Sino-Japanese Friendship and Trade Treaty: Difference between revisions
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The treaty guaranteed the judiciary rights of Consuls, and fixed trade tariffs between the two countries.<ref name="Ando 13">[https://books.google.com/books?id=l68dbn2zGTAC&pg=PA13 ''Japan and international law: past, present and future'' by Nisuke Andō, Kokusaihō Gakkai (Japan) p.13]</ref> |
The treaty guaranteed the judiciary rights of Consuls, and fixed trade tariffs between the two countries.<ref name="Ando 13">[https://books.google.com/books?id=l68dbn2zGTAC&pg=PA13 ''Japan and international law: past, present and future'' by Nisuke Andō, Kokusaihō Gakkai (Japan) p.13]</ref> |
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The treaty was ratified in 1873 and was applied until the [[First Sino-Japanese War]], which led to a renegotiation with the [[Treaty of Shimonoseki]]. |
The treaty was ratified in the spring of 1873 and was applied until the [[First Sino-Japanese War]], which led to a renegotiation with the [[Treaty of Shimonoseki]]. |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
Revision as of 04:02, 3 September 2018
The Sino-Japanese Friendship and Trade Treaty (Nisshin shūkō jōki (日清修好条規); simplified Chinese: 中日修好条规; traditional Chinese: 中日修好條規; pinyin: Zhōngrì Xiūhǎo Tiáoguī) was the first treaty between Japan and Qing China. It was signed on 13 September 1871 in Tientsin by Date Munenari and Plenipotentiary Li Hongzhang.[1]
The treaty guaranteed the judiciary rights of Consuls, and fixed trade tariffs between the two countries.[1]
The treaty was ratified in the spring of 1873 and was applied until the First Sino-Japanese War, which led to a renegotiation with the Treaty of Shimonoseki.