Boundaries-Prelims.indd

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xii Acknowledgments


1994 Liturgical services and
business fortunes: Chinese
maritime merchants in
the eighteenth and early
nineteenth centuries

First published in Maritime
Asia: Proϔit Maximisation,
Ethics and Trade Structure c.
1300–1800, ed. Karl Anton
Sprengard and Roderich Ptak.
Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz
Verlag, pp. 75–96.
1995 The Amoy riots of 1852:
Coolie emigration and Sino-
British relations

First published in Mariners,
Merchants and Oceans: Studies
in Maritime History, ed. K.S.
Mathew. New Delhi: Manohar
Publishers & Distributors,
pp. 419–46.
1995 Trade, the sea prohibition and
the “Folangji”, 1513–

First published in The
Portuguese and the Paciϔic,
ed. Francis A. Dutra and
Joao Camilo dos Santos.
Santa Barbara: Center
for Portuguese Studies,
University of California, Santa
Barbara, pp. 381–424.
1997 Maritime frontiers, territorial
expansion and haifang
(coastal defense) during the
late Ming and high Qing

First published in China and
Her Neighbours: Borders,
Visions of the Others,
Foreign Policy (10th to 19th
Century), ed. Roderich Ptak.
Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz
Verlag, pp. 211–57.
2001 “Are these persons British or
Chinese subjects?”—Legal
principles and ambiguities
regarding the status of the
Straits Chinese as revealed
in the Lee Shun Fah affair in
Amoy, 1847

A rewritten version of a
paper presented in 2001 at
the Workshop on “China and
Southeast Asia: Historical
Interactions”, held at the
Centre of Asian Studies,
University of Hong Kong.

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