ISSN 0130-0083
En Ru
ISSN 0130-0083
Interests of state and private commercial capital in Russia’s trade with China in the first third of the 18th century

Abstract

The article examines the prospects and advantages of different organizational forms of trade between Russia and China in the first third of the 18th century on the basis of legislative acts, notes and proposals of Russian merchants, officials and foreign diplomats, documents of commercial establishments. Regular trade between Russia and China was legally sanctioned by the Treaty of Nerchinsk in 1689. Huge distances and difficulties of the route, the length and danger of the journey, the direct interest of the government in the sale of furs, which came in the form of tribute from the pagan peoples of Siberia, made the state caravan trade the main form of trade between Russia and China. The caravan could also include inhabitants of different cities, who were going to China for their own trade. In 1706, the fur trade was declared a monopoly of the treasury, and merchants and service class were forbidden to trade “soft stuff ” in Siberia and to travel with goods to China. By concentrating the most profitable areas and types of trade in the hands of the treasury, the government sought to increase the flow of funds needed for the Northern War. In 1711, the newly established Senate suggested that Moscow rich merchants should buy off the trade with China by organizing a company for this purpose. This system guaranteed a fixed amount of income for the treasury. However, the largest representatives of the merchant circles of Moscow declined this suggestion, citing insufficient funds and arguing the advantages of free trade with China. In the 1720s merchants again raised the question of free Chinese trade. The Commission on Commerce in 1727 also acknowledged that “no great profit is seen” from the state caravans. Nevertheless, even later (in 1731 and 1734) the government forbade Russian subjects to trade “soft stuff ” in Beijing and in territories subject to China. It was only in 1762 that the state monopoly on trade with China was abolished.

PDF, ru

Received: 09/19/2022

Accepted date: 12/28/2022

Keywords: state trade caravans; companion trade; Russian merchants; treasury regalia; Peter the Great; Senate

Available in the on-line version with: 28.12.2022

To cite this article:
Issue 6, 2022