Carl Fredrik Liljevalch

Sr.
Drawing of Liljevalch, circa 1880
Drawing of Liljevalch, c. 1880
Born10 July 1796
Died24 June 1870
NationalitySwedish
Occupation(s)Bussinessman, diplomat

Carl Fredrik Liljevalch Sr. (10 July 1796, in Lund 24 June 1870, in Stockholm) was a Swedish businessman, entrepreneur and diplomat. He was very active in the Swedish forest industry, organizing the country's first two circumnavigations. His son, Carl Fredrik Liljevalch Jr., had an estate which laid the foundation of Stockholm's Liljevalchs konsthall.

Career

In the wake of the First Opium War, King Oscar I sent Liljevalch to China to conclude a commercial treaty with China. In March 1847, Liljevalch and Manchu statesman Qiying codified the Treaty of Canton, which was Sweden-Norway and China's first-ever treaty. The Treaty was almost identical to the Sino-American Treaty of Wanghia, which had been written three years earlier, and it gave Sweden-Norway the same privileges as other treaty powers. The treaty remained in force well into the twentieth century.[1]

On returning home, Liljevalch published an account of his time in China called[2] (China's trade industry and government, and accounts of the education of the Chinese people; their customs and habits; and notices of Japan, Siam, and other.), in 1848. He settled on the island Gotland where he lived for several years, wanting to establish the cultivation of white beets for sugar production.

References

  1. Hofberg, Herman; Heurlin, Frithiof; Millqvist, Viktor; Rubenson, Olof (1906). "II:55 (Svenskt biografiskt handlexikon)". runeberg.org (in Swedish). Retrieved 2023-11-08.
  2. Liljevalch, Carl Fredrik (1848). Chinas handel: industri och statsförfattning, jemte underrättleser om chinesernes folkbilding, seder och bruk, samt notiser on Japan, Siam m. f L. (in Swedish). Tryckt hos Joh. Beckamn.
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