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  • This 1895 official correspondence, authored by Joaquim Belisário Caldas, Chief Counselor of the Portuguese Consulate in Canton (Guangzhou), addresses a high-ranking official of the Portuguese Empire regarding the insolvency of two establishments named "Hotel Victoria" in Hong Kong and Canton. Although operated by Chinese proprietors, both businesses were registered under Portuguese legal protection—a common practice enabling Chinese entrepreneurs to circumvent restrictions on commercial activity within foreign concessions by affiliating with Portuguese nationals. The letter outlines the administrative procedures for declaring bankruptcy in colonial jurisdictions, emphasizing the challenges of financial oversight in extraterritorial settings. Caldas reports unsuccessful efforts to recover outstanding debts, noting only partial restitution: $81.00 was collected through the representative of Colonel D. Brenau, Vice Colonel Bourne. Unclaimed funds were subsequently transferred into state revenue in accordance with fiscal protocols. A notable issue involved approximately $9.50 in small-denomination receipts (ranging from $0.15 to $0.20), submitted without identifiable claimants. Given the absence of clear ownership, Caldas recommends depositing these sums into the consular treasury pending potential future claims, subject to formal approval by the Minister of Foreign Affairs. The document provides critical insight into late 19th-century colonial economic structures, particularly the reliance on nominal foreign sponsorship for local enterprises and the complexities of cross-jurisdictional financial administration. It also illustrates bureaucratic responses to commercial failure in treaty-port China, where overlapping legal regimes and informal economies complicated accountability.

Last update from database: 10/29/25, 4:01 AM (UTC)

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