Early life Left in China as a teenage boy by Captain Rigby of the
Honourable East India Company ship
Normanton in 1736, Flint grew to adulthood speaking
Mandarin Chinese. For reasons unknown, he adopted or was given the Chinese name Hóng Rènhuī (洪任辉) and in 1739 departed for Bombay and other East India Company run locations. Three years later he returned to China to continue his language studies, for which, according to scholar
H.B. Morse the Company provided funding. As a result, some 136 years after its foundation James Flint became the Company's Chinese interpreter and the first such individual in British history. In 1741 he took up a position at the Company factory in
Canton, where he considered British trade unsatisfactory, even though at that time it surpassed that of the French and the Dutch. In 1746 Flint took passage on the Company ship
Tavistock and became "Linguist to all our Supra Cargoes in general", receiving 90
taels of silver per ship and accommodation at the Company's factories. During the
War of the Austrian Succession (1740–1748), the Company remained comparatively powerful and expanded its business in China. Nevertheless, its trade volume still lagged behind that of its combined European competitors. Under these circumstances the Company became anxious to expand its trade into China's interior. With trading conditions in Canton unsatisfactory, the British decided to reopen their former trade in
Ningbo and other northern ports.
Flint Affair By the 1750s the British economy had undergone significant development such that Canton could no longer satisfy the trade volumes required by the East India Company. A group of foreign businessmen headed by Flint and already disgruntled by illegal extortion on the part of the Canton customs bureau stood ready to purchase large quantities of raw silk, tea and
Nankeen cloth from their point of origin or a port nearby. Between 1755 and 1757, Flint and his associates made successive sea voyages north to trade at
Ningbo in Zhejiang Province. Qing officials knew that allowing Sino-British commerce in Zhejiang would undoubtedly bring increased prosperity to the province and spur its development. However, given the length of time that foreign trade had been focused on Canton, a powerful interest group comprising the local Chinese merchants, customs officials and Qing scholar-bureaucrats had developed there. This faction enjoyed a monopoly on trade and its associated corruption and extortion from which it extracted the maximum benefit. They were naturally unwilling to allow any part of their interests in Canton to be transferred to the north. Meanwhile, Zhejiang possessed a number of potential foreign trade ports but opening them up would have the unsettling side effect of creating additional responsibility for local officials. As a result,
Yang Yingju (
:zh: 杨应琚),
Governor-general of Min-Zhe and responsible for Zhejiang, lobbied officials in Beijing for a prohibition of trade in Ningbo. Moreover, the emperor received reports regarding the presence of armed Western merchant ships all along the coast, urging him to concentrate the Westerners in Guangzhou where the subsequently-expanded Guangdong fleet could more effectively guard and monitor them. In 1757, the Qianlong Emperor responded to pressure from his officials and implemented a new foreign trade policy whereby all ships from overseas were barred from every Chinese port with the exception of Canton. Known in Chinese as
Yī kŏu tōngshāng (一口通商 "Single port commerce system"), the
Canton System arose in part as a result of Flint's actions.
Flint's complaint in Tianjin With the East India Company unwilling to abide by this new prohibition, in May 1759 James Flint once again left Canton and sailed north for Ningbo. However, when he arrived in
Dinghai (定海), at that time known as Chusan, he found a contingent of the Qing army waiting, who advised him to return south. The next month Flint left Dinghai but instead of returning to Canton he made straight for
Tianjin. On 24 June he arrived outside Tianjin and announced himself as a British official of the Fourth Grade (
sìpǐn, 四品), which would place him approximately halfway down the hierarchy of Chinese officialdom. The emperor went on to say that if Flint's complaint turned out to be true, Li Yongbiao and the others responsible would be publicly executed. Accompanied by a specially chosen Qing official, Flint found himself rushed back to Canton by land, the first British subject to ever make that journey. The General Commanding the Troops in Fuzhou (福州将军), Xin Zhu (新柱), hurried to Guangdong to conduct the investigation. There, he and Qianlong's chosen official arrested Li Yongbiao and Li Shiyao then confronted them with Flint's complaint, which listed seven grievances. However, Flint's real purpose in coming to Ningbo in the first place was to break through the single port commerce system and trade there he had clearly stated on arrival in Dinghai that the rear of his ship was packed with silver. While Flint was back in Canton, the British merchantman
Chesterfield arrived in the waters off Zhejiang, but its offer to trade met with a refusal. The ship's captain then claimed that he needed to stay for a few days to repair the ship's sails but after a short standoff,
Chesterfield sailed away. Qianlong viewed the episode with suspicion he believed that the ship's arrival was connected with Flint's complaint, which would serve as a distraction while his supposed co-conspirators aboard
Chesterfield tried to open the ports of Zhejiang to trade. The
Chesterfield and its crew were never seen again.
Qianlong's decision Qianlong's basis for deciding Flint's case focused on three principles: • If the complaint of extortion and corruption proved true, Li Yong Biao would be executed and the details made public. • Any Chinese "scoundrel" who had assisted Flint in writing his petition would be executed on the spot. • Flint's desire to travel from Canton to Tianjin to present a petition was abhorrent, but Flint should also refrain from informal criticism of state policy. According to written testimony from Li Shiyao, Li Yongbiao had not embezzled any government funds and had purchased goods on his own account for which he had not received compensation. Nevertheless, some of his relatives had taken delivery of goods from foreign traders and failed to pay for them. After deciding that Li Youngbiao had been blackmailed by his relatives, Qianlong stripped him of his position and sent him into exile. Li's relatives, along with other implicated Guangdong customs officials, suffered varying degrees of punishment. The emperor further ruled that the Chinese authors of Flint's complaint were particularly heinous. After investigation and analysis of the document, Qianlong concluded that it had been written in collusion with Liu Yabian (刘亚匾), a
Sichuanese merchant, and subsequently edited by Lin Huan (林怀), a
Fujianese translator employed by the East India Company in Batavia (now
Jakarta, Indonesia). Qianlong then ordered Li Shibiao to gather the Hong merchants in Canton, where Liu Yabian was publicly executed as an object lesson in what would happen to Chinese citizens who aided "barbarians". Despite Lin Huan's remote location, Qianlong secured his return to face punishment and he too was executed. At the same time he ordered the apprehension and interrogation of any members of Lin's family attempting to leave the country. The effect of the order was such that residents along the coast no longer dared to use their familiar sea routes to Jakarta. The single port trading system based around Canton would remain in force, thus dashing Flint's hopes for the opening up of Zhejiang. Worse still, in order to keep a tighter rein on foreign traders in Canton, on 24December 1759 the Qing Court proclaimed the "Vigilance Towards Foreign Barbarian Regulations" (
Fángfàn wàiyí guītiáo, 防范外夷规条), also known as the (
Fáng yí wŭ shì, 防夷五事, literally, "Five counter-measures against the barbarians"), which amongst other things forbade foreign trade in the winter and forced western merchants to live in the
Thirteen Factories. After Flint's release he was taken to Whampoa where he boarded the Company ship
Horsenden bound for England. In total, he earned £8,500 from 176066, £6,500 of which was from commission as a supercargo and £2,000 for "hardships suffered" including his imprisonment for three years between December 1759 and November 1762.
Introduction of the soybean to North America During his years in China, Flint had ample opportunity to examine Chinese agriculture practices at first hand. As a result, on his return from the East he teamed up with fellow former East India Company employee
Samuel Bowen, whom he had met on board the Company ship
Success back in 1759, to introduce the
soybean to North America. Bowen, possibly with funding from Flint, acquired land in Georgia where he produced
soy sauce and soy
vermicelli noodles. In 1770, Flint corresponded with noted U.S. statesman and scientist
Benjamin Franklin on the subject of how the Chinese converted callivances (soybeans) into
tofu. Flint's letter is the earliest documented use of the word "tofu" in the English language. ==Notes==