Online Encyclopedia

CHUNCHO

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 324 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHUNCHO  , a tribe of

South
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American Indians, living in the forests east of
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Cuzco, central Peru . They are a fierce and savage
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people who have preserved their independence . They are said to be akin to their neighbours the Antis . They dwell in communal houses, and live chiefly by hunting . Chuncho has also been used to describe one of three aboriginal
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stocks of Peru, the others being
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Quichua and Aymara . CH`UNGK'
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ING, a city in the province of Szech'uen,
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China, on the
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left
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bank of the Yangtsze, at its point of junction with the Kialing, in 29° 33' N., and 107° 2' E . It is surrounded by a crenelated stone wall, which is 5 M. in circumference and is pierced by nine gates . It is the commercial centre for the trade, not only of Szech'uen, but of all south-western China . The one
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highway between Szech'uen and the eastern provinces is the Yangtsze
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river route, as owing to the mountainous nature of the intervening country
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land transit is almost impracticable . The import trade brought up by large junks from Ich`ang, and consisting of cotton
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cloth,
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yarn, metals and
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foreign manufactures, centres here, and is distributed by a class of smaller vessels up the various rivers of the provinces . Native produce, such as yellow
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silk, white
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wax, hides,
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rhubarb, musk and opium, is here collected and repacked for
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conveyance to Hankow,
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Shanghai or other parts of the
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empire . The city was opened to foreign trade by convention with the
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British government in 1891, with the proviso, however, that foreign steamers should not be at liberty to trade there until Chinese-owned steamers had succeeded in ascending the river .

This restriction was abolished by the

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Japanese treaty of 1895, which declared Ch'ungk'ing open on the same terms as other ports . After that date the problem of steam navigation on the section of the river between Ich`ang and Ch'ungk'ing occupied attention . By 1907 a small steamer had been navigated up the rapids, but it remained a question how far steam navigation could be made a
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practical success . The trade was carried on by native craft, hauled up against the strength of the current in the worst places by a
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line of trackers on the bank . The
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great rise in the river during the summer months, at Ch'ungk'ing ordinarily 70 ft. and occasionally as much as 96 ft., added to the difficulties . The population of Ch'ungk'ing, including the city of Kiangpei on the opposite bank of the Kialing river, is about 300,000 . The foreign residents are very few . In 1898 the value of the trade passing through the maritime customs was £2,614,000, and in 1904 £4,214,568, of which imports counted for £2,644,777 and exports for £1,569,791 .

End of Article: CHUNCHO
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