What is it about?
Hankou was once the host city of a large group of native banks or Qianzhuang in China. This case study examines the local archives to explore their urban origins, business customs and internal dynamics of Qianzhuang in Hankou from the mid-1800s. Despite all their struggles, Hankou Qianzhuang disappeared almost inconspicuously in 1952. The archival evidence from the local sources indicates that their formal dissolution had resulted more from political changes than from their inability to serve modern businesses or resistance against ruling orders. These new findings may contribute to China’s monetary history literature, particularly on the role of native-place ties and traditional features in structuring the conduct of business in China.
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Why is it important?
China's financial-economic history would better be explored with more locally oriented examinations on its banking organizations in those major mainland cities back to the 19th century.
Perspectives
Chinese Urban History; The Revisionist Perspective on China's Economic-Financial History; China-Oriented and None-Eurocentric Narratives; Reciprocal Comparison;
Yun Liu
Queen's University
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: A City of Commerce and its Native Banks: Reviewing the History of Hankou Qianzhuang before 1952, African and Asian Studies, November 2016, Brill,
DOI: 10.1163/15692108-12341032.
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