Online Encyclopedia

CHINCHEW, or CHINCHU

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 232 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHINCHEW, or CHINCHU  , the name usually given in
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English charts to an ancient and famous
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port of
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China in the province of Fu-kien, of which the Chinese name is Ch'uanchow fu or Ts'uanchow fu . It stands in 24° 571 N., 118° 35' E . The walls have a circuit of 7 or 8 m., but embrace much vacant ground . The chief exports are tea and
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sugar,
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tobacco, china-
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ware, nankeens, &c . There are remains of a
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fine mosque, founded by the Arab traders who resorted thither . The English Presbyterian
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Mission has had a
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chapel in the city since about 1862 . Beyond the
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northern branch of the
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Min (several miles from the city) there is a suburb called Loyang, approached by the most celebrated
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bridge in China . Ch'uanchaw, owing to the obstruction of its harbour by sand banks, has been supplanted as a port by
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Amoy, and its trade is carried on through the port of Nganhai . It is still, however, a large and populous city . It was in the
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middle ages the
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great port of Western trade with China, and was known to the
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Arabs and to Europeans asZaitun orZayton, the name under which it appears in Abulfeda's geography and in the Mongol
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history of Rashiddudin, as well as in
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Ibn Batuta,Marco Polo and other
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medieval travellers . Some
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argument has been alleged against the identity of Zayton with Ch'uanchow, and in favour of its being rather Changchow (a great city 6o m . W.S.W. of Ch'uanchow), or a port on the
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river of Changchow near Amoy .

" Port of Zayton may have embraced the great

basin called Amoy Harbour, the chief
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part of which lies within the Fu or department of Ch'iianchow; but there is hardly
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room for doubt that the Zayton of Marco Polo and Abulfeda was the Ch'uanchow of the Chinese . Ibn Batuta in-forms us that a rich
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silk texture made here was called Zaituniya; and there can be little doubt that this is the real origin of the word " Satin," Zettani in medieval
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Italian, Aceytuni in
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Spanish .

End of Article: CHINCHEW, or CHINCHU
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