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List of ambassadors of China to Peru

Coordinates: 12°05′49″S 77°02′56″W / 12.097059°S 77.048951°W / -12.097059; -77.048951
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Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the People's Republic of China to the Republic of Peru
中华人民共和国驻秘鲁共和国特命全权大使 (Chinese)
Incumbent
Song Yang
since September 29, 2022
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China
Embassy of China, Lima
Inaugural holderChen Lanbin
Formation11 December 1875; 148 years ago (1875-12-11)
Abolished1971 (ROC)

The Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the People's Republic of China to the Republic of Peru[a] is the official representative of the People's Republic of China to the Republic of Peru.[1] The ambassador in Lima, appointed by the Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC), services the Embassy of the People's Republic of China in Peru.

Background

China and Peru first established relations with the signing of a treaty in Tianjin on June 26, 1874.[2][3] Peru's first resident ambassador was named the next year, assuming his duties on May 20, 1878, while the Chinese ambassador would only reach Peru in 1883, after the War of the Pacific.[2][4][5] Relations between both states started with the Coolie Trade and matured during the 'Hundred Years weakness and poverty' (Wang, 1993) from the 1840s to 1949 of the impoverished Qing China, followed by a republic divided by civil wars and invaded by Japan.[6]

After the establishment of the Republic of China, Peru maintained its relations with the new Kuomintang government. In 1944, the diplomatic status of the two countries was raised to embassy level, and high-level officials of the two countries exchanged frequent visits in the 1950s and 1960s.[7] As a result of the Chinese Civil War, Peru closed its embassy in Beijing in 1946.[8]

In 1971, under the military government of Juan Velasco Alvarado, Peru established relations with the People's Republic of China on November 2, 1971,[9] with the Republic of China severing its relations and closing its embassy in Lima as a result,[7][10]: 4  and the PRC opening its embassy the following year. As such, Peru became the third Latin American country to recognize the Beijing-based government.[11]

In May 1978, the Republic of China (Taiwan) established a "Far East Trade Center" in Lima, renamed the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Peru on November 5, 1990, under an executive order approved by then president Alberto Fujimori.

List of representatives

Name Appointment Arrival Credentials Removed Resignation Rank Title Head of state
1875: China and Peru formally establish relations; the ambassador in Washington, D.C. becomes accredited to Peru
Chen Lanbin 陈兰彬 December 11, 1875 June 24, 1881 2M IE Guangxu
Cheng Tsao-Ju 郑藻如 June 24, 1881 July 1884 July 26, 1885
Zhang Yinhuan 張蔭桓 July 27, 1885 June 20, 1888 June 27, 1888 September 28, 1889
Tsui Kwo Yin 崔國因 March 31, 1889 March 1, 1891 March 6, 1891 September 2, 1893 March 17, 1891
Yang Yü[12] 楊儒 February 8, 1893 November 23, 1896
Wu Ting-fang 伍廷芳 November 23, 1896 October 26, 1902
Liang Cheng 梁誠 July 13, 1902 July 3, 1902
Wu Ting-fang 伍廷芳 September 23, 1907 June 24, 1909 July 2, 1909 December 17, 1909
Zhang Yintang 張蔭棠 August 12, 1909 Xuantong
Alfred Sao-ke Sze[b] 施肇基 October 25, 1911
1913: China and Peru formally reestablish relations on May 15
Liu Shih-hsunBR 刘式训 December 31, 1913 May 14, 1914 M E Yuan Shikai
Wu Chin-lin 吳振麟 December 26, 1913 May 11, 1914 2S* CdA
Hsia Yi-TingBR 夏詒霆 February 11, 1918 February 11, 1921 March 5, 1921 January 1925 M E Feng Guozhang
Lo Tsung-yee 羅忠詒 September 17, 1920 December 14, 1923 1S* CdA Xu Shichang
Shih Yu-ming 史悠明 August 29, 1923 July 1926 1S CdA Gao Lingwei
Shi Zhaoxiang[13] 施肇祥 February 14, 1926 June 1926 January 6, 1929 M E Duan Qirui
Wang Teh-fen 王德棻 August 29, 1928 January 6, 1929 March 5, 1929 3S CdA Tan Yankai
Wei Tze-ching 魏子京 January 21, 1929 March 5, 1929 September 6, 1930 1S CdA Chiang Kai-shek
September 6, 1930 September 6, 1930 March 7, 1931 A(a) CdA
March 7, 1931 March 21, 1931 August 21, 1931 January 23, 1934 M E
Li Jun 李骏 March 2, 1934 August 2, 1934 August 6, 1934 October 24, 1944 M E Lin Sen
1944: Chinese legation upgrated to embassy on September 1
Li Jun 李骏 September 1, 1944 December 20, 1944 M CdA Chiang Kai-shek
Pao Chun-chienBO 保君建 October 24, 1944 December 20, 1944 December 22, 1944 February 20, 1956 AEP
Hsu Shu-hsiBO 徐淑希 February 20, 1956 April 7, 1956 April 30, 1956 December 19, 1962 February 2, 1963
Senba P.W. SengBO[14] 孫邦華 April 20, 1963 June 16, 1963 June 25, 1963 March 18, 1967 May 30, 1967
Liu Tsung-han 劉宗翰 March 18, 1967 June 5, 1967 June 10, 1967 November 4, 1971
1971: Commercial office opened by the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade in Peru
Wang Yanchang 王言昌 September 1971 November 1971 Director Mao Zedong
1971: China (PRC) and Peru formally establish relations on November 2
Wang Yanchang 王言昌 November 1971 February 1972 C CdA Zhou Enlai
Jiao Ruoyu 焦若愚 December 15, 1971 February 1, 1972 February 9, 1972 January 2, 1977 AEP
Wang Ze 王泽 May 1977 May 6, 1977 May 25, 1977 May 1981
Xu Huang 徐晃 November 1981 December 1981 March 24, 1984[c] Zhao Ziyang
Yang Mai 杨迈 October 1984 October 23, 1984 March 1988
Zhu Xiangzhong 朱祥忠 June 1988 June 3, 1988 June 21, 1988 October 5, 1990 Li Peng
Dai Shiqi 戴诗琪 October 1990 October 19, 1990 August 1993
Chen Jiuchang 陈久长 September 1993 September 13, 1993 November 1996
Ren Jingyu 任景玉 November 1996 December 1996 October 2000
Mai Guoyan 麦国彦 October 2000 October 30, 2000 December 2004 Zhu Rongji
Yin Hengmin 殷恒民 December 2004 December 30, 2004 January 5, 2005 February 2007 Wen Jiabao
Gao Zhengyue 高正月 February 2007 February 25, 2007 February 28, 2007 July 2009
Zhao Wuyi 赵五一 August 2009 August 5, 2009 August 7, 2009 November 2011
Huang Minhui[15] 黄敏慧 November 2011 November 15, 2011 November 18, 2011 June 2015
Jia Guide[16] 贾桂德 July 2015 July 21, 2015 August 20, 2015 May 2019 Li Keqiang
Liang Yu 梁宇 November 2019 November 9, 2019 December 11, 2019 July 2022
Song Yang 宋扬 August 2022 August 30, 2022 September 29, 2022

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Chinese: 中华人民共和国驻秘鲁共和国特命全权大使; pinyin: Zhōnghuá rénmín gònghéguó zhù bìlǔ gònghéguó tèmìng quánquán dàshǐ; Spanish: Embajador Extraordinario y Plenipotenciario de la República Popular China ante la República del Perú
  2. ^ Unable to travel due to the Xinhai revolution.
  3. ^ Died in office.

References

  1. ^ Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China, Chinese Ambassadors to Peru, [1], 驻秘鲁共和国历任大使, [2]
  2. ^ a b Chong Geng, Andrés Humberto (April 2003). "Breve historia de las relaciones sino-peruanas". China Today.
  3. ^ "La inmigración china en el Perú (1850-1890)". Boletín de la Sociedad Peruana de Medicina Interna. 5 (3). 1992.
  4. ^ Basadre Grohmann, Jorge (2014). Historia de la República del Perú [1822-1933]. Vol. 5. El Comercio. p. 357. ISBN 978-612-306-353-5.
  5. ^ García Corrochano, Luis (2019). "Las relaciones entre Perú y China en perspectiva histórica". La conexión China en la Política exterior del Perú en el siglo XXI (PDF) (in Spanish). Lima: PUCP. p. 61. ISBN 9781909890459.
  6. ^ Park, Jae (2013). "Cultural artefact, ideology export or soft power? Confucius Institute in Peru". International Studies in Sociology of Education. 23: 1–16. doi:10.1080/09620214.2013.770205. S2CID 143873899.
  7. ^ a b "駐處與駐地關係" [Residency and Resident Relations [between the Republic of China and Peru]]. Portal of Republic of China (Taiwan) Diplomatic Missions.
  8. ^ García Corrochano 2019, p. 64.
  9. ^ Wolfgang Bartke (1981). "The diplomatic service of the People's Republic of China as of June 1981". news.xinhuanet.com. Instituts für Asienkunde. p. 110. Archived from the original on October 17, 2015. Retrieved 2017-04-23.
  10. ^ Zhang, Xiaoxu (2022-09-19). "La identidad política de los inmigrantes chinos en el Perú con su país de origen: a principios de la década 1970s". Ibero-América Studies. 4 (2): 30–38. doi:10.55704/ias.v4i2.04. S2CID 252402046.
  11. ^ Aquino, Carlos (2021-03-13). "Perú y China: Dos pueblos, un destino común". El Peruano.
  12. ^ Yang Yu
  13. ^ [3]Shih Chao-ch'Ang
  14. ^ Senba P.W. Seng
  15. ^ "Lista del Cuerpo Diplomático, Organismos Internacionales y Cuerpo Consular" (PDF). Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores. 2015-03-01.
  16. ^ Directorio de Cooperación Técnica Internacional 2018-2019 (PDF) (in Spanish). Instituto Nacional de Estadística e Informática. 2018.

12°05′49″S 77°02′56″W / 12.097059°S 77.048951°W / -12.097059; -77.048951