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"We must religiously observe our engagements with China, but I fear
that Hong Kong is a sorry possession and Chusan is a magnificent
island admirably placed for our purposes." So wrote the home
secretary Sir James Graham to the prime minister Sir Robert Peel,
as British diplomats prepared to return the island of Chusan to
Chinese rule during the winter of 1845. For years, this now
little-known island off the coast of Zhejiang province had been
home to thousands of men, women and children of all classes and
backgrounds, of all races and religions, from across the British
Empire and beyond. Before the Union Jack ever flew over Hong Kong,
it had been raised on Chusan. From a wealth of primary archives,
Liam D'Arcy-Brown pieces together the forgotten story of how the
British wrested Chusan from the Qing dynasty, only to hand it back
for the sake of Queen Victoria's honour and Britain's national
prestige. At a time when the Chinese Communist Party is inspiring a
new brand of patriotism by revisiting the shame inflicted during
the Opium Wars, here is a book that puts Britain's incursions into
nineteenth-century China in a fascinating and revealing new light.
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