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Deadly Dreams : Opium and the Arrow War (1856–1860) in China

Part of the Cambridge studies in Chinese history, literature and institutions series
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The Arrow War (1856 60) involved all the world's major powers, and could almost be called a world war because of the global economic and diplomatic issues driving it.

For twenty-five years Dr John Wong has been trying to discover the true origins of the war.

What began as a study of an alleged insult to the British flag supposedly flying over the boat Arrow led to an analysis of complex Chinese and British diplomacy; of the even more complex Chinese tea and silk exports; of British India's jealously guarded economic strategies and opium monopoly; of cotton supplied to the Lancashire mills by the Americans, who thereby made up their trade deficit with China occasioned by their heavy purchases of tea; of intricate Westminster politics and British global trade; of French pride and cultural priorities; of Russian intrigues and territorial designs; and of America's apparent aloofness and real ambitions.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521526191 / 9780521526197
Paperback / softback
951.034
07/11/2002
United Kingdom
English
xxx, 542 p. : ill.
23 cm
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Reprint. Originally published: 1998.