Lot Closed
October 15, 06:10 PM GMT
Estimate
14,000 - 18,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
STAUNTON, SIR GEORGE LEONARD
AN AUTHENTIC ACCOUNT OF AN EMBASSY FROM THE KING OF GREAT BRITAIN TO THE EMPEROR OF CHINA...TAKEN CHIEFLY FROM THE PAPERS OF HIS EXCELLENCY THE EARL OF MACARTNEY. LONDON: W. BULMER & CO. FOR G. NICOL, 1797
3 volumes. Text: 2 volumes, 4to (10 3/4 x 8 3/4 in.; 273 x 222 mm). 2 engraved portrait frontispieces of Emperor Tchien Lung in vol. I, and the Earl Macartney in vol. II, 1 plate, 26 vignette illustrations after William Alexander and others. Contemporary tree calf, flat spine divided into six compartments, second gilt-lettered, others with repeat decoration in gilt; expert repair to head and tail of spine. Atlas: 1 volume, folio (22 1/2 x 17 in.; 571 x 432). 44 engraved views, plans, plates, charts or maps, including a large folding world map, 3 natural history subjects and 25 views. Expertly bound to style, unif🍬orm🧸 to the text, in half calf over period brown paper covered boards, spine gilt.
First edition of the official published account of the first British embassy to China, headed by the Earl Macartney: complete with the atlas of maps and plates
George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney was dispatched to Beijing in 1792 travelling via Madeira, Tenerife, Rio de Janeiro, the Cape of Good Hope and Indonesia. He was accompanied by Staunton, and a retinue of suitably impressive size, including Staunton's 11-year-old son who was nominally the ambassador's page. On the embassy's arrival in China it emerged that the 11-year-old was the only European member of the embassy able to speak Mandarin, and thus the only one able to converse with the Emperor. The embassy, the first such to China, had two objectives: the first to register with the Emperor British displeasure at the treatment that the British merchants were receiving from the Chinese,🍎 the second to gain permission for a British minister 𝔉to be resident in China. The first objective was achieved, the second was not. Macartney was twice granted an audience with the Emperor and in December 1793 he was sumptuously entertained by the Chinese viceroy in Canton, and returned to England via Macao and St. Helena, arriving in September 1794.
PROVENANCE:
Sir Thomas Co𒊎urtenay Warner, 1st Baronet (armorial bookplate)