fbpx
Wikipedia

George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney

George Macartney should not be confused with Sir George Macartney, a later British statesman.

George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney, KB, PC (Ire) (14 May 1737 – 31 May 1806) was an Anglo-Irish statesman, colonial administrator and diplomat who served as the governor of Grenada, Madras and the British-occupied Cape Colony. He is often remembered for his observation following Britain's victory in the Seven Years' War and subsequent territorial expansion at the Treaty of Paris that Britain now controlled "a vast Empire, on which the sun never sets".

The Earl Macartney
Governor of Grenada
In office
1776–1779
MonarchGeorge III
Preceded bySir William Young
Succeeded byJean-François, comte de Durat
Governor of Madras
In office
22 June 1781 – 14 June 1785
MonarchGeorge III
Preceded bySir Thomas Rumbold
Succeeded bySir Archibald Campbell
Governor of the Cape Colony
In office
1797–1798
MonarchGeorge III
Preceded byAbraham Josias Sluysken
Succeeded byFrancis Dundas
Personal details
Born(1737-05-14)14 May 1737
Loughguile, County Antrim, Ireland
Died31 May 1806(1806-05-31) (aged 69)
Chiswick, Middlesex, England
Alma materTrinity College Dublin

Early years edit

He was born in 1737 as the only son of George Macartney, High Sheriff of Antrim and Elizabeth Winder. Macartney descended from a Scottish family with origins in Ireland, who were granted land in Scotland for serving under Edward Bruce, brother of Robert the Bruce. The Macartneys of Auchenleck, Kirkcudbrightshire settled in Lissanoure County Antrim, Ireland, where he was born.

After graduating from Trinity College Dublin, in 1759, he became a student of the Temple, London. Through Stephen Fox, elder brother of Charles James Fox, he was taken up by Lord Holland.[1]

Appointed envoy extraordinary to Russia in 1764,[2][3] he succeeded in negotiating an alliance betwee Great Britain and Russia with Catherine II. In 1768, he returned to the Irish House of Commons as a Member of Parliament for Armagh Borough, in order to discharge the duties of Chief Secretary for Ireland. On resigning this office, he was knighted.[4][5][1]

In 1775, he became governor of the British West Indies[6] and was created Baron Macartney in the Peerage of Ireland in 1776.[7] He was elected to a seat in the British parliament (Bere Alston) from 1780 to 1781.

Grenada edit

Macartney was the governor of Grenada from 1776[8] to 1779. During his governance, the island was attacked in July 1779, by the French royal fleet of the Comte d'Estaing.

After losing control of the fortifications on Hospital Hill — an essential defence position located on a prominence overlooking the island capital St. George's—Macartney chose to surrender unconditionally and was taken prisoner to France.

Madras edit

Macartney was the governor of Madras (now known as Chennai) from 1781 to 1785. During his tenure as governor, renovation and strengthening of the walls of Fort St. George was commenced after the siege by Thomas Lally, and completed in 1783. It was also during this time that most of the buildings and barracks in the western portion of the Fort were erected. The Palace Street, the Arsenal, the Hanover square and the Western Barracks were constructed during this time. The streets on the eastern side of the Fort were also altered.

It was also during this time that idea of a police force for Madras was thought of. Stephen Popham, another British resident and the developer of Pophams Broadway, submitted a plan to Macartney for the establishment of a regular police force for Madras and for the building of direct and cross drains in every street. Popham also advocated measures for the naming and lighting of streets, for the regular registration of births and deaths and for the licensing of liquor, arrack and toddy shops. A Board of Police assisted by a Kotwal was subsequently formed. The Kotwal was to be the officer of the markets under the Superintendent of Police.[9]

He negotiated the Treaty of Mangalore which brought an end to the Second Anglo-Mysore War in 1784.[10] Macartney declined the governor-generalship of India—then the British territories administered by the British East India Company—and returned to Britain in 1786.

Ambassador to China edit

 
Lord Macartney

After being created Earl Macartney in the Irish peerage in 1792, he was appointed the first envoy of Britain to Qing China, after the failure of a number of previous embassies, including Cathcart's. He led the Macartney Embassy to Beijing in 1792, with a large British delegation on board a 64-gun man-of-war, HMS Lion under the command of Captain Sir Erasmus Gower. The embassy was ultimately not successful in its primary aim to open trade with China, although numerous secondary purposes were attained, including a first-hand assessment of the strength of the Chinese empire.

The failure to obtain trade concessions was not due to Macartney's refusal to kowtow in the presence of the Qianlong Emperor, as is commonly believed. It is more likely that the Chinese hegemony of east Asian states meant that China was used to having other states come and offer vassalage. In comparison, the European states were used to the order that came out of the Peace of Westphalia. Under that order, all states were formally treated as equals. For this reason, Macartney was negotiating as an equal in the European style, while the Qianlong Emperor was used to conducting diplomacy under Chinese hegemony.[11]

After the conclusion of the embassy, the Qianlong Emperor sent a letter to King George III, explaining in greater depth the reasons for his refusal to grant the requests of the embassy.[12][incomplete short citation] The Macartney Embassy is historically significant because it marked a missed opportunity by the Chinese to move toward some kind of accommodation with the West. This failure would continue to plague China as it encountered increasing foreign pressures and internal unrest during the 19th century.

The policies of the Thirteen Factories remained. The embassy returned to Britain in 1794 without obtaining any concession from China. However, the mission could be construed as a success because it brought back detailed observations. Sir George Staunton was charged with producing the official account of the expedition after their return. This multi-volume work was taken chiefly from the papers of Lord Macartney and from the papers of Sir Erasmus Gower, who was Commander of the expedition. Gower also left a more personal record through his private letters to Admiral John Elliot (Royal Navy officer) and Captain Sir Henry Martin, 1st Baronet (Comptroller of the Navy).[13] Joseph Banks, the President of the Royal Society, was responsible for selecting and arranging engraving of the illustrations in this official record.[14]

Macartney was expected to lead an embassy to Japan after he completed his mission to China, but his hopes of being able to proceed to Japan were ended by the confirmation when he returned to Canton of news of the outbreak of war with France and consequently of the vulnerability of his ships to attack by French cruisers operating from Batavia.[15] On 23 December, Macartney recorded in his journal: "I have given up my projected visit to Japan, which (though now less alluring in prospect) has always been with me a favourite adventure as a possible opening of a new mine for the exercise of our industry and the purchase of our manufactures".[16]

Later life edit

On his return from a confidential mission to Italy in 1795, he was raised to the British peerage as Baron Macartney, of Parkhurst in the County of Surrey and Auchinleck in the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright,[17] and at the end of 1796 was appointed governor of the newly acquired territory of the Cape Colony,[18] where he remained until ill health compelled him to resign in November 1798.[1]

In early 1797, he was requested to assist with the proposed plan to send an attacking force from the Cape under Major-General J. H. Craig to the South West coast of Spanish America by way of the British colony in New South Wales.[19]

He died at Chiswick, Middlesex, on 31 May 1806, the title becoming extinct. After the death of his widow (Lady Jane Stuart, daughter of the 3rd Earl of Bute; they were married in 1768), his property passed to his niece, whose son took the name.[1]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Chisholm 1911.
  2. ^ "No. 10478". The London Gazette. 11 December 1764. p. 1.
  3. ^ "No. 10492". The London Gazette. 29 January 1765. p. 1.
  4. ^ "No. 11255". The London Gazette. 6 June 1772. p. 1.
  5. ^ "No. 11262". The London Gazette. 30 June 1772. p. 1.
  6. ^ "No. 11622". The London Gazette. 12 December 1775. p. 8.
  7. ^ "No. 11679". The London Gazette. 29 June 1776. p. 1.
  8. ^ "No. 11622". The London Gazette. 12 December 1776. p. 8.
  9. ^ . Corporation of Chennai. Archived from the original on 8 October 2007. Retrieved 19 January 2010.
  10. ^ Turnbull p. 180.
  11. ^ "#36 – David C. Kang on international relations in historic East Asia" on YouTube
  12. ^ Ch'ien Lung, (Qianlong) Letter to George III
  13. ^ Bates, I. M. (2017). Champion of the Quarterdeck: Admiral Sir Erasmus Gower (1742–1814). Sage Old Books. pp. 171–206. ISBN 9780958702126.
  14. ^ Banks, Joseph. State Library of New South Wales, Papers of Sir Joseph Banks; Section 12: Lord Macartney's embassy to China; Series 62: Papers concerning publication of the account of Lord Macartney's Embassy to China, ca 1797. 19 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Robert J. King, "'A regular and reciprocal System of Commerce' — Botany Bay, Nootka Sound, and the isles of Japan", The Great Circle, vol.19, no.1, 1997, pp.1–29; and "'The long wish'd for object' – Opening the trade to Japan, 1785–1795", The Northern Mariner, vol.XX, no.1, January 2010, pp. 1–35, [1]
  16. ^ Cranmer-Byng, "Russian and British Interests in the Far East, 1791–1793", Canadian Slavonic Papers, vol. X, 1968, pp. 206, 357–375.
  17. ^ "No. 13897". The London Gazette. 31 May 1796. p. 527.
  18. ^ "At the Court at St. James's, Dec 28. 1796". Edinburgh Gazette. No. 368. 3 January 1797. p. 221. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  19. ^ Dundas to Macartney, 21 January 1797, "Correspondence of George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney, whilst Governor of the Cape of Good Hope", Bodleian Library, GB 0162 MSS.Afr.t.2–4*. See also Robert J. King, "An Australian Perspective on the English Invasions of the Rio de la Plata in 1806 and 1807", International Journal of Naval History, vol. 8 no.1, April 2009, [2]

References and further reading edit

  • Barrow, John. (1807). Some Account of the Public Life, and a Selection from the Unpublished Writings, of the Earl of Macartney, 2 vols. London: T. Cadell and W. Davies.
  • Cranmer-Byng, J. L. "Lord Macartney’s Embassy to Peking in 1793." Journal of Oriental Studies. Vol. 4, Nos. 1,2 (1957–58): 117–187.
  • Esherick, Joseph W. "Cherishing Sources from Afar." Modern China Vol. 24, No. 2 (1998): 135–61.
  • Hevia, James Louis. (1995). Cherishing Men from Afar: Qing Guest Ritual and the Macartney Embassy of 1793. Durham: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-1637-4
  • Hibbert, Christopher. The Dragon Wakes. China and the West, 1793–1911 (1970) online free to borrow
  • Jacques, Martin. (2009). When China Rules the World: the End of the Western World and the Birth of a New Global Order. New York: Penguin Press. ISBN 9781594201851; OCLC 423217571
  • Peyrefitte, Alain. (1992). The Immobile Empire (Jon Rotschild, translator). New York: Alfred A. Knopf/Random House. ISBN 978-0-394-58654-0
    • Peyrefitte, Alain. (1990). Images de l'Empire immobile ou le choc des mondes. Récit historique. Paris: Fayard. ISBN 978-2-213-02383-0
  • Reddaway, W. F. "Macartney in Russia, 1765–67." Cambridge Historical Journal 3#3 (1931), pp. 260–294. online
  • Robbins, Helen Henrietta Macartney (1908). Our First Ambassador to China: An Account of the Life of George, Earl of Macartney with Extracts from His Letters, and the Narrative of His Experiences in China, as Told by Himself, 1737–1806, from Hitherto Unpublished Correspondence and Documents. 6 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine London : John Murray. Digitized by University of Hong Kong Libraries, Digital Initiatives, ; review in The Athenaeum
  • Rockhill, William Woodville. "Diplomatic Missions to the Court of China: The Kotow Question I," The American Historical Review, Vol. 2, No. 3 (Apr. 1897), pp. 427–442.
  • Rockhill, William Woodville. "Diplomatic Missions to the Court of China: The Kotow Question II," The American Historical Review, Vol. 2, No. 4 (Jul. 1897), pp. 627–643.
  • Staunton, George Leonard. (1797). An Authentic Account of and Embassy from the King of Great Britain to the Emperor of China, 3 vols. London: G. Nichol.
  • Turnbull, Patrick. Warren Hastings. New English Library, 1975.

External links edit

  • George Macartney papers, Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts, University of Pennsylvania
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Macartney, George Macartney, Earl". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 193.
Political offices
Preceded by Chief Secretary for Ireland
1769–1772
Succeeded by
Government offices
Preceded by Governor of Grenada
1776–1779
Succeeded byas Governor-General of Grenada
New creation Governor of the Cape Colony
1797–1798
Succeeded by
Parliament of Ireland
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Armagh Borough
1768–1776
With: Philip Tisdall 1768–1769
Charles O'Hara 1769–1776
Succeeded by
Philip Tisdall
Henry Meredyth
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Cockermouth
1768–1769
With: Charles Jenkinson (1768)
George Johnstone (1768–1769)
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Ayr Burghs
1774–1776
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Bere Alston
1780–1781
With: Lord Algernon Percy (1780)
Viscount Feilding (1781)
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by Ambassador from Great Britain to Russia
1764–1766
Succeeded by
Preceded by Ambassador from Great Britain to Russia
1767–1768
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Ambassador from Great Britain to China
1792–1794
Succeeded by
Peerage of Ireland
New creation Earl Macartney
1792–1806
Extinct
Baron Macartney
1776–1806
Peerage of Great Britain
New creation Baron Macartney
1795–1806
Extinct

george, macartney, earl, macartney, george, macartney, should, confused, with, george, macartney, later, british, statesman, 1737, 1806, anglo, irish, statesman, colonial, administrator, diplomat, served, governor, grenada, madras, british, occupied, cape, col. George Macartney should not be confused with Sir George Macartney a later British statesman George Macartney 1st Earl Macartney KB PC Ire 14 May 1737 31 May 1806 was an Anglo Irish statesman colonial administrator and diplomat who served as the governor of Grenada Madras and the British occupied Cape Colony He is often remembered for his observation following Britain s victory in the Seven Years War and subsequent territorial expansion at the Treaty of Paris that Britain now controlled a vast Empire on which the sun never sets The Right HonourableThe Earl MacartneyKB PC Ire Portrait by Lemuel Francis AbbottGovernor of GrenadaIn office 1776 1779MonarchGeorge IIIPreceded bySir William YoungSucceeded byJean Francois comte de DuratGovernor of MadrasIn office 22 June 1781 14 June 1785MonarchGeorge IIIPreceded bySir Thomas RumboldSucceeded bySir Archibald CampbellGovernor of the Cape ColonyIn office 1797 1798MonarchGeorge IIIPreceded byAbraham Josias SluyskenSucceeded byFrancis DundasPersonal detailsBorn 1737 05 14 14 May 1737Loughguile County Antrim IrelandDied31 May 1806 1806 05 31 aged 69 Chiswick Middlesex EnglandAlma materTrinity College Dublin Contents 1 Early years 2 Grenada 3 Madras 4 Ambassador to China 5 Later life 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 References and further reading 9 External linksEarly years editHe was born in 1737 as the only son of George Macartney High Sheriff of Antrim and Elizabeth Winder Macartney descended from a Scottish family with origins in Ireland who were granted land in Scotland for serving under Edward Bruce brother of Robert the Bruce The Macartneys of Auchenleck Kirkcudbrightshire settled in Lissanoure County Antrim Ireland where he was born After graduating from Trinity College Dublin in 1759 he became a student of the Temple London Through Stephen Fox elder brother of Charles James Fox he was taken up by Lord Holland 1 Appointed envoy extraordinary to Russia in 1764 2 3 he succeeded in negotiating an alliance betwee Great Britain and Russia with Catherine II In 1768 he returned to the Irish House of Commons as a Member of Parliament for Armagh Borough in order to discharge the duties of Chief Secretary for Ireland On resigning this office he was knighted 4 5 1 In 1775 he became governor of the British West Indies 6 and was created Baron Macartney in the Peerage of Ireland in 1776 7 He was elected to a seat in the British parliament Bere Alston from 1780 to 1781 Grenada editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources George Macartney 1st Earl Macartney news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Macartney was the governor of Grenada from 1776 8 to 1779 During his governance the island was attacked in July 1779 by the French royal fleet of the Comte d Estaing After losing control of the fortifications on Hospital Hill an essential defence position located on a prominence overlooking the island capital St George s Macartney chose to surrender unconditionally and was taken prisoner to France Madras editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources George Macartney 1st Earl Macartney news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Macartney was the governor of Madras now known as Chennai from 1781 to 1785 During his tenure as governor renovation and strengthening of the walls of Fort St George was commenced after the siege by Thomas Lally and completed in 1783 It was also during this time that most of the buildings and barracks in the western portion of the Fort were erected The Palace Street the Arsenal the Hanover square and the Western Barracks were constructed during this time The streets on the eastern side of the Fort were also altered It was also during this time that idea of a police force for Madras was thought of Stephen Popham another British resident and the developer of Pophams Broadway submitted a plan to Macartney for the establishment of a regular police force for Madras and for the building of direct and cross drains in every street Popham also advocated measures for the naming and lighting of streets for the regular registration of births and deaths and for the licensing of liquor arrack and toddy shops A Board of Police assisted by a Kotwal was subsequently formed The Kotwal was to be the officer of the markets under the Superintendent of Police 9 He negotiated the Treaty of Mangalore which brought an end to the Second Anglo Mysore War in 1784 10 Macartney declined the governor generalship of India then the British territories administered by the British East India Company and returned to Britain in 1786 Ambassador to China edit nbsp Lord Macartney After being created Earl Macartney in the Irish peerage in 1792 he was appointed the first envoy of Britain to Qing China after the failure of a number of previous embassies including Cathcart s He led the Macartney Embassy to Beijing in 1792 with a large British delegation on board a 64 gun man of war HMS Lion under the command of Captain Sir Erasmus Gower The embassy was ultimately not successful in its primary aim to open trade with China although numerous secondary purposes were attained including a first hand assessment of the strength of the Chinese empire The failure to obtain trade concessions was not due to Macartney s refusal to kowtow in the presence of the Qianlong Emperor as is commonly believed It is more likely that the Chinese hegemony of east Asian states meant that China was used to having other states come and offer vassalage In comparison the European states were used to the order that came out of the Peace of Westphalia Under that order all states were formally treated as equals For this reason Macartney was negotiating as an equal in the European style while the Qianlong Emperor was used to conducting diplomacy under Chinese hegemony 11 After the conclusion of the embassy the Qianlong Emperor sent a letter to King George III explaining in greater depth the reasons for his refusal to grant the requests of the embassy 12 incomplete short citation The Macartney Embassy is historically significant because it marked a missed opportunity by the Chinese to move toward some kind of accommodation with the West This failure would continue to plague China as it encountered increasing foreign pressures and internal unrest during the 19th century The policies of the Thirteen Factories remained The embassy returned to Britain in 1794 without obtaining any concession from China However the mission could be construed as a success because it brought back detailed observations Sir George Staunton was charged with producing the official account of the expedition after their return This multi volume work was taken chiefly from the papers of Lord Macartney and from the papers of Sir Erasmus Gower who was Commander of the expedition Gower also left a more personal record through his private letters to Admiral John Elliot Royal Navy officer and Captain Sir Henry Martin 1st Baronet Comptroller of the Navy 13 Joseph Banks the President of the Royal Society was responsible for selecting and arranging engraving of the illustrations in this official record 14 Macartney was expected to lead an embassy to Japan after he completed his mission to China but his hopes of being able to proceed to Japan were ended by the confirmation when he returned to Canton of news of the outbreak of war with France and consequently of the vulnerability of his ships to attack by French cruisers operating from Batavia 15 On 23 December Macartney recorded in his journal I have given up my projected visit to Japan which though now less alluring in prospect has always been with me a favourite adventure as a possible opening of a new mine for the exercise of our industry and the purchase of our manufactures 16 Later life editOn his return from a confidential mission to Italy in 1795 he was raised to the British peerage as Baron Macartney of Parkhurst in the County of Surrey and Auchinleck in the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright 17 and at the end of 1796 was appointed governor of the newly acquired territory of the Cape Colony 18 where he remained until ill health compelled him to resign in November 1798 1 In early 1797 he was requested to assist with the proposed plan to send an attacking force from the Cape under Major General J H Craig to the South West coast of Spanish America by way of the British colony in New South Wales 19 He died at Chiswick Middlesex on 31 May 1806 the title becoming extinct After the death of his widow Lady Jane Stuart daughter of the 3rd Earl of Bute they were married in 1768 his property passed to his niece whose son took the name 1 See also edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to George Macartney Isaac Titsingh the ambassador who represented the Netherlands and VOC to greet Qianlong Emperor William Pitt Amherst 1st Earl Amherst Andreas Everardus van Braam Houckgeest Halliday Macartney a descendant of the Macartney family who served in China under Charles Gordon during the Taiping RebellionFootnotes edit a b c d Chisholm 1911 No 10478 The London Gazette 11 December 1764 p 1 No 10492 The London Gazette 29 January 1765 p 1 No 11255 The London Gazette 6 June 1772 p 1 No 11262 The London Gazette 30 June 1772 p 1 No 11622 The London Gazette 12 December 1775 p 8 No 11679 The London Gazette 29 June 1776 p 1 No 11622 The London Gazette 12 December 1776 p 8 Reforms of George MaCartney Corporation of Chennai Archived from the original on 8 October 2007 Retrieved 19 January 2010 Turnbull p 180 36 David C Kang on international relations in historic East Asia on YouTube Ch ien Lung Qianlong Letter to George III Bates I M 2017 Champion of the Quarterdeck Admiral Sir Erasmus Gower 1742 1814 Sage Old Books pp 171 206 ISBN 9780958702126 Banks Joseph State Library of New South Wales Papers of Sir Joseph Banks Section 12 Lord Macartney s embassy to China Series 62 Papers concerning publication of the account of Lord Macartney s Embassy to China ca 1797 Archived 19 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine Robert J King A regular and reciprocal System of Commerce Botany Bay Nootka Sound and the isles of Japan The Great Circle vol 19 no 1 1997 pp 1 29 and The long wish d for object Opening the trade to Japan 1785 1795 The Northern Mariner vol XX no 1 January 2010 pp 1 35 1 Cranmer Byng Russian and British Interests in the Far East 1791 1793 Canadian Slavonic Papers vol X 1968 pp 206 357 375 No 13897 The London Gazette 31 May 1796 p 527 At the Court at St James s Dec 28 1796 Edinburgh Gazette No 368 3 January 1797 p 221 Retrieved 21 August 2021 Dundas to Macartney 21 January 1797 Correspondence of George Macartney 1st Earl Macartney whilst Governor of the Cape of Good Hope Bodleian Library GB 0162 MSS Afr t 2 4 See also Robert J King An Australian Perspective on the English Invasions of the Rio de la Plata in 1806 and 1807 International Journal of Naval History vol 8 no 1 April 2009 2 References and further reading editBarrow John 1807 Some Account of the Public Life and a Selection from the Unpublished Writings of the Earl of Macartney 2 vols London T Cadell and W Davies Cranmer Byng J L Lord Macartney s Embassy to Peking in 1793 Journal of Oriental Studies Vol 4 Nos 1 2 1957 58 117 187 Esherick Joseph W Cherishing Sources from Afar Modern China Vol 24 No 2 1998 135 61 Hevia James Louis 1995 Cherishing Men from Afar Qing Guest Ritual and the Macartney Embassy of 1793 Durham Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 1637 4 Hibbert Christopher The Dragon Wakes China and the West 1793 1911 1970 online free to borrow Jacques Martin 2009 When China Rules the World the End of the Western World and the Birth of a New Global Order New York Penguin Press ISBN 9781594201851 OCLC 423217571 Peyrefitte Alain 1992 The Immobile Empire Jon Rotschild translator New York Alfred A Knopf Random House ISBN 978 0 394 58654 0 Peyrefitte Alain 1990 Images de l Empire immobile ou le choc des mondes Recit historique Paris Fayard ISBN 978 2 213 02383 0 Reddaway W F Macartney in Russia 1765 67 Cambridge Historical Journal 3 3 1931 pp 260 294 online Robbins Helen Henrietta Macartney 1908 Our First Ambassador to China An Account of the Life of George Earl of Macartney with Extracts from His Letters and the Narrative of His Experiences in China as Told by Himself 1737 1806 from Hitherto Unpublished Correspondence and Documents Archived 6 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine London John Murray Digitized by University of Hong Kong Libraries Digital Initiatives China Through Western Eyes review in The Athenaeum Rockhill William Woodville Diplomatic Missions to the Court of China The Kotow Question I The American Historical Review Vol 2 No 3 Apr 1897 pp 427 442 Rockhill William Woodville Diplomatic Missions to the Court of China The Kotow Question II The American Historical Review Vol 2 No 4 Jul 1897 pp 627 643 Staunton George Leonard 1797 An Authentic Account of and Embassy from the King of Great Britain to the Emperor of China 3 vols London G Nichol Turnbull Patrick Warren Hastings New English Library 1975 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Macartney 1st Earl Macartney George Macartney papers Kislak Center for Special Collections Rare Books and Manuscripts University of Pennsylvania nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Macartney George Macartney Earl Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 193 Political offices Preceded byThe Lord Frederick Campbell Chief Secretary for Ireland1769 1772 Succeeded bySir John Blaquiere Government offices Preceded byWilliam Young Governor of Grenada1776 1779 Succeeded byJean Francois comte de Duratas Governor General of Grenada New creation Governor of the Cape Colony1797 1798 Succeeded byFrancis Dundas acting Parliament of Ireland Preceded byRobert Cuninghame Hon Barry Maxwell Member of Parliament for Armagh Borough1768 1776 With Philip Tisdall 1768 1769Charles O Hara 1769 1776 Succeeded byPhilip Tisdall Henry Meredyth Parliament of Great Britain Preceded bySir John MordauntJohn Elliot Member of Parliament for Cockermouth1768 1769 With Charles Jenkinson 1768 George Johnstone 1768 1769 Succeeded byGeorge JohnstoneSir James Lowther Preceded byJames Archibald Stuart Member of Parliament for Ayr Burghs1774 1776 Succeeded byFrederick Stuart Preceded bySir Francis Henry DrakeHon George Hobart Member of Parliament for Bere Alston1780 1781 With Lord Algernon Percy 1780 Viscount Feilding 1781 Succeeded byViscount Feilding Laurence Cox Diplomatic posts Preceded byThe Earl of Buckinghamshire Ambassador from Great Britain to Russia1764 1766 Succeeded byHans Stanley Preceded byHans Stanley Ambassador from Great Britain to Russia1767 1768 Succeeded byThe Lord Cathcart Preceded by Ambassador from Great Britain to China1792 1794 Succeeded byGeorge Elliot 1784 1863 Peerage of Ireland New creation Earl Macartney1792 1806 Extinct Baron Macartney1776 1806 Peerage of Great Britain New creation Baron Macartney1795 1806 Extinct Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Macartney 1st Earl Macartney amp oldid 1205376987, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.