Your search
Results 3 resources
-
This abstract describes two distinct historical documents from the Guangdong Maritime Customs (Yuehai Guan), both originating from official Qing imperial administrative records. The first is a customs pass issued in the 28th year of the Qianlong reign, tenth month (October 1763), signed by Fang, Supervising Secretary of the Imperial Household Department and Director of the Guangdong Maritime Customs, authorising the foreign merchant Estêvão (rendered as ‘Es-shan-chih’) to navigate with his vessel from Guangdong to Luzon (the Spanish Philippines) upon full payment of customs duties and maritime tribute (*shuixiang*); it specifies crew size (28), armaments (four swords, four muskets, no cannon), and stipulates conditions for passage and verification at checkpoints. The second is a public notice dated the 28th year of the Guangxu reign, sixth month (June 1892), issued under the authority of Supervisor Lü Song of the Canton Customs House, prohibiting the illicit trade in foreign opium within and around the Guangdong provincial capital, directing local magistracies to apprehend offenders, and warning of rigorous punishment for violations. Both documents reflect Qing fiscal regulation, maritime administration, and anti-opium enforcement policies, and are preserved with original seals, archival markings, and marginalia indicating bureaucratic procedure and authentication protocols.
-
This abstract describes a multi-page diplomatic correspondence collection comprising letters, memoranda, and official dispatches dated between 1764 and 1766, primarily originating from London and addressed to Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, the Count of Oeiras (later Marquis of Pombal), chief minister of Portugal. The principal author is Martim de Melo e Castro, Portuguese envoy in London, whose letters detail urgent diplomatic negotiations concerning perceived Spanish and French military threats to Portugal’s European territories and colonial possessions in Brazil, particularly following troop movements along the Iberian frontier and violations of Article 21 of the 1763 Treaty of Paris. Key themes include requests for British military assistance—including twelve thousand muskets, artillery, tents, and cavalry support—negotiations over the outstanding £70,000 sterling subsidy from the 1762 Anglo-Portuguese agreement, disputes concerning grain embargoes and road repairs near the frontier, and intelligence exchanges regarding troop deployments in Trás-os-Montes, Minho, and Beira. The collection also contains extensive correspondence involving Prince Charles of Mecklenburg concerning his service in the Portuguese army, stipend entitlements, regimental command, and diplomatic interventions by the British royal family, alongside ancillary material on merchant grievances, colonial administration in Nova Scotia and Goa, and financial arrangements involving the Portuguese Treasury, the Tower of London, and the National Library of Lisbon, where the document is held.
Explore
Primary Sources
-
Location
-
Portugal
-
Arquivo Histórico Ultramarino
(1)
-
Conselho Ultramarino
(1)
-
Macau (1587-1833)
(1)
- Cx. 06 (1)
-
Macau (1587-1833)
(1)
-
Conselho Ultramarino
(1)
-
Arquivo Nacional. Torre do Tombo
(1)
-
Documentos em Chinês
(1)
-
Chapas Sínicas
(1)
- Maço 1 (1)
-
Chapas Sínicas
(1)
-
Documentos em Chinês
(1)
- Biblioteca Nacional (1)
-
Arquivo Histórico Ultramarino
(1)
-
Portugal
Resource type
- Manuscript (3)