1844, and the American Settlement formally established in 1863 but informally established in 1854.
2The French concessions were relinquished to the Japanese sponsored Chinese National Government by Vichy France in 1943. This action was not recognized by the Free French Government-in-Exile or by the Republic of China. In 1946 the French relinquished their claims in exchange for China evacuating Tonkin in French Indo-China.
3Japanese forces seized the British concessions December 8, 1941. This action was not recognized by either Great Britain or the Republic of China. On January 11, 1943 Great Britain relinquished its concessions and extraterritoriality.
4Italy cooperated with Japan in instituting Japan's new economic policies in North China. In 1943 Italy relinquished it concession at Tientsin to the Japanese sponsored Chinese National Government. Following the end of World War II the Italian Government relinquished extraterritoriality, the Tientsin concession and its residual rights in the international settlements at Shanghai and Amoy (Xiamen). 

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Selected Bibliography

China Yearbook 1928. H. G. W. Woodhead, editor. Tientsin: Tientsin Press. 1929.

Created by Phil Abbey and first uploaded April 10, 1999. Revised November 12, 2001.