Canton System
The Canton System was a Qing dynasty policy formally established in 1757 under Emperor Qianlong that confined all foreign trade to the port of Guangzhou (Canton), where commerce was monopolized by a guild of licensed Chinese merchants known as the Cohong and overseen by the imperial superintendent of maritime customs, or Hoppo.[1][2] This framework enforced strict controls, including confining Western traders to designated factories outside the city walls, prohibiting them from entering Guangzhou proper or interacting freely with locals, and limiting trade to seasonal periods aligned with monsoon winds.[2][3] The system's purpose was to regulate foreign commerce as a form of tribute to the emperor, preserving Chinese sovereignty, minimizing cultural influences from outsiders, and directing revenues—such as up to 855,000 silver taels annually to the imperial household—through hierarchical mediation that subordinated foreign entities to Chinese authorities.[1] It facilitated exports of high-demand goods like tea, silk, and porcelain, primarily to the British East India Company and other European traders, balanced initially by silver inflows but increasingly by opium imports that exacerbated China's trade imbalance and silver outflow.[1][2] Growing Western frustrations with these restrictions, coupled with opium smuggling and demands for expanded access, led to diplomatic failures and military conflict, culminating in the First Opium War (1839–1842); the system's abolition was enshrined in the Treaty of Nanking, which opened additional ports and ended the Cohong monopoly.[2][1] This shift marked the onset of unequal treaties and greater foreign penetration into Chinese markets, transforming the dynamics of Sino-Western trade.[2]