日本早期商事条约的修订。

N. Brailey, Sir Hugh Cortazzi, J. Hoare, Ayako Hotta-Lister
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引用次数: 0

摘要

日本学会和伦敦政治经济学院于1999年7月9日在三得利和丰田国际经济及有关学科中心举行了一次联合专题讨论会,以纪念日本修订条约一百周年。在19世纪50年代和60年代的巴库松时期,日本与外国签订了一些商业条约,其中(除其他外)给予外国国民在日本条约港口的治外法权。这些条约在19世纪90年代与各个国家重新谈判,新条约于1899年7月至8月生效。因此才有了百年纪念。这四位发言者涵盖了从1850年代第一批条约缔结到1911年条约重新谈判的整个时期。1853年至1868年间,休·科塔齐爵士处理了导致与日本签订首批商业条约的各种倡议。詹姆斯·霍尔博士在谈到早期条约的运作和外国社区在条约口岸的态度时指出,这些条约经过多次修改。Nigel Brailey博士谈到了Ernest Satow爵士,他从1895年起担任英国驻日本公使,是负责任的官员,因为“不平等条约”即将结束。他早些时候曾在曼谷担任部长,知道泰国人当时多么强烈地希望修改他们的“不平等条约”。虽然条约规定的管辖权问题已基本解决,但日本关税自治的问题仍未解决。Ayako Hotta-Lister博士在最后一篇论文中描述了日本人是如何在日俄战争后信心大增的情况下,结束了早期的条约,以期达成1911年的《英日关税条约》。通过这次重新谈判,日本获得了关税自主权,并改善了商业条约的条款,但允许对英国做出让步,英国是日本近十年的盟友。日本为条约和关税的斗争
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The Revision of Japans Early Commercial Treaties.
A joint symposium between the Japan Society and the London School of Economics and Political Science was held in the Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines on 9 July 1999 to mark the centenary of Treaty Revision in Japan. In the Bakumatsu period of the 1850s and 1860s Japan had entered into a number of commercial treaties with foreign countries which (among other things) gave foreign nationals extraterritorial rights in Japanese treaty ports. These treaties were re-negotiated with the individual countries in the 1890s and the new treaties came into effect in July-August 1899. Hence the centenary. The four speakers covered the full period from the conclusion of the first treaties in the 1850s to the re-negotiation of the treaties in 1911. Sir Hugh Cortazzi dealt with the various initiatives which led to the first commercial treaties with Japan between 1853 and 1868. Dr James Hoare, in dealing with the working of the early treaties and the attitudes of the foreign communities in the treaty ports, pointed out that the treaties had been modified many times. Dr Nigel Brailey spoke on Sir Ernest Satow who as British minister to Japan from 1895 was the responsible official as the 'unequal treaties' were coming to an end. He had earlier been minister in Bangkok and knew how strongly the Thais wanted their 'unequal treaties' revised at that time. While the question of jurisdiction under the treaties had been largely settled, the question of Japan's tariff autonomy remained unresolved. Dr Ayako Hotta-Lister in the final paper gave an account of how the Japanese, in a mood of increased confidence after the Russo-Japanese war, ended the earlier treaties with a view to concluding the Anglo-Japanese Tariff Treaty of 1911. By this re-negotiation Japan secured tariff autonomy and improved the terms of the commercial treaty but allowed concessions to Britain who had been her ally for almost a decade. Japan's struggle for treaty and tariff
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