Burlingame Treaty

E846406

The Burlingame Treaty was an 1868 agreement between the United States and China that expanded diplomatic relations, affirmed mutual rights of travel and residence, and marked a brief period of more open and equal Sino-American engagement.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Burlingame Treaty canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf bilateral treaty
international agreement
treaty between the United States and China
affirmed China’s right of eminent domain
China’s territorial integrity
aimedTo expand Sino-American diplomatic relations
place Sino-American relations on a more equal footing
promote free migration between the United States and China
allowed Chinese citizens to travel and reside in the United States
Chinese students to study in the United States
U.S. citizens to travel and reside in China
alsoKnownAs Sino-American Treaty of 1868 NERFINISHED
characterizedAs brief high point in 19th-century U.S.–China relations
countrySignatory Qing dynasty NERFINISHED
United States of America NERFINISHED
dateSigned 1868-07-28
encouraged Chinese immigration to the United States
U.S. missionaries and educators in China
followedBy Angell Treaty NERFINISHED
Chinese Exclusion Act NERFINISHED
grantedRight freedom of movement for citizens of each country in the other
most-favored-nation status to China
mutual right of residence
mutual right of travel
historicalPeriod Reconstruction era in the United States NERFINISHED
late Qing dynasty NERFINISHED
language Chinese
English
legalStatusChange later restricted by subsequent U.S. immigration laws
limited U.S. interference in Chinese internal administration
locationSigned Washington, D.C. NERFINISHED
namedAfter Anson Burlingame NERFINISHED
negotiatedBy Anson Burlingame NERFINISHED
negotiatedOnBehalfOf Qing dynasty NERFINISHED
partiallySupersededBy Angell Treaty NERFINISHED
restricted U.S. interference with Chinese religious and cultural practices
signatory Qing government NERFINISHED
United States government NERFINISHED
statedPrinciple mutual equality of nations
noninterference in internal affairs of China
subject Sino-American relations
diplomatic relations
extraterritoriality
immigration
topic rights of Chinese subjects in the United States
rights of U.S. citizens in China
underminedBy Chinese Exclusion Act NERFINISHED
yearSigned 1868

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Anson Burlingame notableWork Burlingame Treaty