The 1876 Chinese Post Office incident : an assessment of the Chinese remittance system and reasons for the incident

Overseas Chinese Remittance Firms, known as Qiaopiju, emerged and proliferated amongst the mid nineteenth-century context of a progressively globalized world and the introduction of new communications and transportation technologies into Asia. This allowed for the creation of a transnational network...

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Main Author: Cheong, Hua Zhen
Other Authors: Chen Song-Chuan
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69749
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-697492019-12-10T10:49:20Z The 1876 Chinese Post Office incident : an assessment of the Chinese remittance system and reasons for the incident Cheong, Hua Zhen Chen Song-Chuan School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities::History::Asia::Singapore Overseas Chinese Remittance Firms, known as Qiaopiju, emerged and proliferated amongst the mid nineteenth-century context of a progressively globalized world and the introduction of new communications and transportation technologies into Asia. This allowed for the creation of a transnational network which the Qiaopiju were at the center. They successfully controlled the remittance trade and increased their profits by not only depending on traditional relational or guanxi bases, but also by utilizing new communications and transportation technologies, which enabled control over transmission time. However, the British colonial government’s attempt at interfering in the remittance business by implementing the Chinese Sub-Post Office and introducing new postal regulations in 1876 sparked off discontentment amongst the Chinese Teochew merchants monopolizing the Straits Settlements’ remittance business. Protesting and resisting the new postal arrangement, the Chinese merchants engaged Chinese Secret Societies to start disturbances and cause unrest. The Chinese Post Office Incident was thus an event with deep economic roots, arising from the clash of control over remittances between the British colonial government, who was attempting to control and regulate communications and transportation networks, and the Chinese merchants, who were expressing their dissatisfaction with the new postal arrangements that compromised their profits. Bachelor of Arts 2017-03-25T01:34:14Z 2017-03-25T01:34:14Z 2017 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69749 en Nanyang Technological University 57 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities::History::Asia::Singapore
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::History::Asia::Singapore
Cheong, Hua Zhen
The 1876 Chinese Post Office incident : an assessment of the Chinese remittance system and reasons for the incident
description Overseas Chinese Remittance Firms, known as Qiaopiju, emerged and proliferated amongst the mid nineteenth-century context of a progressively globalized world and the introduction of new communications and transportation technologies into Asia. This allowed for the creation of a transnational network which the Qiaopiju were at the center. They successfully controlled the remittance trade and increased their profits by not only depending on traditional relational or guanxi bases, but also by utilizing new communications and transportation technologies, which enabled control over transmission time. However, the British colonial government’s attempt at interfering in the remittance business by implementing the Chinese Sub-Post Office and introducing new postal regulations in 1876 sparked off discontentment amongst the Chinese Teochew merchants monopolizing the Straits Settlements’ remittance business. Protesting and resisting the new postal arrangement, the Chinese merchants engaged Chinese Secret Societies to start disturbances and cause unrest. The Chinese Post Office Incident was thus an event with deep economic roots, arising from the clash of control over remittances between the British colonial government, who was attempting to control and regulate communications and transportation networks, and the Chinese merchants, who were expressing their dissatisfaction with the new postal arrangements that compromised their profits.
author2 Chen Song-Chuan
author_facet Chen Song-Chuan
Cheong, Hua Zhen
format Final Year Project
author Cheong, Hua Zhen
author_sort Cheong, Hua Zhen
title The 1876 Chinese Post Office incident : an assessment of the Chinese remittance system and reasons for the incident
title_short The 1876 Chinese Post Office incident : an assessment of the Chinese remittance system and reasons for the incident
title_full The 1876 Chinese Post Office incident : an assessment of the Chinese remittance system and reasons for the incident
title_fullStr The 1876 Chinese Post Office incident : an assessment of the Chinese remittance system and reasons for the incident
title_full_unstemmed The 1876 Chinese Post Office incident : an assessment of the Chinese remittance system and reasons for the incident
title_sort 1876 chinese post office incident : an assessment of the chinese remittance system and reasons for the incident
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69749
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