The Opium Wars: How China Was Forced Open — Fexingo History
Episode 131 of The Opium Wars podcast dives into the shadowy world of the Cantonese compradors — the Chinese middlemen who managed trade, finance, and intelligence between Qing merchants and foreign traders. We follow a specific figure: Howqua's former clerk turned comprador for the British, who navigated the collapse of the Cohong system. The episode explores how compradors leveraged their bilingual skills and local knowledge to become indispensable to both sides — supplying the British fleet with provisions and pilots while secretly reporting back to Qing officials. We look at the 1841 siege of Canton, where compradors facilitated the ransom payment that saved the city from destruction, and the later role of compradors in the Treaty of Nanking negotiations. The conversation also touches on the moral ambiguity of their position — profiteering from opium while their country crumbled. Names like Wu Bingjian (Howqua), James Matheson, and the comprador family of Tong King-sing come to life. We also examine how compradors evolved into China's first modern capitalists, laying the groundwork for the late-Qing self-strengthening movement. A nuanced look at the men who stood at the crossroads of empire. #OpiumWars #Compradors #Canton #Howqua #WuBingjian #JamesMatheson #TongKingSing #Cohong #TreatyOfNanking #QingDynasty #OpiumTrade #LintinIsland #CantonSystem #BritishEmpire #19thCentury #History #FexingoHistory #ChinaHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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