About seventy members of the Macartney mission,…
September 1793 CE
The mission proceeds alongside a road reserved for the emperor alone, stopping each night at one of the lodges prepared for the emperor's use along the way.
Guard posts punctuate the route at roughly five mile intervals, and Macartney observes a large number of troops working to repair the road in preparation for the emperor's return to Beijing later in the year.
The group crosses the Great Wall of China at Gubeikou, where they are greeted by ceremonial gunfire and several companies of troops from the Eight Banners of the Qing military.
William Alexander, who had stayed behind in Beijing, will express regret at being unable to see the Wall for himself.
Under Macartney's orders, Lieutenant Henry William Parish of the Royal Artillery makes a survey of the Great Wall's fortifications with his men, thereby contributing to the intelligence-gathering aspect of the mission, though at the expense of arousing suspicion among their Chinese hosts.
Some of the men, meanwhile, take bricks from the Wall as souvenirs.
Past the Great Wall, the terrain becomes more mountainous and difficult for the men's horses to traverse, slowing their progress.
The entourage arrives at the outskirts of Chengde on September 8.
People
George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney
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Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville
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James Dinwiddie
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John Barrow, 1st Baronet
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Joseph Banks
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Qianlong Emperor
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Sir George Leonard Staunton
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Sir George Staunton, 2nd Baronet
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Thomas Hickey
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William Alexander
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William Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville
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William Pitt the Younger
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