Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-xm8r8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-29T03:04:06.118Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Chinese Interstate Intercourse Before 700 B.C.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2017

Roswell S. Britton*
Affiliation:
New York University

Extract

The Chinese Empire conveniently dates from 221 B.C., when the King of Ch’in coined the title which has since served for Emperor, and with considerable justness designated himself The First Emperor. Conqueror though he was, he left much still to be done in the process of consolidating under one imperial sovereignty all the kingdoms and tribes of the area which is now north and central China. During the pre-imperial era, intercourse among the rulers of the independent units naturally had a customary pattern, an Asiatic analogue to the rudimentary interstate law of the Greek city states. Two bloody centuries preceding The First Emperor have left much martial romance and philosophy both militant and pacifistic, but meager history. From a relatively quiet earlier period, 722-481, however, the classic annals transmit an abundance of critically acceptable history in palpable detail, with interstate incidents suitable for the purpose of case studies. This paper is limited to the first twenty years of that period, the earliest possible for its purpose, which is to induce interstate custom solely from episodes credibly recorded in Chinese classics. Only a few illustrative cases are quoted here, but all the generalizations rest wholly upon case studies unless specifically noted otherwise.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1935

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Mabtin, W. A. P.: Traces of International Law in Ancient China. This was written at Paris, while Dr. Martin was visiting Europe, and was presented before the Congress of Orientalists, Berlin, September, 1881, but withheld from publication in the proceedings of the congress. Rewritten, it was “printed in English for the first time” in The International Review, 14, pp. 63–77, New York, January, 1883; reprinted in the Chinese Recorder, 14, pp. 380–393, Shanghai, Sept.–Oct., 1883. With some further revision, and the title amended to International Law in Ancient China, it was included in Hanlin Papers, 2nd Series, Shanghai, 1894, Ch. 5; and in Lore of Cathay, London, 1901, Ch. 22.Google Scholar
[Ting Wei-liang] Chung-kuo Ku-shih Kung-fa. 1884. Reprinted in Hsi Cheng Ts’ung-shu (Compendium on Western Politics). 1897. Vol. 7.Google Scholar
Diplomacy in Ancient China. Journal of the Peking Oriental Society, Nos. 3 and 4, pp. 241-263. Reprinted also in Hanlin Papers, 2nd Series, and Lore of Cathay, noted above.Google Scholar
Kuang-Ts’E, Lan. Ch’un-Ch’iu Kung-fa Pi-i Fa-wei (A comparative exposition of the Ch’un Ch’iu and the modern international law). 6 vols. 1901.Google Scholar
Hsin-Ch’Eng, Chang. Ch’un-Ch’iu Kuo-chi Kung-fa. Peking. 1924. Author's English subtitle: International Law in Ancient Orient. The preface explains that the Ch'un Ch'iu period offers the earliest record of international law in the entire Orient.Google Scholar
Tchoan-Pao, Siu (HSU Chuan-pao): Le Droit des Gens et la Chine Antique, Tome I, Partie I, Les I dées. Paris. 1926. A thesis under the Faculty of Law, University of Paris.Google Scholar
Hsien-Ch'in Kuo-chi-Fa chih I-chi. Shanghai. 1931. Author's English subtitle: The Traces of International Law in Ancient China. This is an analytic source book, 658 pages quarto in small type, dealing with the Facts, in sequel to Les ItUes, the Paris thesis, noted above.Google Scholar
Ch'Eng, Te-Hsu. International Law in Early China (1122-249 B.C.). Chinese Social and Political Science Review, xi, pp. 38, 251 ff. Peking. Jan. and April, 1927.Google Scholar
Thomas, Elbert Duncan. Chinese Political Thought. London, 1928; New York, 1932. Chapter xv: Interstate Ideas.Google Scholar
Ku-Tuan, Ch'en. Chung-Kuo Kuo-chi-Fa So-yuan (The origins of Chinese international law). Shanghai. 1934. Google Scholar