Dr. YANG Taoyu2025-03-192025-03-192025Urban History, 2025, vol. 52(3), pp. 472-478.0963-92681469-8706http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/10732The modern history of Tianjin, a northern port city in China, offers an intriguing urban case for scholars interested in comparative colonial practices. From the 1860s to the 1940s, Tianjin was home to up to nine foreign concessions and a sequence of different Chinese municipalities. While much scholarship on colonial history has focused on the interactive dynamics between the colonizer and the colonized, Tianjin’s colonial past draws attention to the multiplicity, multilateralism and multilayered trajectories at the heart of the colonial experiences of both imperialist powers and the Chinese. At the heart of this short survey are some reflections on the multi-imperial dimensions of the city of Tianjin. It also explains how the multi-imperial dimensions operated in Tianjin in its treaty-port incarnation and offers some considerations of how the Tianjin case contributes to broader historiographical conversations germane to the imperial–global–urban complex.enThe multi-imperial dimensions in treaty-port Tianjin and its historiographical significancePeer Reviewed Journal Article10.1017/S0963926824000440