GLI ESORDI E GLI SVILUPPI DELL’EMIGRAZIONE ITALIANA NELLA «VECCHIA SHANGHAI»

After the First Opium War (1839-1842) and the Treaty of Nanjing (1842), Shanghai was opened to international trade, and experienced a period of cosmopolitism and economic growth as far as the Japanese occupation during WWII: the international urban environment of those years has been renamed ‘Old Sh...

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Main Author: Stefano Piastra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Firenze University Press 2019-11-01
Series:Bollettino della Società Geografica Italiana
Online Access:https://riviste.fupress.net/index.php/bsgi/article/view/557
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author Stefano Piastra
author_facet Stefano Piastra
author_sort Stefano Piastra
collection DOAJ
description After the First Opium War (1839-1842) and the Treaty of Nanjing (1842), Shanghai was opened to international trade, and experienced a period of cosmopolitism and economic growth as far as the Japanese occupation during WWII: the international urban environment of those years has been renamed ‘Old Shanghai’. Italians migrated to the ‘Old Shanghai’ in several phases, with different purposes. At first (1850s-1860s), some Italian traders, known as ‘semai’ (mainly from Piedmont and Lombardy), were involved in silkworm eggs trade, in the framework of the attempts to defeat the pébrine (a silkworms disease which threatened the silk sector in Europe) through the importation of pébrine-free silkworm eggs in the West. Even the institution, in these years, of a Consulate of the Kingdom of Sardinia in Shanghai (1860), later become Consulate of the Kingdom of Italy, was indirectly linked to Italian business in silkworm eggs and silk in the city. Later (1870s-1880s), Italian managers and supervisors of steam silk filatures, mainly from Milan area (where silk sector was very well developed and based on an industrial approach), moved to the ‘Old Shanghai’, serving for English-, American- or German-owned silk companies. At the dawn of the 20th century, several Lombard businessmen got enough know-how, funds and business reputation to open in Shanghai their own silk filatures or silk import/export companies. Italian community in the ‘Old Shanghai’ was small and in a minority report if compared with the international environment of the city: this is the reason why the recruitment of Italians (mainly, Lombards) as silk filature supervisors, employees or business partners was based on mutual trust, kinship or previous work experience as colleagues (in Lombardy or in Shanghai), more than CV or independent references.
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spelling doaj-art-ab0878a34f29428cb00ac880b84cd9cd2025-08-20T03:57:04ZengFirenze University PressBollettino della Società Geografica Italiana1121-78202019-11-01103-410.13128/bsgi.v10i3-4.557GLI ESORDI E GLI SVILUPPI DELL’EMIGRAZIONE ITALIANA NELLA «VECCHIA SHANGHAI»Stefano PiastraAfter the First Opium War (1839-1842) and the Treaty of Nanjing (1842), Shanghai was opened to international trade, and experienced a period of cosmopolitism and economic growth as far as the Japanese occupation during WWII: the international urban environment of those years has been renamed ‘Old Shanghai’. Italians migrated to the ‘Old Shanghai’ in several phases, with different purposes. At first (1850s-1860s), some Italian traders, known as ‘semai’ (mainly from Piedmont and Lombardy), were involved in silkworm eggs trade, in the framework of the attempts to defeat the pébrine (a silkworms disease which threatened the silk sector in Europe) through the importation of pébrine-free silkworm eggs in the West. Even the institution, in these years, of a Consulate of the Kingdom of Sardinia in Shanghai (1860), later become Consulate of the Kingdom of Italy, was indirectly linked to Italian business in silkworm eggs and silk in the city. Later (1870s-1880s), Italian managers and supervisors of steam silk filatures, mainly from Milan area (where silk sector was very well developed and based on an industrial approach), moved to the ‘Old Shanghai’, serving for English-, American- or German-owned silk companies. At the dawn of the 20th century, several Lombard businessmen got enough know-how, funds and business reputation to open in Shanghai their own silk filatures or silk import/export companies. Italian community in the ‘Old Shanghai’ was small and in a minority report if compared with the international environment of the city: this is the reason why the recruitment of Italians (mainly, Lombards) as silk filature supervisors, employees or business partners was based on mutual trust, kinship or previous work experience as colleagues (in Lombardy or in Shanghai), more than CV or independent references.https://riviste.fupress.net/index.php/bsgi/article/view/557
spellingShingle Stefano Piastra
GLI ESORDI E GLI SVILUPPI DELL’EMIGRAZIONE ITALIANA NELLA «VECCHIA SHANGHAI»
Bollettino della Società Geografica Italiana
title GLI ESORDI E GLI SVILUPPI DELL’EMIGRAZIONE ITALIANA NELLA «VECCHIA SHANGHAI»
title_full GLI ESORDI E GLI SVILUPPI DELL’EMIGRAZIONE ITALIANA NELLA «VECCHIA SHANGHAI»
title_fullStr GLI ESORDI E GLI SVILUPPI DELL’EMIGRAZIONE ITALIANA NELLA «VECCHIA SHANGHAI»
title_full_unstemmed GLI ESORDI E GLI SVILUPPI DELL’EMIGRAZIONE ITALIANA NELLA «VECCHIA SHANGHAI»
title_short GLI ESORDI E GLI SVILUPPI DELL’EMIGRAZIONE ITALIANA NELLA «VECCHIA SHANGHAI»
title_sort gli esordi e gli sviluppi dell emigrazione italiana nella vecchia shanghai
url https://riviste.fupress.net/index.php/bsgi/article/view/557
work_keys_str_mv AT stefanopiastra gliesordieglisviluppidellemigrazioneitaliananellavecchiashanghai