Online Encyclopedia

PAKHOI, or PEIHAI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 521 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PAKHOI, or PEIHAI  , a city and treaty
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port of
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China, in the west of the province of Kwang-tung, situated on a
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bay of the Gulf of Tong-king, formed by the peninsula
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running south-west from
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Lien-chow, in 210 30' . N., 1090 So' E . Pop. about 25,000 . Dating only from about 182o--183o, and at first little better than a
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nest of pirates, Pakhoi rapidly grew into commercial import. ance, owing partly to the
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complete freedom which it enjoyed from taxation, and partly to the diversion of trade produced by the T'ai-p'
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ing
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rebellion . The establishment of a Chinese custom-house and the opening of the ports of
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Hanoi and Haiphong for a time threatened to injure its prospects; but,
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foreign trade being permitted in 1876—1877, it began in 1879 to be regularly visited by foreign steamers . The Chinese
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town stands on the peninsula and faces due north . From the bluff, on which all the foreign community lives, a partly cultivated plain extends . Liquid indigo,
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sugar, aniseed and aniseed oil, cassia-lignea and cassia oil, cuttle-fish and hides are the chief exports . With Macao especially an extensive
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junk trade is carried on . A large number of the inhabitants engage in fishing and fish-curing . The preparation of dried fish is a speciality of Pakhoi, the fish being exported to Hong
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Kong .

End of Article: PAKHOI, or PEIHAI
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