The embassy continues to Tianjin, where it…
August 1793 CE
Macartney and Staunton attend a banquet with viceroy Liang and the Manchu legate Zhengrui, who stipulates that all gifts are to be brought to Rehe and laid at the emperor's feet in accordance with protocol.
However, Macartney persuades the viceroy to permit some of the gifts to be left in Beijing to avoid damaging them on the journey to Rehe.
The imperial court had advised Liang not to accompany Macartney to the capital, so as to avoid giving the British too high a sense of their own status.
According to Qianlong, "treated too favorably, a Barbarian becomes arrogant".
Instead of the viceroy, Zhengrui will act as the mission's liaison.
Images
Drawing by William Alexander, draughtsman of the Macartney Embassy to China in 1793. A fort near Tianjin situated on a point at the confluence of three rivers, the Pei-ho, the Yun-leang, and the When-ho. The city of Tianjin was carefully guarded since it was the chief harbor for shipping, and principal depot for merchandise in China. This fortification was thirty-five feet in height, and built with bricks, except the foundation, which was of stone, and has been partly undermined; the surrounding country being very low and marshy. A guard of soldiers was constantly stationed there, and, in cases of turmoil, the sentinels gave the alarm to the adjacent military posts, in the daytime by hoisting a signal, and at night by the explosion of fireworks; on which the neighboring garrisons would arrive to the spot. On the upper landing there is a building to shelter sentinels on duty; one of them is beating a gong, to announce to the garrison the approach of a viceroy or mandarin of rank ; on this notice, they immediately form in a rank, and stand under arms to salute him. Within the parapet a lantern is suspended, and in the opposite angle the imperial standard is elevated; the color of the tablet, with the inscription on it, likewise shows it to be a royal edifice. In Johan Nieuhoff's account of the Dutch Embassy, which was sent to Peking in the year of 1650, there is a print either of this tower, or one similar to it, which stood on the same site. The hillocks of earth under a clump of trees, seen in the distance, are burying-places. Image taken from The Costume of China, illustrated in forty-eight colored engravings, published in London in 1805.