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Canton

feet, city, river, english, miles and temple

CANTON, called also YANG-CHING (i. e., "city of rams"), a large com mercial city and port in the south of China, and capital of the province of Kwang-tung (of which the name Canton is merely a corruption), on the N. or left side of the Shu-kiang, or Pearl river, in a rich alluvial plain, 70 miles N. of Macao and 90 N. W. of Hong kong. The Pearl river is the estuary of the same stream that higher up is called Boca Tigre, or Boca Tigris. Farther up still, the stream is known as the Canton river; and this is but the chief channel by which the united waters of the Si 'clang and the Pekiang rivers reach the sea through the delta. The city is sur rounded by walls partly brick, partly sandstone, 25 to 40 feet high, 20 feet thick, with an esplanade inside, 6 miles in circumference; and it is divided by a partition wall running E. and W. into two unequal parts, the N. or old city, much the larger, and the S. or new city. The entire circuit, including suburbs, is nearly 10 miles. At the S. W. corner of the suburbs S. of the river, are the Hongs or European quarter, divided from the river by a quay, 100 yards wide, called Respondentia Walk. The streets, more than 600, are in general less than 8 feet wide, and very crooked. The houses along the water-side are built on piles, and subject to inundations.

There are two pagodas, the "Plain Pa goda," erected more than 10 centuries ago, 160 feet high, and an octagonal nine-storied pagoda, 175 feet high, erect ed more than 1,300 years ago; and 124 temples or Joss-houses. The Honam temple, one of the largest in Canton, covers with its grounds, 7 acres, and has 175 priests attached. The "Temple of Filial Duty" has 200 priests, supported by 3,500 acres of glebe-lands. The priests and nuns in Canton number more than 2,000, nine-tenths of them Buddhists. The "Temple of Five Hun dred Genii" has 600 statues of various sizes in honor of Buddha and his dis ciples. Examination Hall, in the old city, is 1,330 feet by 583 feet, covers 16 acres, and has 8,653 cells. There are

also in Canton prisons, granaries, a handsome English church, public schools and colleges, a foundling hospital, an English and an American missionary hospital, etc. Nearly half the craft on the river are fixed residences, and the population on land and water is esti mated variously at from 1,000,000 to 1,500,000. The climate of Canton may be pronounced healthy. The average temperature ranges from 42° to 96° F.

The admirable situation of Canton, connected by three rivers with the whole province, E., N., and W., and to the W. with the distant interior of China, and commanding a safe and commodious an chorage for the largest vessels, explains how, from an early period, it was a favorite port with foreign merchants. The earliest notices date back to two centuries B. c. In 700 A. D. a regular market was opened and a collector of customs appointed. The Arabs made regular voyages hither as early as the 9th century. The Portuguese found their way to it in 1517, and were fol lowed by the Dutch a hundred years later. These in turn were overtaken and supplanted by the English before the close of the 17th century, and an im mense trade was carried on by the agents of the East India Company. Their monopoly ceased on April 22, 1834. The city was captured by the allied French and English forces, De cember, 1857, and continued to be gar risoned by them till October, 1861. After the treaty of Nankin (signed Aug. 29, 1842), Canton was known as one of the five treaty ports, with Amoy, Foochow, Ningpo, and Shanghai.

The chief exports from Canton are tea, silk, sugar, and cassia; the chief im ports, cotton, woolen and metal goods, food-stuffs, kerosene, etc. The total trade of the port is very large and is estimated at $75,000,000.