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Nerbudda incident

The Nerbudda incident (Chinese: 吶爾不噠號事件) was the execution of 197 personnel of the British transport ship Nerbudda and brig Ann in Taiwan on 10 August 1842 during the First Opium War. An additional 87 prisoners died from ill treatment in captivity. In September 1841, the Nerbudda became shipwrecked off northern Taiwan near Keelung. In March 1842, the Ann became shipwrecked at Da'an harbour. Survivors from both ships—primarily Indian camp followers and lascars—were captured and marched south to the capital of Taiwan Prefecture, where they were imprisoned before being beheaded. Out of the nearly 300 castaways who landed or attempted to land in Taiwan, only 11 survived captivity and execution. The Daoguang Emperor ordered the execution on 14 May 1842, after the Chinese defeat in Zhejiang.

Nerbudda incident
Part of the First Opium War
Parade Ground in Taiwan (now Tainan) where the British subjects were publicly executed
LocationTaiwan, Taiwan Prefecture, Qing Empire (now Tainan, Taiwan)
Coordinates25°09′04″N 121°45′22″E / 25.1511°N 121.7561°E / 25.1511; 121.7561Coordinates: 25°09′04″N 121°45′22″E / 25.1511°N 121.7561°E / 25.1511; 121.7561
Date10 August 1842
TargetSurvivors of the Nerbudda and Ann shipwrecks
Attack type
Mass beheading
Deaths197 prisoners executed
87 dead from ill-treatment
PerpetratorsDahonga
Yao Ying

Background

In expanding their trading activities in East Asia, the British East India Company viewed Taiwan (Formosa) as a viable trading post with rich resource potential. The Company lobbied the British government to grant a trade monopoly by first occupying the island. In 1840, British national William Huttmann wrote to Foreign Secretary Lord Palmerston that given the strategic and commercial value of the island and the Qing dynasty's benign rule over it, a British warship with less than 1,500 troops could occupy its eastern coast while also developing trade. During the First Opium War, British men-of-war patrolled the Taiwan Strait and the Pescadores.[1]

Shipwrecks

Nerbudda

In early September 1841, the transport ship Nerbudda set sail from Hong Kong to Chusan (Zhoushan).[2] It had 274 personnel consisting of 243 Indians, 29 Europeans, and two men from Manila.[3] A severe gale dismasted the ship, which drifted towards the northern coast of Taiwan and struck a reef.[2][4] All the Europeans, accompanied by three Indians and the two Manila men, left the Nerbudda in a row boat, leaving behind 240 Indians (170 camp followers and 70 lascars). The ship, which was supplied with provisions, lay in smooth water in Keelung bay for five days, during which they prepared rafts. In attempting to land, some drowned in the surf, others were killed by plunderers on shore, and the rest were captured by local authorities who separated them into small parties and marched them to the prefectural capital Taiwan (now Tainan).[3][4] About 150 are thought to have made it on shore.[5] Meanwhile, those in the row boat proceeded along the eastern coast of Taiwan.[6] After being adrift for several days, they were descried by the trading schooner Black Swan and taken to Hong Kong.[5][7]

The Manchu Brigade General Dahonga (達洪阿) and the Han taotai (intendant) Yao Ying (姚瑩) filed a disingenuous report to the Daoguang Emperor, claiming to have sunk the ship from the Keelung fort while defending against a naval attack on 30 September, with 32 enemies killed and 133 captured.[a] In response, the emperor sent rewards to both commanders.[1] However, the battle never occurred and the people they claimed to have slaughtered were the shipwrecked survivors.[8] Only two ended up surviving (the head and second serang[9]) and being sent to Xiamen (then known by its Hokkien pronunciation as Amoy) after the executions the following year.[3]

Ann

In March 1842, the brig Ann set sail from Chusan to Macao.[3] It had 57 personnel consisting of 34 Indian natives, 14 European or American natives, five Chinese, and four Portuguese or Malays.[3] Most were seacunnies or lascars.[10] Strong winds drifted the ship on shore and the ebb tide caused it to run aground near Da'an harbour.[3][11] The crew commandeered a Chinese junk in an attempt to set out to sea, but a gale disrupted the plan, and were soon captured by armed Chinese. Dahonga and Yao Ying again sent a disingenuous report, claiming that fishing vessels destroyed the ship in self-defence.[12] Only nine survivors were spared in the executions in August 1842.[11] In 1843, a list of the names of the 57 crewmen and their fate was published in The Chinese Repository:[10]

  • 43 beheaded
  • 2 died in prison
  • 2 died in the wreck
  • 1 escaped
  • 8 set free to Xiamen (six were European or American natives, one an India native, and one from China[13])
  • 1 Chinese retained as an interpreter[14]

Rescue attempts

Between 19–27 October 1841, the British sloop Nimrod sailed to Keelung and offered 100 dollars for every Nerbudda survivor. But after finding out they were sent south for imprisonment, Captain Joseph Pearse ordered the bombardment of the harbour and destroyed 27 sets of cannon before returning to Hong Kong.[1] On 8 October 1842, Commander William Nevill of the Serpent left Xiamen for Taiwan (Tainan).[15] Captain Henry Ducie Chads of the Cambrian ordered him to inquire about the survivors of both ships "under a Flag of Truce".[14] By that time, the British were aware that the captives were already executed. Nevill brought a letter from Chads addressed to the Taiwanese governor, requesting the release of the survivors, but reported that his reception was uncourteous and his letter not accepted.[14] They were told that the last survivors were being sent to Fuzhou.[16] On 12 October, they returned to Xiamen.[17]

When the Serpent arrived in Anping, she found 25 survivors of the 26 crew of the transport ship Herculaneum, Captain Stroyan, which left Singapore on 6 September 1842, carrying coals from Calcutta to the British steamers in Chusan, and been thought lost. Unlike the Nerbudda and Ann survivors, Captain Stroyan and his crew were well-treated, albeit because they knew the fate of many of the other wreck victims, in constant fear of their lives. It is possible, depending on the credibility of contemporary newspaper reports, that the Taiwanese authorities largely spared the European survivors, focusing their executions on the Indian (lascar) crew. The contemporary reports of the rescue of the Herculaneum crew refer to 197 total survivors of the Nerbudda and Ann, 30 having died, 157 having been executed, including eight Britons, one of whom was Robert Gully, the son of prize fighter and MP John Gully, and the 10 survivors who were sent to Xiamen. The Serpent arrived in Xiamen with the Herculaneum survivors on 12 October, the survivors of the Nerbudda and Ann not arriving until 25 October, almost two weeks later.[18]

Execution

 
Granary where the prisoners were held captive

After the Nerbudda survivors were captured, Dahonga and Yao Ying solicited permission from Beijing to execute them as invaders.[11] On 14 May 1842, the Daoguang Emperor released an edict after British forces repulsed the Chinese attempt to recapture Ningbo in Zhejiang province. With regards to the Ann prisoners, he ordered: "after acquiring their confessions, only the leaders of the rebellious yi [barbarians] should be imprisoned. The remaining rebellious yi and the 130-odd[b] that were captured last year shall all be immediately executed in order to release our anger and enliven our hearts."[20] On 10 August,[c] the captives were taken two or three miles outside the city walls. Their execution was reported in The Chinese Repository:

All the rest—one hundred and ninety-seven [prisoners]—were placed at small distances from each other on their knees, their feet in irons and hands manacled behind their backs, thus waiting for the executioners, who went round, and with a kind of two-handed sword cut off their heads without being laid on a block. Afterwards their bodies were all thrown into one grave, and their heads stuck up in cages on the seashore.[21]

87 other prisoners died from ill-treatment while in captivity.[22] Merchant Robert Gully and Captain Frank Denham wrote a journal while they were imprisoned. Gully was executed while Denham survived. On 25 October, one of the freed survivors Mr. Newman received a "leaf" of Gully's log from a Chinese soldier who said it was obtained from Gully's shirt, which was stripped off him at the hour of execution. It contained his last known diary entry, dated 10 August.[21] The journals of Gully and Denham were published in London in 1844. In 1876, a memoir by Dan Patridge, a survivor of the Ann, was also published in London.

Aftermath

On 23 November 1842, Plenipotentiary Henry Pottinger condemned the massacre of non-combat personnel and demanded that the Taiwanese officials responsible be degraded, punished, and their property confiscated with the amount paid to the British government for compensation to the families of those executed. He stated that he obtained proof the emperor ordered the execution, but that it was due to the Taiwanese authorities falsely reporting that they were a hostile group who attacked the island despite the vessels not being warships and the captured crew not being troops or fighting men.[23] The potential repercussions concerned the Qing government who had just concluded peace negotiations in the Treaty of Nanking a few months earlier.[12] On 11 January 1843, the emperor ordered a judicial inquiry into Dahonga and Yao Ying.[24]

The governor of Fujian and Zhejiang, Yiliang (怡良), was dispatched as commissioner to Taiwan (Tainan).[25] After investigation, he reported that both commanders confessed to sending fabricated reports of defending against a naval attack.[12][26] In April 1843, they were recalled to the capital Beijing.[27] After being interrogated, they were imprisoned but released by the emperor on 18 October,[20] having served only 12 days.[8] Later that year, Yao Ying claimed that his actions were done to boost the declining morale of the Qing officialdom and troops.[28] On 16 December, Dahonga was assigned to a post at Hami, Xinjiang province, while Yao Ying received an appointment in Sichuan province. The British government were not aware of the postings until Hong Kong Governor John Francis Davis informed Foreign Secretary Lord Aberdeen on 11 March 1845.[8]

In 1867, 25 years after the executions, an interview was published in which British physician William Maxwell asked an old Chinese clerk in a Tainan hong if he remembered the beheadings. He responded in the affirmative and claimed that on the same day, a heavy thunderstorm formed and lasted for three days, drowning an estimated 1,000 to 2,000 people: "I remember that day well, and a black day it was for Formosa ... that was a judgment from Heaven for beheading the Foreigners; but it was done in revenge for your soldiers taking Amoy".[29][30]

Notes

Footnotes
  1. ^ They reported 5 "white", 5 "red", and 22 "black" foreigners were killed and 133 "black" foreigners were captured.[1]
  2. ^ In Chinese documents, 139 captives (3 red, 10 white, and 126 black foreigners) were executed in Tainan as reported in Yao Ying's memorial to the emperor.[19]
  3. ^ A Taiwanese scholar, after researching English and Chinese historical documents, concluded that the executions were conducted from 9 to 13 August 1842.[19]
Citations
  1. ^ a b c d Tsai 2009, p. 66
  2. ^ a b MacPherson 1843, p. 235
  3. ^ a b c d e f The Chinese Repository, vol. 11, p. 684
  4. ^ a b Ouchterlony 1844, pp. 203–204
  5. ^ a b Bernard & Hall 1847, pp. 237–238
  6. ^ MacPherson 1843, p. 236
  7. ^ Ouchterlony 1844, p. 205
  8. ^ a b c Tsai 2009, p. 67
  9. ^ The Chinese Repository, vol. 11, p. 683
  10. ^ a b The Chinese Repository, vol. 12, p. 114
  11. ^ a b c Polachek 1992, p. 187
  12. ^ a b c Gordon 2007, p. 13
  13. ^ The Chinese Repository, vol. 11, p. 685
  14. ^ a b c Gordon 2007, p. 11
  15. ^ The Chinese Repository, vol. 11, p. 627
  16. ^ The Chinese Repository, vol. 11, p. 628
  17. ^ The Chinese Repository, vol. 11, p. 629
  18. ^ Bell's Weekly Messenger, 6 September 1843, p. 144
  19. ^ a b Chang Hsüan Wên (2006). "Truth and Fabrication: A Research into the Execution of Captives during the Opium War". Master Thesis. Institute of History, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan. p. 136. (Chinese publication only)
    章瑄文,〈紀實與虛構:鴉片戰爭期間臺灣殺俘事件研究〉,清華大學歷史研究所碩士論文,2006年; 136頁.
  20. ^ a b Mao 2016, p. 442
  21. ^ a b The Chinese Repository, vol. 12, p. 248
  22. ^ Bate 1952, p. 174
  23. ^ The Chinese Repository, vol. 11, p. 682
  24. ^ Polachek 1992, p. 189
  25. ^ Davis 1852, p. 10
  26. ^ The Chinese Repository, vol. 12, pp. 501–503
  27. ^ Fairbank & Têng 1943, p. 390
  28. ^ Polachek 1992, p. 190
  29. ^ Mayers et al. 1867, p. 313
  30. ^ Thomson 1873, no. 13

References

  • Bate, H. Maclear (1952). Reports from Formosa. New York: E. P. Dutton.
  • Bernard, W. D.; Hall, W. H. (1847). The Nemesis in China (3rd ed.). London: Henry Colburn.
  • The Chinese Repository. Volume 11. Canton. 1842.
  • The Chinese Repository. Volume 12. Canton. 1843.
  • Davis, John Francis (1852). China, During the War and Since the Peace. Volume 2. London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans.
  • Fairbank, J. K.; Têng, Ssu-yü (1943). "I-liang". In Hummel, Arthur W. Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period (1644–1912). Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • Gordon, Leonard H. D. (2007). Confrontation over Taiwan: Nineteenth-Century China and the Powers. Plymouth: Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-1868-9.
  • MacPherson, Duncan (1843). Two Years in China (2nd ed.). London: Saunders and Otley.
  • Mao, Haijian (2016). The Qing Empire and the Opium War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-06987-9.
  • Mayers, William; Dennys, N. B.; King, Charles (1867). The Treaty Ports of China and Japan. London: Trubner and Co.
  • Ouchterlony, John (1844). The Chinese War. London: Saunders and Otley.
  • Polachek, James M. (1992). The Inner Opium War. Council of East Asian Studies.
  • Thomson, John (1873). Illustrations of China and Its People. London: Sampson Low, Marston, Low, and Searle.
  • Tsai, Shih-shan Henry (2009). Maritime Taiwan: Historical Encounters with the East and the West. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-7656-2328-7.

Further reading

  • Journals Kept by Mr. Gully and Capt. Denham During a Captivity in China in the Year 1842. London: Chapman and Hall. 1844.
  • Patridge, Dan (1876). British Captives in China; An Account of the Shipwreck on the Island of Formosa, of the Brig "Ann". London: Wertheimer, Lea and Co.

nerbudda, incident, chinese, 吶爾不噠號事件, execution, personnel, british, transport, ship, nerbudda, brig, taiwan, august, 1842, during, first, opium, additional, prisoners, died, from, treatment, captivity, september, 1841, nerbudda, became, shipwrecked, northern,. The Nerbudda incident Chinese 吶爾不噠號事件 was the execution of 197 personnel of the British transport ship Nerbudda and brig Ann in Taiwan on 10 August 1842 during the First Opium War An additional 87 prisoners died from ill treatment in captivity In September 1841 the Nerbudda became shipwrecked off northern Taiwan near Keelung In March 1842 the Ann became shipwrecked at Da an harbour Survivors from both ships primarily Indian camp followers and lascars were captured and marched south to the capital of Taiwan Prefecture where they were imprisoned before being beheaded Out of the nearly 300 castaways who landed or attempted to land in Taiwan only 11 survived captivity and execution The Daoguang Emperor ordered the execution on 14 May 1842 after the Chinese defeat in Zhejiang Nerbudda incidentPart of the First Opium WarParade Ground in Taiwan now Tainan where the British subjects were publicly executedLocationTaiwan Taiwan Prefecture Qing Empire now Tainan Taiwan Coordinates25 09 04 N 121 45 22 E 25 1511 N 121 7561 E 25 1511 121 7561 Coordinates 25 09 04 N 121 45 22 E 25 1511 N 121 7561 E 25 1511 121 7561Date10 August 1842TargetSurvivors of the Nerbudda and Ann shipwrecksAttack typeMass beheadingDeaths197 prisoners executed87 dead from ill treatmentPerpetratorsDahongaYao Ying Contents 1 Background 2 Shipwrecks 2 1 Nerbudda 2 2 Ann 3 Rescue attempts 4 Execution 5 Aftermath 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further readingBackground EditIn expanding their trading activities in East Asia the British East India Company viewed Taiwan Formosa as a viable trading post with rich resource potential The Company lobbied the British government to grant a trade monopoly by first occupying the island In 1840 British national William Huttmann wrote to Foreign Secretary Lord Palmerston that given the strategic and commercial value of the island and the Qing dynasty s benign rule over it a British warship with less than 1 500 troops could occupy its eastern coast while also developing trade During the First Opium War British men of war patrolled the Taiwan Strait and the Pescadores 1 Shipwrecks EditNerbudda Edit In early September 1841 the transport ship Nerbudda set sail from Hong Kong to Chusan Zhoushan 2 It had 274 personnel consisting of 243 Indians 29 Europeans and two men from Manila 3 A severe gale dismasted the ship which drifted towards the northern coast of Taiwan and struck a reef 2 4 All the Europeans accompanied by three Indians and the two Manila men left the Nerbudda in a row boat leaving behind 240 Indians 170 camp followers and 70 lascars The ship which was supplied with provisions lay in smooth water in Keelung bay for five days during which they prepared rafts In attempting to land some drowned in the surf others were killed by plunderers on shore and the rest were captured by local authorities who separated them into small parties and marched them to the prefectural capital Taiwan now Tainan 3 4 About 150 are thought to have made it on shore 5 Meanwhile those in the row boat proceeded along the eastern coast of Taiwan 6 After being adrift for several days they were descried by the trading schooner Black Swan and taken to Hong Kong 5 7 The Manchu Brigade General Dahonga 達洪阿 and the Han taotai intendant Yao Ying 姚瑩 filed a disingenuous report to the Daoguang Emperor claiming to have sunk the ship from the Keelung fort while defending against a naval attack on 30 September with 32 enemies killed and 133 captured a In response the emperor sent rewards to both commanders 1 However the battle never occurred and the people they claimed to have slaughtered were the shipwrecked survivors 8 Only two ended up surviving the head and second serang 9 and being sent to Xiamen then known by its Hokkien pronunciation as Amoy after the executions the following year 3 Ann Edit In March 1842 the brig Ann set sail from Chusan to Macao 3 It had 57 personnel consisting of 34 Indian natives 14 European or American natives five Chinese and four Portuguese or Malays 3 Most were seacunnies or lascars 10 Strong winds drifted the ship on shore and the ebb tide caused it to run aground near Da an harbour 3 11 The crew commandeered a Chinese junk in an attempt to set out to sea but a gale disrupted the plan and were soon captured by armed Chinese Dahonga and Yao Ying again sent a disingenuous report claiming that fishing vessels destroyed the ship in self defence 12 Only nine survivors were spared in the executions in August 1842 11 In 1843 a list of the names of the 57 crewmen and their fate was published in The Chinese Repository 10 43 beheaded 2 died in prison 2 died in the wreck 1 escaped 8 set free to Xiamen six were European or American natives one an India native and one from China 13 1 Chinese retained as an interpreter 14 Rescue attempts EditBetween 19 27 October 1841 the British sloop Nimrod sailed to Keelung and offered 100 dollars for every Nerbudda survivor But after finding out they were sent south for imprisonment Captain Joseph Pearse ordered the bombardment of the harbour and destroyed 27 sets of cannon before returning to Hong Kong 1 On 8 October 1842 Commander William Nevill of the Serpent left Xiamen for Taiwan Tainan 15 Captain Henry Ducie Chads of the Cambrian ordered him to inquire about the survivors of both ships under a Flag of Truce 14 By that time the British were aware that the captives were already executed Nevill brought a letter from Chads addressed to the Taiwanese governor requesting the release of the survivors but reported that his reception was uncourteous and his letter not accepted 14 They were told that the last survivors were being sent to Fuzhou 16 On 12 October they returned to Xiamen 17 When the Serpent arrived in Anping she found 25 survivors of the 26 crew of the transport ship Herculaneum Captain Stroyan which left Singapore on 6 September 1842 carrying coals from Calcutta to the British steamers in Chusan and been thought lost Unlike the Nerbudda and Ann survivors Captain Stroyan and his crew were well treated albeit because they knew the fate of many of the other wreck victims in constant fear of their lives It is possible depending on the credibility of contemporary newspaper reports that the Taiwanese authorities largely spared the European survivors focusing their executions on the Indian lascar crew The contemporary reports of the rescue of the Herculaneum crew refer to 197 total survivors of the Nerbudda and Ann 30 having died 157 having been executed including eight Britons one of whom was Robert Gully the son of prize fighter and MP John Gully and the 10 survivors who were sent to Xiamen The Serpent arrived in Xiamen with the Herculaneum survivors on 12 October the survivors of the Nerbudda and Ann not arriving until 25 October almost two weeks later 18 Execution Edit Granary where the prisoners were held captive After the Nerbudda survivors were captured Dahonga and Yao Ying solicited permission from Beijing to execute them as invaders 11 On 14 May 1842 the Daoguang Emperor released an edict after British forces repulsed the Chinese attempt to recapture Ningbo in Zhejiang province With regards to the Ann prisoners he ordered after acquiring their confessions only the leaders of the rebellious yi barbarians should be imprisoned The remaining rebellious yi and the 130 odd b that were captured last year shall all be immediately executed in order to release our anger and enliven our hearts 20 On 10 August c the captives were taken two or three miles outside the city walls Their execution was reported in The Chinese Repository All the rest one hundred and ninety seven prisoners were placed at small distances from each other on their knees their feet in irons and hands manacled behind their backs thus waiting for the executioners who went round and with a kind of two handed sword cut off their heads without being laid on a block Afterwards their bodies were all thrown into one grave and their heads stuck up in cages on the seashore 21 87 other prisoners died from ill treatment while in captivity 22 Merchant Robert Gully and Captain Frank Denham wrote a journal while they were imprisoned Gully was executed while Denham survived On 25 October one of the freed survivors Mr Newman received a leaf of Gully s log from a Chinese soldier who said it was obtained from Gully s shirt which was stripped off him at the hour of execution It contained his last known diary entry dated 10 August 21 The journals of Gully and Denham were published in London in 1844 In 1876 a memoir by Dan Patridge a survivor of the Ann was also published in London Aftermath EditOn 23 November 1842 Plenipotentiary Henry Pottinger condemned the massacre of non combat personnel and demanded that the Taiwanese officials responsible be degraded punished and their property confiscated with the amount paid to the British government for compensation to the families of those executed He stated that he obtained proof the emperor ordered the execution but that it was due to the Taiwanese authorities falsely reporting that they were a hostile group who attacked the island despite the vessels not being warships and the captured crew not being troops or fighting men 23 The potential repercussions concerned the Qing government who had just concluded peace negotiations in the Treaty of Nanking a few months earlier 12 On 11 January 1843 the emperor ordered a judicial inquiry into Dahonga and Yao Ying 24 The governor of Fujian and Zhejiang Yiliang 怡良 was dispatched as commissioner to Taiwan Tainan 25 After investigation he reported that both commanders confessed to sending fabricated reports of defending against a naval attack 12 26 In April 1843 they were recalled to the capital Beijing 27 After being interrogated they were imprisoned but released by the emperor on 18 October 20 having served only 12 days 8 Later that year Yao Ying claimed that his actions were done to boost the declining morale of the Qing officialdom and troops 28 On 16 December Dahonga was assigned to a post at Hami Xinjiang province while Yao Ying received an appointment in Sichuan province The British government were not aware of the postings until Hong Kong Governor John Francis Davis informed Foreign Secretary Lord Aberdeen on 11 March 1845 8 In 1867 25 years after the executions an interview was published in which British physician William Maxwell asked an old Chinese clerk in a Tainan hong if he remembered the beheadings He responded in the affirmative and claimed that on the same day a heavy thunderstorm formed and lasted for three days drowning an estimated 1 000 to 2 000 people I remember that day well and a black day it was for Formosa that was a judgment from Heaven for beheading the Foreigners but it was done in revenge for your soldiers taking Amoy 29 30 Notes EditFootnotes They reported 5 white 5 red and 22 black foreigners were killed and 133 black foreigners were captured 1 In Chinese documents 139 captives 3 red 10 white and 126 black foreigners were executed in Tainan as reported in Yao Ying s memorial to the emperor 19 A Taiwanese scholar after researching English and Chinese historical documents concluded that the executions were conducted from 9 to 13 August 1842 19 Citations a b c d Tsai 2009 p 66 a b MacPherson 1843 p 235 a b c d e f The Chinese Repository vol 11 p 684 a b Ouchterlony 1844 pp 203 204 a b Bernard amp Hall 1847 pp 237 238 MacPherson 1843 p 236 Ouchterlony 1844 p 205 a b c Tsai 2009 p 67 The Chinese Repository vol 11 p 683 a b The Chinese Repository vol 12 p 114 a b c Polachek 1992 p 187 a b c Gordon 2007 p 13 The Chinese Repository vol 11 p 685 a b c Gordon 2007 p 11 The Chinese Repository vol 11 p 627 The Chinese Repository vol 11 p 628 The Chinese Repository vol 11 p 629 Bell s Weekly Messenger 6 September 1843 p 144 a b Chang Hsuan Wen 2006 Truth and Fabrication A Research into the Execution of Captives during the Opium War Master Thesis Institute of History National Tsing Hua University Taiwan p 136 Chinese publication only 章瑄文 紀實與虛構 鴉片戰爭期間臺灣殺俘事件研究 清華大學歷史研究所碩士論文 2006年 136頁 a b Mao 2016 p 442 a b The Chinese Repository vol 12 p 248 Bate 1952 p 174 The Chinese Repository vol 11 p 682 Polachek 1992 p 189 Davis 1852 p 10 The Chinese Repository vol 12 pp 501 503 Fairbank amp Teng 1943 p 390 Polachek 1992 p 190 Mayers et al 1867 p 313 Thomson 1873 no 13References EditBate H Maclear 1952 Reports from Formosa New York E P Dutton Bernard W D Hall W H 1847 The Nemesis in China 3rd ed London Henry Colburn The Chinese Repository Volume 11 Canton 1842 The Chinese Repository Volume 12 Canton 1843 Davis John Francis 1852 China During the War and Since the Peace Volume 2 London Longman Brown Green and Longmans Fairbank J K Teng Ssu yu 1943 I liang In Hummel Arthur W Eminent Chinese of the Ch ing Period 1644 1912 Washington U S Government Printing Office Gordon Leonard H D 2007 Confrontation over Taiwan Nineteenth Century China and the Powers Plymouth Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 1868 9 MacPherson Duncan 1843 Two Years in China 2nd ed London Saunders and Otley Mao Haijian 2016 The Qing Empire and the Opium War Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 06987 9 Mayers William Dennys N B King Charles 1867 The Treaty Ports of China and Japan London Trubner and Co Ouchterlony John 1844 The Chinese War London Saunders and Otley Polachek James M 1992 The Inner Opium War Council of East Asian Studies Thomson John 1873 Illustrations of China and Its People London Sampson Low Marston Low and Searle Tsai Shih shan Henry 2009 Maritime Taiwan Historical Encounters with the East and the West London Routledge ISBN 978 0 7656 2328 7 Further reading EditJournals Kept by Mr Gully and Capt Denham During a Captivity in China in the Year 1842 London Chapman and Hall 1844 Patridge Dan 1876 British Captives in China An Account of the Shipwreck on the Island of Formosa of the Brig Ann London Wertheimer Lea and Co Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nerbudda incident amp oldid 1118775494, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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