Abstract

In 1763 John Bell, a Scottish physician and traveller, published an account of his overland journey to China across a system of ancient caravan trails known as the Silk Road, made some 40 years earlier (1719–1722) in the suite of a Russian embassy sent by Peter the Great to the Kangxi emperor. Bell's earthy, well-tempered narrative, which forms a part of his Travels from St Petersburg in Russia to Diverse Parts of Asia, appeared at a time when Britain had come to fix its attention on sensational sea voyages of discovery. While British merchant adventurers, whom Chinese officialdom treated with caution and contempt, were confined to a trading compound at Canton and denied access to China's interior, Bell throws open the gated splendours of the Imperial Palace at Peking, which for over a century had been refracted mainly through Jesuit reports. In Peking he witnesses the honours lavished upon a Russian ambassador, the kind of reception that still evaded the British after six decades of desultory efforts to expand trade and establish diplomatic relations with China, and one that Lord Macartney could only hope for 30 years later during his embassy to Peking (1792–1794).

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