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  • The first edition of this encyclopaedic work offers a richly detailed and visually striking account of Britain’s engagements in China at the turn of the 20th century. With a primary focus on Hong Kong, the text delves into diverse aspects of colonial life, including finance, education, local industries—such as silk, tea, and cotton—as well as sports and cultural customs. Following this extensive section, the book provides a similarly thorough 200-page examination of Shanghai, supplemented by concise entries on a dozen other treaty ports. Alongside numerous illustrations and a full-page map of China detailing its railway network. The book exhibits fine craftsmanship: gilt lettering and decorative devices adorn the spine, while the front board bears an elegant gilt roundel depicting harbour. This work stands as both a historical document and an artefact of bookmaking, offering invaluable insights into British colonial perspectives while exemplifying the high standards of early 20th-century publishing. Maps, numerous black and white photographic illustrations, 848pp; full pebble-grained morocco, gilt decorated, spine gilt-lettered and ruled between raised compartments, edges fully gilt, 31 x 24cms, modern marbled endpapers the editor notes that: "More than one half the imports and exports of China passes through the various Treaty Ports, and it would have been a negation of one of the avowed objects of these publications if no attempt had been to show the present-day tendency of this trade and how the proportion borne by the British Empire compares with that of its competitors". The series served as a handsome soft power testament to British colonial might and aspiration.

Last update from database: 9/8/25, 9:01 AM (UTC)

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