Ming dynasty mercentile/naval trade post Zheng He

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Mr. G
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Re: Ming dynasty mercentile/naval trade post Zheng He

Post by Mr. G »

Thanas wrote:Bearne, that you? :)
Sorry?

If you are wondering my other sources are:

1) http://theunbrokenwindow.com/Developmen ... ennial.pdf, page 95

3) http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/37569/1/Rock%2 ... ero%29.pdf, page 28
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Re: Ming dynasty mercentile/naval trade post Zheng He

Post by Thanas »

We had another user who went inactive a few months ago, who used the same profile picture. Which is what I was asking but you are not him.
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Re: Ming dynasty mercentile/naval trade post Zheng He

Post by PainRack »

Errr....... I'm not sure how you argue that half of the silver mined in the new world didn't go to china, given that your source states that for the extant period being discussed, 75 million ounces went to Asia but 89.7 million ounces went to Europe.
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Re: Ming dynasty mercentile/naval trade post Zheng He

Post by PainRack »

Hmm..........

I'm not sure how to develop my theme further.

The whole point of this thread was to substantiate some claims I made on SDN a few years back, when I pointed out that the beheading of the treasure fleet did not end Ming naval effort in Asia, that indeed, it was the dominant trading/naval power until the advent of Portugeuse sailors a century later. And I shown that the arrival of the Portugeuse indeed, stimulated and expanded trade further than ever seen during Zheng He time.

I think I shown the first point adequately.

The general theme however, was to showcase what 'seems' to me a progression from what was a state monopoly on foreign trade, via the tributary system, to private entrepot trade. The opening up of China so as to speak, a direct inverse to the common perception that the ending of the Ming fleet and a naval ban 100 years later created an isolated China akin to Japan.

Its not that difficult to show that when the Ming dynasty was formed, it was a xenophobic state and relatively isolationist. The founding constitution is based on an agrarian economy built along neo Confucian philosophy and as such, foreign trade was discouraged. Each polity was encouraged to be as self sufficient as possible.

However, as population growth exploded, the economy became more complex than the founder intended. State imperialism/exploitation of resources, along with the tributary system created a... well, a state controlled monopoly on trade. And Zheng He expeditions further stimulated this network, to the extent that merchants were drawn into foreign trade with their foreign counterparts.
What people seems to forget is that the tributary system allowed foreigners to trade into China, while the state government returned 'gifts' to the tributary power.

The ending of Zheng He expeditions did shrink the network, but it didn't shut it down entirely. I think that pending archaeological evidence for proof, it is possible to argue that the state, and merhcants acting alongside the state did continue the tributary trade until the naval ban in the 16th century. The ending of the naval ban then heralded the end of state control over foreign trade and with the isolation of Ming China hinterlands, an entrepot trading network was set up where foreign merchants, including Spanish, Dutch and Portugeuse traders would sell goods to Chinese merchants, be it in Taiwan, Manila, Macao. and Chinese merchants would then resell it in China.

A switch from state trade to private.

But I have no idea how to actually.... buttress this viewpoint....... Any ideas?
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Re: Ming dynasty mercentile/naval trade post Zheng He

Post by PainRack »

I'm waiting for the library reservation of AYUTTHAYA VENICE OF THE EAST to come through but based on some museum and catalogue visits.....
http://www.academia.edu/4907251/Ayuttha ... _Thammarat

A short historical blurb on the history of Bangkok, Malacca and the links to the Chinese trade.


The Chinese had been relying on a maritime trade between South China to link it to India, a route that became more important with the collapse of the Silk road. One of the records of this route rests on records such as Tang San Zhang,
http://www.vbtutor.net/xiyouji/history.htm
and fragmentary records from the Yuan dynasty which describe Singapore as Dragon Tooth Strait.


We can trace the history of the Ming trade however, through the impact it has on subsidary cities such as Malacca or Bangkok.

The history of Malacca should be obvious now. Zheng He expedition brought Malacca under the aegis of the Ming, protecting the Malacca Sultunate from the grasp of the Ayutthayan Empire. Trade was conducted under the aegis of both entrepot trade as well as the tributary system. Despite Siam attempts, Malacca would remain free until the Portugeuse successfully invaded and captured it.


At this point in time, the Thai began their own food revolution. From the 15th century onwards, the Thai began using floating rice grains, which allowed them to increase their food cultivation in the Chao Praya River delta, creating a surplus that was used for external trade.

For the purpose of facillating this trade, Bangkok(and the subsidary customs stations downriver) was founded.

Unfortunately, we don't have much extant records of the Ming Chinese trade with Bangkok, most of the details were those during the Qing. However, the Portugeuse and the Dutch in particular soon became the main traders with the Ayutthayan Kingdom and it is from their records that we see the scale of the Thai trade the description of customs stations, disarming of ships and arms before entry into the River delta, the scope of goods available, with both local Thai teak and ivory, rice and other goods, being traded for luxury goods from the Chinese...... such as the ceramics highlighted in the post above.


Any historical focus is rightfully on the European contacts, given the scale and scope of their trade with Bangkok, however, we also gleam from both the English and Dutch trading factories that Ming ships were also prevalent and participating in this trade in the early 17th century.
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Re: Ming dynasty mercentile/naval trade post Zheng He

Post by PainRack »

With regards to Ming merchants, I'm...... trying to find academic references but apparently, based on proclaimations made from the official gazetteers, the Ming merchants had become wealthy and powerful enough that they routinely supplied loans and were solicited by officials to subsidise civic infrastructure, along the lines of Roman citizens of the past.


Some of them also used such official links to either lobby or coerce profitable licenses, such as wine or salt licenses. Due to such lobbying and the impact of the Confucian debate, an Emperor even liberalised and allowed free market production of wine.. before it was reversed for its profitable revenues.
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Re: Ming dynasty mercentile/naval trade post Zheng He

Post by PainRack »

Zhilong, the father of Koxinga who invaded Dutch owned Taiwan was an outlier.

From Lost Colony by Tonio Andrade, Zhilong fled China to Macau and would serve as a translator to the Dutch.

The Dutch had ultimately settled Taiwan as they did not wish to contest the Ming army on the mainland, however, Lost Colony points out that they made contact with the local minority Min pirates, who were then part of the Wukou pirates in an attempt to control trade with China.

Zhilong would become one of the most feared pirate, because from one ship financed by the Dutch as a dubious form of privateer, he would rise to own over 4 hundred junks pillaging China.

On one trip in his early career, limping into Zealandia with damaged masts and holed hull, the Dutch allowed the pirate Zhilong to dock and received as part of their booty one hundred and sixty pieces of eight.

Later on, Zhilong would hand over 9 captured junks in 1626,with a cargo worth over 20 thousand Chinese taels of silver to the Dutch governor , with a modern price of 5 million USD....

Contrary to Wang, the Ming couldn't defeat Zhilong via numbers as his fleet had been partially equipped with Dutch cannons. Indeed, the Ming desperate attempt to reverse engineer this gap apparently led to the Ming salvaging Dutch wrecks so as to examine the cannons.


https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zheng_Zhilong

Lost Colony also details how Zhilong eventual allegiance to the Ming dynasty led to him creating a 'modern' junk fleet and the battle of LIulao Bay.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Liaoluo_Bay

This fleet was sunk by Putnam in a sneak attack.


Interestingly , Lost Colony also details how the Chinese viewed the Dutch warships, with the entire fleet fleeing before Putnam punitive attacks and coastal town raided before Zheng fireship attack. The only fleet that was viewed as able to handle the Dutch was Zhilong modern European style junks. Which was sunk.

Reinforcements from other fleets was not viewed as adequate to defeat the Dutch gunline, resulting in the decision for fireship attack, using the capital ships as fireships as a diversion. Lost Colony details Putnam viewing the superior numbers as inconsequential.



It would appear that this pattern repeats itself decades later,as Lost Colony focuses itself on Koxingxia invasion of Taiwan and has an interesting epilogue where the Dutch sends a small squadron to revenge itself for the loss.

It linked up with the Qing navy for manpower,and in a fleet battle, the Ming elements promptly fled before the Dutch after a small skirmish.... Only for the Qjng fleet pincer which was closing the trap to flee before the Ming.


It's.... Answer some questions brought up by Thanas and Simon in this thread and the other and well,shows how ignorant I am of this chapter in history still.

I was aware that the government didn't build modern ships capable of having a gunline capable of challenging a Sea Beggar or Galleon, but apparently, it was built by private hands instead.
The paper cited is behind paywall so I couldn't see How the Ming salvaged wrecks to reverse engineer cannons but the invasion of Taiwan shows that the Europeans cannon and military fortification tech was still leaps more advanced than the Chinese.


Still, this short excerpt shows the size of China private navies and shipyards, the size of the Chinese pirates basing themselves in Min, Japan and etc and the values of the cargoes hijacked during this period of naval trade ban .

It also shows how the Ming military was severely technologically behind the Europeans, their attempts to catch up and how they used numbers and deception tactics to make do for their tactical and technological deficiencies
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Re: Ming dynasty mercentile/naval trade post Zheng He

Post by PainRack »

https://mikedashhistory.com/2016/10/31/ ... -makassar/



This is a history that remains comparatively little-known, not least because it involves no Europeans. But, since it so subverts the popular conception of what actually went on in Australia, it is a story well worth telling. In this history, Aboriginal Australians not only met and worked – often on terms of easy friendship and equality – with peoples from cultures quite different from their own; they also lived and sometimes travelled with them. Perhaps the most startling outcome of this series of events was a surreal encounter between the first group of white explorers to penetrate the deep interior of the north and an Aborigine who – they were amazed to find – already spoke a little English, picked up in the course of a voyage he'd made to Singapore. But surely the most fascinating was the creation (decades, probably, before Cook came ashore at Botany Bay, and perhaps as early as the 17th century) of a small Aboriginal community in the busy port of Makassar, in Sulawesi: that extraordinary island, all peninsulas, that lies in the heart of the East Indies, and looks like nothing so much as a child's sketch of a dinosaur.
I was aware of the LARGER blog topic but NOT this factoid, which tickled me endlessly.



The myth that Australian aborgines were isolated, didn't know how to make simple things like boats and etc is entrenched in popular culture. While academics has worked to repulse the colonial narrative, it still present in modern day biases.





Contrary to Australia being isolated and Aborgines being utter primitives, the same myths the British used to justify taking over the land in America, we now know of a vast trade network that links the Aborgines to the lands of China and India. Tasmania and her islands were key to this, as they formed the closest bridge to SEA and the Pacific peoples and Malay traders like Bugis ( shut up, I'm not going to go into the whole complicated Malayness and the histories/books and just classify everyone who lived in the Pennisula and the surrounding islands into Indonesia as Malay for the sake of this post )



Posters may be reminded of how the Ming Dynasty had extensive trade links with the world, the Naval Silk road so as to speak, which became ever more important as Arab traders and etc changed the landlocked Silk Road.



While the mainland trade was in necessities such as rice (Vietnam and Thailand), SEA island trade was in luxuries such as sea cucumber, spices, turtle shells and etc. And this is where the Australians come in.





I was aware previously that Tasmanian natives participated in the trade. What I did NOT know was that this was naturally a call to adventure for other aborginals, who would join in the sailing trade and venture up north as far as Singapore to engage in such trade. The blogpost goes very mildly into the Malay trade and how the Dutch Indonesian Colonies, the tariffs and permit system led to rampant smuggling. Discussion of the Malay trade is .... Impossible, since eventually we need to talk about the Dutch,Portugues and British rivalry, the global spice trade and then how that transited to the Clipper tea trade and the contentions between Malay historians pointing out that Malay piracy was actually Malay kingdoms enforcing their sovereignty and not the European narrative of piracy.





Suffice to say that this... Ended up in the hilarious tale of a British exploration mission, likely lost and starving, relying on the Australians to save their lives ... Finding out that one of them spoke English because he had previously sailed to Singapore and learnt English there.
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Re: Ming dynasty mercentile/naval trade post Zheng He

Post by Solauren »

At this point, I don't know why anyone believes 'colonial narrative' about anything.
I've been asked why I still follow a few of the people I know on Facebook with 'interesting political habits and view points'.

It's so when they comment on or approve of something, I know what pages to block/what not to vote for.
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Re: Ming dynasty mercentile/naval trade post Zheng He

Post by The_Saint »

Ummm.... not to be negative but how does Tasmania play a key role in trade to South East Asia when it's on the complete opposite side of Australia. Trade in penguins?

I think someone has mixed Tasmania with Timor.
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