Our passion for tea produced a trade imbalance that the East India Co. addressed by selling Indian opium to China. Imports of the drug increased 10-fold from 1800 to 1839, when the Qing ruler imposed a blockade.
Ironically, Charles Eliot, the British official who triggered the war, "instinctively disliked the opium trade" – but money ruled.
Lovell has produced a wonderfully readable book from this discreditable episode – though scarcely obscure for the Chinese, who objected to Cameron's Remembrance Day poppy when he visited China in 2010.
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