It was very enjoyable to read about the Dutch envoy to the Qing court in 1795. The book is well written and interesting both for sinologists as well as readers with little prior knowledge about 18th century China or Batavia.
This book is a reevaluation of the Dutch envoy which went down in history as a failure. Often history is told by the last men standing, in this case the British, who had sent a failed mission two years prior led by Lord Macartney and wanted to make the kowtowing Dutch one seem even worse. Tonio Andrade based his research on the diaries of the participants, and other documents in Dutch and Chinese that were missed by earlier scholars. He convincingly demonstrates that it is unjust to paint the Dutch mission as a failure, just because it didn’t lead to economic gain. This was mainly due to the collapse of the East Indies Company and the Netherlands being overrun by Napoleon’s armies that happened during the mission, which meant there was no commercial follow up possible. On their return to Europe the participants reports were not widely published and translated either, or misreported leading to further misunderstandings about the success of the trip.
Drawing from the personal observations of four members of the trip, in letters home as well as in diaries, Andrade could include many authentic details of what life was like in China. He provides day to day descriptions of the arduous 1500-mile trip over land from Canton to Beijing in the middle of winter, which is rushed so that the envoy arrives in time for the celebration of the 60th year reign anniversary of Qing dynasty emperor Qianlong. There are many details about the lodging, food, entertainment, scheming in the Dutch group as well as on the part of the Mandarins that accompany them on their trip up and down the country, that help pace the book. On their way back the envoy takes the more leisurely Grand Canal Route and stops off at many sights that are tourist attractions to this day.
What was considered most scandalous by contemporaries was the Dutch willingness to kowtow for the emperor. Andrade argues that the Dutch, with their diplomatic experience in Japan where they held a unique post at Deshima, understood that in Asia the role of diplomacy is not just about bargaining, gaining concessions, and signing treaties. Chinese diplomacy was “aimed at the maintenance of a regime of communications and interaction which both sides viewed as legitimate”. Arcade concludes that: “The Dutch visitors were greeted so warmly in the forbidden city and the imperial pleasure gardens, not just because their kowtows reinforced imperial order but also because it was fun to include these exotic outsiders in the holiday festivities”.