Directory_and_Chronicle_1895 — Page 490

Directories & Chronicles 香港指南 All

*78

CHINA

China had no foreign debt till the end of 1874, when a loan of £627,675, bearing 8 per cent. interest, was contracted through the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, under Imperial authority and secured by the customs' revenue. Since then a number of loans have been raised, most of them through the agency of the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, several of which have been paid off. The total Foreign debt of China is inconsiderable.

AREA AND POPULATION.

China proper, extending over 73,093 geographical, or 1,534,953 English square miles, is divided into eighteen provinces, the area and population of which are given below:-

Province

Provincial Capital

Area English Estimated Square Miles Population.

Chihli

Peking

58,949

28,114,023

Shantung

Tsinan

65,104

28,958,764

Shansi

Taiyuen.

55,268

27,260,281

Honan

Kaifung.

65,104 23,037,171

Kiangsu.

Nanking

37,843,501

Anhwei

Ngankin

92,661

34,168,059

Kiangsi

Nanchang

72,176

30,426,999

Fohkien.

Foochow

53,480

38,888,432

Chekiang

Hangchow

39,150 26,256,784

Hupeh Hunan Shensi

Wuchang

37,370,098

381,724

Changchau

18,652,507

Sigan

10,207,256

Kansuh

Lanchow

154,008

15,193,135

Szechuen

Chingtu..

166,800

21,435,678

Kwangtung

79,456

19,147,030

Kwangsi

78,250

7,313,895

Yunnan

107,869

5,561,320

Kweichau

64,554

5,288,219

Canton Kwelin

Yunnan Kweiyang

1,534,953 405,213,152

The above population, giving 263 souls per square mile throughout China proper, although partly based on official returns, is not at all reliable. An estimate given by the Board of Revenue of the population in 1887 made it 303,241,969, which is probably much nearer the mark.

The total number of foreigners in China in 1893 was 9,891, of whom 4,163 were subjects of Great Britain, 1,336 of the United States, 786 of France, 777 of Germany, 328 of Sweden and Norway, 189 of Italy, 357 of Spain, 1,017 of Japan, and 410 Portuguese, almost entirely natives of Macao, all other nationalities being represented by very few members. Of 580 mercantile firms doing business at the treaty ports, 354 were British, 81 German, 30 American, and 33 French.

The principal dependencies of China are Mongolia, with an area of 1,288,035 square miles, and some 2,000,000 people; and Manchuria, with an area of 362,313 square miles, and an estimated population of 15,000,000. The latter is being steadily and rapidly colonised by Chinese, who greatly outnumber the Manchus in their own land. Thibet, which is also practically a dependency of China, has an area of 643,734 square miles and a population of 6,000,000 souls. It is ruled by the Dalai Lama, but subject to the Government of Peking, who maintain a Resident at Lhassa.

ARMY AND Navy.

The standing military force of China consists of two great divisions, the first formed by the more immediate subjects of the ruling dynasty, the Manchus, and the second by the Chinese and other subject races. The first, the main force upon which the Imperial Government can rely, form the so-called troops of the Eight Banners, and garrison all the great cities, but so as to be separated by walls and forts from the population. According to the latest reports, the Imperial army comprises a total of 850,000 men, including 678 companies of Tartar troops, 211 companies of Mongols, and native Chinese infantry, a kind of militia, numbering 120,000 men. The native soldiers do not as a rule live in barracks, but in their own houses, mostly pursuing some civil occupation.

The Chinese navy consisted, prior to the Franco-Chinese war of 1884, mainly of small gunboats built at the Mamoi Arsenal, Foochow, and at Shanghai, on the foreign model, but was afterwards greatly strengthened. Five ships were lost, however, in the battle of the Yalu, when the Japanese inflicted a several defeat upon the Chinese. The fleet of China now includes five armoured ships, namely, the Ting Yuen and Chen Yuen, built at Stettin

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