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=== China === {{Main|Postal history of China}} [[File:Stamp China 1949 4c on 100 silver ovpt.jpg|thumb|[[China]] 4-cent on 100-dollar silver overprint of 1949]] Some Chinese sources claim mail or postal systems dating back to the [[Xia dynasty|Xia]] or [[Shang dynasty|Shang]] [[list of Chinese dynasties|dynasties]], which would be the oldest mailing service in the world. The earliest credible system of couriers was initiated by the [[Han dynasty]] (206 BCE β 220 CE), who had relay stations every 30 [[li (unit)|li]] (about 15 km) along major routes. The [[Tang dynasty]] (618 to 907 AD) operated a recorded 1,639 posthouses, including maritime offices, employing around 20,000 people. The system was administered by the Ministry of War and private correspondence was forbidden from the network. The [[Ming dynasty]] (1368 to 1644) sought a postal system to deliver mail quickly, securely, and cheaply. Adequate speed was always a problem, because of the slow overland transportation system, and underfunding. Its network had 1,936 posthouses every 60 li along major routes, with fresh horses available every 10 li between them.<ref>Chelsea Zi Wang, "More Haste, Less Speed: Sources of Friction in the Ming Postal System". ''Late Imperial China'' 40.2 (2019): 89β140.</ref> The [[Qing dynasty|Qing]] operated 1,785 posthouses throughout their lands. More efficient, however, was the system linking the international settlements, centered around Shanghai and the Treaty ports. It was the main communication system for China's international trade.<ref>Lane J. Harris, "Stumbling towards empire: the Shanghai Local Post Office, the transnational British community and informal empire in China, 1863β97". ''Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History'' 46.3 (2018): 418β445.</ref>
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