During the
Yuan dynasty, the street was known as the
Dong Jiangmi Xiang (), or "East River-Rice Lane". It was the location of the tax office and customs authorities, because of its proximity to the
Grand Canal, east, by which
rice and grains arrived in
Beijing from
the south. During the
Ming dynasty, a number of ministries relocated into the area, including the Ministry of Rites, which was in charge of diplomatic matters. Several hostels were built for
tributary missions from
Vietnam,
Mongolia,
Korea and
Burma. marines at Beijing to protect the Legation Quarter, c. 1910 The Chinese government had long denied the European countries and the United States a diplomatic presence in the imperial capital of Beijing. However, the
Convention of Peking after China's defeat in the
Second Opium War of 1856–60 required the
Qing dynasty government to permit diplomatic representatives to live in Beijing. The area around
Dong Jiangmi Xiang was opened for the establishment of foreign legations. The
Zongli Yamen was established as a foreign office of the
Qing dynasty to deal with the foreigners, as well as
permanent diplomatic missions established since the 1870s in various countries that China had
diplomatic relations with. In 1861, the British legation was established in the residence of
Prince Chun, the French legation was established in the residence of
Prince An, and the Russian legation was established in the existing Russian quarters of the Orthodox Church. In 1862, the American legation was established in the home of Dr.
Samuel Wells Williams, an American who was appointed to head the U.S. legation. Other countries also soon followed suit. By 1900 there were eleven legations in the Legation Quarter: the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Japan, Russia, Italy, Spain, Austria, Belgium, Netherlands, and the United States. The Legation Quarter was rectangular in shape, approximately east to west and north to south. The southern boundary was the
inner city wall of Beijing, which the foreign residents commonly called the "Tartar Wall". The inner city walls were massive, high and thick on top. The northern boundary was near the wall around the
Imperial City. On the east the Legation Quarter was bordered near the
Chongwenmen (Hata) gate, and on the west near the
Qianmen (Chien) gate. Legation Street, now called Dongjiaomin Xiang (East Foreign Residents Alley), bisected the Legation Quarter from east to west. The
Grand Canal, described as "noxious" ran through the center of the quarter from north to south, exiting the legation quarter through a watergate beneath the inner city wall. The quarter had its own postal system and taxes. In the late 19th century the eleven foreign delegations were scattered among modest Chinese houses and opulent palaces inhabited by
Manchu princes. However, in 1860, Beijing was "in a wretched state of dilapidation and ruin, and scarcely one of their palatial buildings is not falling into decay." Legation Street in 1900 was still "a straggling unpaved slum of a thoroughfare, along which one occasionally sees a European picking his way between the ruts and puddles with the donkeys and camels." A number of foreign enterprises in addition to the legations had been established in the quarter, including two large stores catering to Europeans, two foreign banks, the
Jardine Matheson trading house, the
Imperial Maritime Customs offices, managed by an Englishman,
Robert Hart, and the Swiss-run Hotel de Pekin. ==The Boxer Rebellion==