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  • This abstract describes two distinct historical documents from the Guangdong Maritime Customs (Yuehai Guan), both originating from official Qing imperial administrative records.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.

Last update from database: 7/3/26, 9:56 AM (UTC)