| 1882 Perron map MACAU / MACAO, CHINA, #97 |
Nice small map titled Macao, from wood engraving with fine detail and clear impression, approx. size with margins is 20.5 x 15.5 cm. From La Nouvelle Géographie universelle, la terre et les hommes, 19 vol. (1875-94), great work of Elisee Reclus. Cartographer is Charles Perron.
Macau
special administrative region (Pinyin: tebie xingzhengqu;
Wade-Giles romanization: t'e-pieh hsing-cheng-ch'ü) of China, on the country's
southern coast. Macau is located on the southwestern corner of the Pearl (Zhu)
River (Chu Chiang) estuary (at the head of which is the port of Guangzhou
[Canton]) and stands opposite the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, which
is some 25 miles (40 km) away on the eastern side of the estuary. Macau
comprises a small, narrow peninsula projecting from the mainland province of
Guangdong and includes the islands of Taipa and Coloane. Extending up a hillside
is the city of Macau, which occupies almost the entire peninsula. The name
Macau, or Macao (Pinyin: Aomen; Wade-Giles romanization: Ao-men), is derived
from the Chinese Ama-gao, or “Bay of Ama,” for Ama, the patron goddess of
sailors.
History
The first Portuguese ship anchored in the Pearl River estuary in 1513, and
further Portuguese visits followed regularly. Trade with China commenced in
1553. Four years later Portuguese paying tribute to China settled in Macau,
which became the official and principal entrepôt for all international trade
with China and Japan and an intermediary port for ships traveling from Lisbon to
Nagasaki (at the time, Japan's only outport for trade); China, nonetheless,
still refused to recognize Portuguese sovereignty over the territory. The first
governor was appointed in the 17th century, but the Portuguese remained largely
under the control of the Chinese. Missionaries carried over on Portuguese ships
transformed Macau into an East Asian centre of Christianity. Even though China's
trade with the outside world was gradually centralized in Guangzhou (Canton)
toward the end of the 18th century, merchants were allowed into Guangzhou only
during the trading season—from November to May—and the international merchant
community established itself at Macau. By the mid-19th century the British
colony of Hong Kong had surpassed Macau in trade, and within a few years the
merchants had largely deserted the Portuguese possession, which never again was
a major entrepôt.
In the 1930s and '40s Macau, declared a neutral territory during the
Sino-Japanese War and World War II, became a refuge for both Chinese and
Europeans. The Chinese population in the territory continued to grow when the
communist government assumed power in China in 1949. In 1951 Portugal officially
made Macau an overseas province. Following a military coup in Portugal in 1974,
the government allotted more administrative autonomy and economic independence
to the territory. The constitution promulgated in 1976 established the
Legislative Assembly, which was dominated by the minority Portuguese. Until
diplomatic relations were solidified between Portugal and the communist
government in China in 1979, discussions on transferring Macau to Chinese
control were fruitless.
In March 1984 the Portuguese governor dissolved the assembly in response to
opposition within the government to extend the right to vote to the Chinese
majority. A few months later new elections, which included Chinese suffrage,
finally brought a significant number of Chinese deputies into the government. In
April 1987 Portugal and China reached an agreement to return Macau to Chinese
rule in 1999, using the Hong Kong Joint Declaration between Britain and China as
a model. They agreed to provisions under the Basic Law that would ensure the
autonomy of Macau for 50 years after the start of Chinese rule. These included
Macau's right to elect local leaders, the right of its residents to travel
freely, and the right to maintain its way of life, both economically and
socially. Defense and foreign policy matters were to be administered by China,
and those living in Macau without Portuguese passports would become Chinese
citizens. Elections continued to turn out record numbers of voters and a Chinese
majority legislature. On Dec. 20, 1999, Macau became a special administrative
region under Chinese sovereignty, as Hong Kong had in 1997.
The period since reunification has been peaceful and marked by increasing
prosperity. Much of the region's economic growth has come from the tremendous
expansion in gambling and gaming since 2000, which transformed Macau into one of
the world's largest gambling centres (in terms of revenue). Tourism also has
risen sharply from levels in the 1990s. Major infrastructure projects have
included continued land reclamation throughout the region and a third bridge
(opened 2005) between Macau Peninsula and Taipa Island. The political situation
has been stable, with orderly legislative elections. Ho Hau Wah (Edmund Ho) was
named Macau's first chief executive at reunification in 1999; he was reelected
to a second term in 2004.