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Timeline of the Ming treasure voyages

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Voyages of Zheng He (1405 - 1433).

This is a timeline of the Ming dynasty treasure voyages from 1405 to 1433.

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Transcription

Hi, I’m John Green; this is Crash Course: World History and today we’re going to do some compare and contrast, because that’s what passes for hip in world history circles. Right, so you’ve probably heard of Christopher Columbus who in 1492 sailed the ocean blue and discovered America, a place that had been previously discovered only by millions of people-- Mr Green, Mr Green! Columbus was just a lucky idiot. Yeah, no. Here’s a little rule of thumb, Me from the Past: If you are not an expert in something, don’t pretend to be an expert. This is going to serve you well both in your academic career and in your Kissing Career. MOVING ON. [music intro] [music intro] [music intro] [music intro] [music intro] [music intro] So unlike Me from the Past, I’d argue that Columbus has a deserved reputation in history— [Save his Harry Potter directional stint] but was he really the greatest sailor of the 15th Century? Well, let’s meet the other contestants. [playing for a lifetime supply of Garlique] In the red corner, we have Zheng He, who, when it comes to ocean-going voyages was the first major figure of the 15th century. And in the blue corner is Vasco da Gama, from scrappy little Portugal, who managed to introduce Europeans to the Indian Ocean trade network. Columbus, you have to sit in the polka-dotted corner. [until you learn special effects are a privilege, not a crutch] As you’ll no doubt remember from our discussion of Indian Ocean trade, it was dominated by Muslim merchants, involved ports in Africa and the Middle East and India and Indonesia, and China and it made a lot of people super rich. This last point explains why our three contestants were so eager to set sail. Well, that and the ceaseless desire of human beings to discover things and contract scurvy. Let’s begin with Zheng He, who is probably the greatest admiral you’ve never have heard of. Couple of important things about Zheng He: First, he was a Muslim. That may seem strange until you consider that by the late 14th century China had long experience with Muslims, especially when they were ruled by, wait for it.... The Mongols. [Hark! The commotive, cacophonic caterwauling of clattering conquerors!] Secondly, Zheng He was a eunuch. (He was one of a kind?] Fortunately, 15th century China had excellent general anesthesia, so I’m sure it didn’t hurt at all when they castrated him— what’s that, Stan? They didn’t have any anesthesia? Oh, boy. Oh. STAN, I’M SEEING IT! I can see, AH AH AHHHH. Stan! SHOW ME SOMETHING CUTE RIGGHT NOW! Oh, hi there kitty! How’d you get in that little teacup? Thank you, Stan. Right, so Zheng He rose from humble beginnings to lose both of his testicles, and become the greatest admiral in Chinese history. Let’s go to the thought Bubble. Between 1405 and 1433, Zheng He led seven voyages throughout the Indian Ocean, the expeditions of the so-called treasure ships, and they were huge. Columbus’ first voyage consisted of three ships. Zheng He led an armada of over 300 ships. With a crew of over 27,000— more than half of London’s population at the time. And some of these ships were, well, enormous. The flagships, known as treasure ships, were over 400 feet long and had 7 or more masts. See that little tiny ship there in front of the Treasure Ship? That’s a to-scale rendering of Christopher Columbus’s flagship, the Santa Maria. Zheng He wasn’t an explorer: The Indian Ocean trade routes were already known to him and other Chinese sailors. He visited Africa, India, and the Middle East, and in a way, his journeys were trade missions, but not in the sense of filling his ships up with stuff to be sold later for higher prices. China was the leading manufacturer of quality goods in the world, and there wasn’t anything they actually needed to import. What they needed was prestige and respect so that people would continue to see China as the center of the economic universe, so there was a tribute system through which foreign rulers or their ambassadors would come to China and engage in a debasing ritual called the kowtow wherein they acknowledged the superiority of the Chinese emperor and offered him or her but usually him gifts in return for the right to trade with China. The opportunity to humble yourself before the Chinese emperor was so valuable that many a prince was happy to jump on a treasure ship and sail back to China with Zheng He. Also, these tribute missions brought lots of crazy things to China, including exotic animals: From Africa, Zheng He brought back a zoo’s worth of rhinos, zebras, and even giraffes. Basically, he was like the medieval Chinese Noah. Thanks, Thought Bubble. So the Chinese were world leaders in naval technology, and they wanted to dominate trade here in the Indian Ocean. So why, then, did these voyages end? One reason was that Zheng, He couldn’t live forever, and sure enough, he didn’t. Also his patron, the Yongle Emperor, died. And the emperor’s successors weren’t very interested in maritime trade. They were more concerned with protecting China from its traditional enemies, nomads from the steppe. To do this, they built a Rather Famous Wall. The Great Wall was mostly built under the Ming with resources that they had because they stopped building gigantic ships. Just imagine what might have happened if the Ming emperors had embraced a different strategy. One that was based on outreach instead of isolationism. And now, to the blue corner… Representing Portuguese exploration, we have Vasco da Gama. Couple things about Portugal: First, it has a fair bit of coast line. Secondly it was also relatively resource poor, which meant it relied upon trade to grow. Also, the Iberian peninsula was the only place in Europe where Muslims could be found in large numbers in the 15th century, which meant the Christian Crusading spirit was quite strong there, presumably because Muslims had brought so much stability and prosperity to the region. And chief among these would-be crusaders was Prince Henry the Navigator, so called because he was not a navigator. [What is in a name, Metta World Peace?] He was, however, a patron, not only of sailors themselves, but of a special school at Sagres in which nautical knowledge was collected and new maps were made, and all kinds of awesome stuff happened. And all that knowledge gave Portuguese sailors a huge competitive advantage when it came to exploration. Henry commissioned sailors to search for two things. First, a path to the Indian Ocean so they could get in on the lucrative spice trade. And second, to find the kingdom of Prester John, a mythical Christian King who was supposed to live in Africa somewhere, so that Henry could have Prester John’s help in a crusade. Da Gama was the first of Henry’s protégés to make it around Africa, and into the Indian Ocean. In 1498, he landed at Calicut, a major trading center on India’s west coast. And when he got there, merchants asked him what he was looking for. He answered with three words: Gold and Christians. Which basically sums up Portugal’s reasons for exploration. So, once the Portuguese breached the Indian Ocean, they didn’t create, like, huge colonies, because there were already powerful empires in the region. Instead, they apparently sat in the middle of the Indian Ocean doing nothing. Actually, they were able to capture & control a number of coastal cities, creating what historians call a “trading post empire.” They could do this thanks to their well-armed ships, which captured cities by firing cannons into city walls like IRL Angry Birds. But since the Portuguese didn’t have enough people or boats to run the Indian Ocean trade, they had to rely on extortion. [C.R.E.A.M. Get the money- Dollar, dollar bill y'all.] So, Portuguese merchant ships would capture other ships and force them to purchase a permit to trade called a cartaz. And without a cartaz, a merchant couldn’t trade in any of the towns that Portugal controlled. To merchants, who’d plied the Indian Ocean for years in relative freedom, the Portuguese were just glorified pirates, extracting value from trade without adding to its efficiency or volume. So, the cartaz strategy sort of worked for a while, but the Portuguese never really took control of Indian Ocean trade. They were successful enough that their neighbors Spain, became interested in their own route to the Indies, and that brings us to Columbus. But first, let’s dispel some myths: One: Columbus and his crew knew the earth was round. [Some folks still aren't convinced] He was just wrong about the earth’s size. Columbus used Ptolemy’s geography and the Imago Mundi, based on Muslim scholarship— and ended up overestimating the size of Asia and underestimating the size of the oceans. Two: Columbus never thought he’d made it to China. He called the people he encountered “Indians” because he thought that he’d made it to the East Indies, what we know as Indonesia. Three: Columbus was not a lucky idiot. He navigated completely unknown waters primarily relying on a technique known as dead reckoning, in which you figure out your position based on three pieces of information: The direction you’re going, your speed, and the time, which you figure out via hourglass. With only that technology to guide you, its not actually that easy to hit a continent. Come here people who are saying he didn’t hit a continent, that he only hit some islands. Come here. Dahhh! Oh, it’s time for the Open Letter? An open letter to the Line of Demarcation… But first, let’s see what’s in the secret compartment today. Oh, its a globe. T hanks Stan! Just what I always needed. Dear Line of Demarcation, You have so much to teach us about the way that the world used to work, and the way that it works now. In 1494, Pope Alexander VI settled a dispute between Portugal and Spain by dividing the world into two parts: The Spanish part, and the Portuguese part. This whole thing, at least according to Pope Alexander VI, could be split between Spain and Portugal. At least when it came to so-called unclaimed land. I mean, unclaimed by whom? You know all the American Indians were like, “wait, this land is available? In, in that case, we’ll just, we’ll just keep it. If its all the same to you.” Anyway, Line of Demarcation, I have great news for you. What Alexander VI did totally worked. We haven’t had a problem since. Best wishes, John Green. So, Columbus’s first journey (he made four, the last three of which were pretty calamitous) was tiny, and he initially landed on a s mall Caribbean island he called San Salvador in search, like the Portuguese, of Gold and Christians. He was able to convince Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain to fund his expedition by promising riches and conversions of the natives, hopefully to sign them up for yet another crusade. And there’s a long-standing myth that Columbus tricked Ferdinand and Isabella into paying for his trip, but in fact they’d commissioned two different sets of experts to analyze his plans, both of which agreed, he was [totes cray cray]. One called the plan, “Impossible to any educated person.” But even so, Ferdinand and Isabella footed the bill, partly because they were full of Crusading zeal after expelling the Muslims from Spain, and partly because they were desperate to get their hands on some of that pepper richness. [Also some Kleenex, to help with the subsequent sneezy richness?] Columbus of course, failed at finding riches— he returned with neither spices nor gold. He did create some Christians, as we’ll discuss in a future episode, but in terms of goal accomplishment, Columbus was much less successful than either Zheng He or Vasco de Gama. [and most certainly, David Yates] But within two generations of Columbus, Spain would become fantastically wealthy, and for a time they were the leading power in Europe. Columbus’s voyages also had a huge, largely negative, impact on the people the Spanish encountered in the Americas. And excitingly from my perspective, once Columbus returned from San Salvador, we can speak for the first time of a truly world history. Except for you Australia. So who was the greatest mariner of the 15th century? Well, as usual, it depends on your definition of greatness. [Eccleston, Tennant, Smith? Frak it... Adipose?] If you value administrative competence over ill-advised adventure, than Zheng He is certainly the winner. But the reason we remember Columbus over him or Vasco de Gama is that Columbus’s voyages had a lasting impact on the world, even if it wasn’t necessarily a positive one. And that makes me wonder what kind of person you’d want to be: A capable administrator and brilliant sailor like Zheng He? A daring captain like de Gama? Or the bearer of a complicated but famous legacy like Columbus? Let me know in comments. Thanks for watching, and we’ll see you next week. Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan Muller, our script supervisor is Danica Johnson. The show is written by my high school history teacher Raoul Meyer and myself, and our graphics team is Thought Bubble. [Seriously, no Canadians made it past Stanley Cup Round 1?] Last week’s Phrase of the Week was, “You smell pretty.” [missed an opportunity for banjo picking there...] Thanks for that suggestion, by the way. If you want to suggest future phrases of the week, you can do so in comments where you can also guess at this weeks phrase of the week or ask questions about today’s video that will be answered by our team of historians. Thanks for watching Crash Course, and as we say in my home town, Don’t forget you're Stuck In My Heart Now, Where My Blood Belongs.

1370s

Year Date Event
1371 Ma He, son of Hajji, son of Hajji, son of Bayan, son of Ajall Shams al-Din Omar, is born in Kunyang Subdistrict, Yunnan, near Kunming[1]

1380s

Year Date Event
1381 Ming conquest of Yunnan: Ming dynasty invades Yunnan and Ma He is captured; his father Hajji is killed at the age of 39[2]
1385 Ma He is castrated and enters the service of Zhu Di[3]

1390s

Year Date Event
1399 December Jingnan Campaign: Ma He successfully defends Beiping's reservoirs[4]

1400s

Year Date Event
1402 17 July Zhu Di becomes the Yongle Emperor and promotes Ma He to the Grand Director (Taijian) of the Directorate of Palace Servants[4]
1403 4 September Orders are issued for the construction of 200 "seagoing transport ships"[5]
1404 11 February Yongle Emperor confers the surname Zheng on Ma He[6]
1 March Orders are issued for the construction of 50 "seagoing ships"[7]
1405 11 July Zheng He and 27,800 men depart from Nanjing on 255 ships, of which 62 are treasure ships, "bearing imperial letters to the countries of the Western Ocean and with gifts to their kings of gold brocade, patterned silks, and colored silk gauze, according to their status." The fleet proceeds to Liujiagang where it is separated into squadrons and the crews pray to Mazu, goddess of sailors.[8]
August Treasure fleet reaches the mouth of the Min River and assembles at Taiping Anchorage in Changle District[9]
December Treasure fleet departs for Champa and after 15 days arrives at Qui Nhơn, where "most of the men take up fishing for a livelihood"[10]
1406 Treasure fleet visits Malacca and Java before heading up the Straits of Malacca to Aru, Samudera Pasai Sultanate, and Lambri, where the people are described as "very honest and genuine," and from there 3 days to the Andaman Islands, and then 8 more days to the west coast of Ceylon where the king reacts with hostility. The fleet departs for Calicut, which is described as "the Great country of the Western Ocean"[11]
1407 Treasure fleet makes the return voyage and stops at Malacca to pick up Parameswara and envoys[12]
Treasure fleet defeats Chen Zuyi's pirate fleet at Palembang and installs Shi Jinqing as "grand chieftain ruling over the native people of that place"[13]
2 October Treasure fleet arrives at Nanjing[12]
5 October Wang Hao is ordered to refit 249 "sea transport ships" in "preparation for embassies to the countries of the Western Ocean"[14]
23 October Yongle Emperor issues orders for the second voyage and to confer formal investiture on the king of Calicut[15]
Yongle Emperor summons Javanese envoys to demand restitution for killing 710 Chinese and settles for 10,000 ounces of gold[16]
29 October Yongle Emperor bestows merit upon the officers and men of the treasure fleet[17]
30 October A eunuch Grand Director departs with an imperial letter for the king of Champa[15]
Zheng He departs with a fleet of 249 ships and takes a route similar to the first voyage with the addition of stops at Jiayile, Abobadan, Ganbali, Quilon, and Cochin[18]
1408 14 February Orders for the construction of 48 treasure ships are issued from the Ministry of Works in Nanjing[19]
1409 January Orders are issued for the third voyage[20]
15 February The Galle Trilingual Inscription is produced[21]
Treasure fleet makes the return voyage and stops at the Similan Islands to cut logs for incense[20]
summer Treasure fleet returns to China[18]
October Zheng He departs with 27,000 men, taking the usual route[21]

1410s

Year Date Event
1410 Ming–Kotte War: Treasure fleet lands at Galle in Ceylon and captures King Vijayabahu VI of the Kingdom of Gampola[21]
1411 6 July Treasure fleet returns to Nanjing[22]
1412 18 December Yongle Emperor issues orders for the fourth voyage[23]
1413 autumn Zheng He departs from Nanjing and takes the usual route with the addition of 4 new destinations: the Maldives, Bitra, Chetlat Island, and Hormuz, which is given the following description: "Foreign ships from every place, together with foreign merchants traveling by land, all come to this territory in order to gather together and buy and sell, and therefore the people of this country are all rich"[24]
1415 Treasure fleet captures Sekandar, a rebel against Zain al-'Abidin, king of the Samudera Pasai Sultanate[25]
12 August Treasure fleet arrives back in Nanjing[26]
13 August Zheng He's colleague is sent on a mission bearing gifts to Bengal[26]
1416 19 November Yongle Emperor bestows gifts upon ambassadors from 18 countries[27]
19 December Yongle Emperor issues orders for the fifth voyage[28]
1417 autumn Zheng He departs China taking the previous route to Hormuz, and then Aden, Mogadishu, Barawa, Zhubu, and Malindi[29]
1419 8 August Treasure fleet returns to China
20 September Ambassadors present exotic animals to the Ming court including a giraffe imported from Somalia by Bengalis[30]
2 October Orders are issued for the construction of 41 treasure ships[19]

1420s

Year Date Event
1421 3 March Orders are issued for the sixth voyage and envoys from 16 countries including Hormuz are given gifts of paper and coin money, and ceremonial robes and linings[31]
14 May Yongle Emperor orders the suspension of the treasure voyages[32]
10 November Orders are issued to Zheng He to provide Hong Bao and envoys from 16 countries passage back to their countries; the treasure fleet takes its usual route to Ceylon where it splits up and heads for the Maldives, Hormuz, and the Arabian states of Djofar, Lasa, and Aden, and the two African states of Mogadishu and Barawa; Zheng He visits Ganbali[33]
1422 Treasure fleet regroups at Samudera Pasai Sultanate and visit Siam before heading back to China[33]
3 September Treasure fleet returns to China bringing envoys from Siam, Samudera Pasai Sultanate, and Aden[34]
1424 27 February Zheng He is sent on a diplomatic mission to Palembang to confer "a gauze cap, a ceremonial robe with floral gold woven into gold patterns in the silk, and a silver seal" on Shi Jinqing's son Shi Jisun[35]
12 August Yongle Emperor dies[36]
7 September Zhu Gaozhi becomes Hongxi Emperor and terminates the treasure voyages[36]
1425 29 May Hongxi Emperor dies[37]
27 June Zhu Zhanji becomes Xuande Emperor[38]
1428 25 March Xuande Emperor orders Zheng He to supervise the reconstruction of the Great Baoen Temple[39]

1430s

Year Date Event
1430 25 May Arrangements are made for the provisions of another voyage[40]
29 June Xuande Emperor issues orders for the seventh voyage[41]
1431 19 January Treasure fleet departs from Nanjing[42]
23 January The fleet stops at an island on the Yangtze to hunt animals[42]
3 February Treasure fleet arrives at Liujiagang[42]
14 March Liujiagang Inscription is erected[43]
8 April Treasure fleet arrives at Changle[42]
December The Changle Inscription is erected and the fleet departs from Changle[43]
16 December Treasure fleet arrives near Fuzhou[44]
1432 27 January Treasure fleet arrives at Vijaya[42]
12 February Treasure fleet departs from Vijaya[42]
7 March Treasure fleet arrives at Surabaya[45]
13 July Treasure fleet departs from Surabaya[45]
24 July Treasure fleet arrives at Palembang[45]
27 July Treasure fleet departs from Palembang[45]
3 August Treasure fleet arrives at Malacca[46]
2 September Treasure fleet departs from Malacca[46]
12 September Treasure fleet arrives at Samudera Pasai Sultanate and Hong Bao and Ma Huan detach from the fleet to visit Bengal[46][47]
2 November Treasure fleet departs from Samudera Pasai Sultanate[46]
14 November Treasure fleet anchors at Great Nicobar Island for three days; the natives there trade coconuts in log boats[48]
28 November Treasure fleet arrives at Beruwala[46]
2 December Treasure fleet departs from Beruwala[46]
10 December Treasure fleet arrives at Calicut[48]
14 December Treasure fleet departs from Calicut[48]
1433 Zheng He dies[49]
Hong Bao and Ma Huan arrive in Calicut and send seven men to Mecca while Hong Bao visits Djofar, Lasa, Aden, Mogadishu, and Barawa before heading back to China[50]
17 January Treasure fleet arrives at Hormuz[48]
9 March Treasure fleet departs from Hormuz and heads back to China[51]
31 March Treasure fleet arrives at Calicut[51]
9 April Treasure fleet departs from Calicut[51]
25 April Treasure fleet arrives at Samudera Pasai Sultanate[51]
1 May Treasure fleet departs from Samudera Pasai Sultanate[51]
9 May Treasure fleet arrives at Malacca[51]
13 June Treasure fleet arrives at Vijaya[51]
17 June Treasure fleet departs from Vijaya[51]
7 July Treasure fleet arrives in China[52]
14 September Envoys from Samudera Pasai Sultanate, Calicut, Cochin, Ceylon, Djofar, Aden, Coimbatore, Hormuz, Kayal, and Mecca present tribute[53]
Ma Huan publishes his Yingya Shenglan[54]
1434 Gong Zhen publishes his Xiyang Fanguo Zhi[54]
1436 Ming dynasty bans building seagoing ships[55]
Fei Xin publishes his Xingcha Shenglan[55]

1460s

Year Date Event
1464 Documents of the treasure voyages are removed from the archives of the Ministry of War and destroyed by Liu Daxia on the basis that they were "deceitful exaggerations of bizarre things far removed from the testimony of people's ears and eyes," and that "the expeditions of Sanbao to the Western Ocean wasted tens of myriads of money and grain, and moreover the people who met their deaths [on these expeditions] may be counted in the myriads. Although he returned with wonderful precious things, what benefit was it to the state? This was merely an action of bad government of which ministers should severely disapprove. Even if the old archives were still preserved they should be destroyed in order to suppress [a repetition of these things] at the root."[56]

References

  1. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 11.
  2. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 12.
  3. ^ Levathes 1996, p. 58.
  4. ^ a b Dreyer 2007, p. 22.
  5. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 104-105.
  6. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 23.
  7. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 105.
  8. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 51-52.
  9. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 52.
  10. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 52-53.
  11. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 53.
  12. ^ a b Dreyer 2007, p. 55.
  13. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 57.
  14. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 62-63.
  15. ^ a b Dreyer 2007, p. 59.
  16. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 63.
  17. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 58.
  18. ^ a b Dreyer 2007, p. 64.
  19. ^ a b Dreyer 2007, p. 104.
  20. ^ a b Dreyer 2007, p. 65.
  21. ^ a b c Dreyer 2007, p. 66.
  22. ^ Duyvendak 1938, p. 361.
  23. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 75.
  24. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 77-78.
  25. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 79.
  26. ^ a b Dreyer 2007, p. 81.
  27. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 82.
  28. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 76.
  29. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 83.
  30. ^ Duyvendak 1938, p. 402.
  31. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 91.
  32. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 138.
  33. ^ a b Dreyer 2007, p. 93.
  34. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 94.
  35. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 57-58.
  36. ^ a b Dreyer 2007, p. 137.
  37. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 140.
  38. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 135.
  39. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 142.
  40. ^ Mills 1970, p. 57.
  41. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 144.
  42. ^ a b c d e f Dreyer 2007, p. 151.
  43. ^ a b Dreyer 2007, p. 145.
  44. ^ Mills 1970, p. 15.
  45. ^ a b c d Dreyer 2007, p. 152.
  46. ^ a b c d e f Dreyer 2007, p. 153.
  47. ^ Mills 1970, p. 35.
  48. ^ a b c d Dreyer 2007, p. 154.
  49. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 165.
  50. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 158.
  51. ^ a b c d e f g h Dreyer 2007, p. 160.
  52. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 161.
  53. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 162-163.
  54. ^ a b Dreyer 2007, p. 219.
  55. ^ a b Dreyer 2007, p. 171.
  56. ^ Dreyer 2007, p. 173.

Bibliography

  • Church, Sally K. (2005), Zheng He: An Investigation into the Plausibility of 450-ft Treasure Ships, Monumenta Serica Institute
  • Dreyer, Edward L. (2007), Zheng He: China and the Oceans in the Early Ming Dynasty, 1405-1433, Pearson Longman
  • Duyvendak, J.J.L. (1938), "The True Dates of the Chinese Maritime Expeditions in the Early Fifteenth Century", T'oung Pao, 34 (5): 341–413, doi:10.1163/156853238X00171
  • Levathes, Louise (1996), When China Ruled the Seas: The Treasure Fleet of the Dragon Throne 1405-1433, Simon & Schuster
  • Mills, J.V.G. (1970), Ying-yai Sheng-lan: 'The Overall Survey of the Ocean's Shores' [1433], Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
  • Needham, Joseph (1971), Science and Civilization in China Volume 4 Part 3, Cambridge At The University Press
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