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    1

    Was Zheng He a Colonialist?

    Tan Ta Sen

    In recent years, some historians began to re-examine the nature and impact of

    the Admiral Zheng Hes expeditions. Lectures, books and articles have been

    published by scholars in China and outside China including Dr. Geoff Wade. These

    publications have enriched our understanding of the subject under study. While most

    writers argue the positive aspects of the Zheng He voyages, Dr. Wade chose to be

    highly critical and is of the opinion that voyages were aggressive and colonialist in

    nature in fact, they constituted acts of aggression and invasion.

    This essay examines some of the arguments presented by Dr. Wade in his

    article published in the journal entitled The Zheng He Voyages: A Reassessment1

    and he reiterated his similar accusations in many seminars held at the Institute of

    Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore and elsewhere in Malaysia. Wade accused

    Zheng He and Emperor Yongle of systematically pursuing a so-called southern

    expansion programme in a three-pronged strategy:

    1. Zheng Hes voyages and Ming maritime proto-colonialism,

    2.

    Ming invasion of Dai Viet (Annam),

    3. Mings invasion and occupation of Yunnan.2

    1 Geoff Wade, The Zheng He Voyages: A Reassessment in JMBRAS, Vol. LXXV!!! Pt. 1,

    2005, 37-582 Ibid., 55.

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    I. Were Zheng He and Emperor Yongle proto-colonialists?

    The following section examines the records of Mings intentions and actions taken in

    connection with the diplomatic relations between the Ming Court and surrounding

    small states.

    Ming Foreign Relations and Tributary Exhanges

    Wade began his first argument that Zheng Hes missions were

    intended to create legitimacy for the usurping emperor, display the might of

    Ming, bring the known polities to demonstrate submission to the Ming, and

    thereby achieve apax Mingthroughout the known world and collect treasures

    for the Court.3

    Emperor Yongle (Zhu Di) was indeed an usurper and he made great efforts to

    legitimize his throne, but he was by no means an expansionist and colonialist. He

    ascended to the throne by a revolt against his nephew, Emperor Jianwen, who was the

    second Emporer of the Ming Dynasty. He was very conscious of the fact that he had

    usurped the throne and was concerned with how history would view him and judge

    his position in history. He would not want to be remembered as a usurper in history.

    His thrones legitimacy was of the utmost importance to him. When he captured

    Nanjing in 1402, he promptly issued an imperial decree to declare himself as

    3 ., .

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    Emperor Hongwus oldest son of the legal wife. He proceeded to make himself a

    great Ming emperor so that he would leave a good legacy behind him. He chose

    foreign lands as the stage to achieve his goal. Zheng Hes historic voyages were

    aimed at expanding Ming Chinas sphere of political influence as wide as possible in

    the western ocean and into new frontiers from Southeast Asia to Africa. Ming China

    under his reign had become the sole superpower in the world and the guardian of

    world peace. Emperor Yongle through Zheng He had achieved his goal and he was

    remembered favourably in history for being the only Chinese emperor who had made

    China a global maritime super power in history. His towering historical image had

    overshadowed his usurpation of the throne. He had created another Golden Age in the

    history of China. However, his overseas glory was not achieved by invasion and

    territorial conquest as claimed by Wade.

    Right from the outset, Yongle had no ambition to colonize native states.

    Colonialism is defined by Heywood as a theory or practice of establishing control

    over a foreign territory and turning into a colony. Colonialism is thus a particular

    form of imperialism. Colonialism is usually distinguished by settlement and by

    economic domination. As typically practiced in Africa and Southeast Asia, colonial

    government was exercised by a settlement community from a mother country who

    were ethnically distinct from the native population.4Foreign relations of the Ming

    court, especially during the Zheng He period, cannot be fitted into such a concept.

    4 Heywood, Andrew, Politics.London: McMillan, 1997. 116.

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    Imperial China since the Qin dynasty had developed a Sino-centric world

    view and world order. China was perceived as the centre of the universe, the Middle

    Kingdom, and the emperor the Son of Heaven who presided over all-under-Heaven

    (tianxia) (Fairbank 1968b: 2). Under such a framework, Chinas foreign

    relations were hierarchical. The graded and concentric hierarchy of Chinas foreign

    relations with peoples and states were grouped by Fairbank under the following three

    zones

    5

    :

    A.

    Sinic zone consisting of the most nearby states and culturally similar

    tributaries such as Korea and Annam parts of which had anciently been ruled

    within the Chinese empire in the past, and Ryukyu (now Okinawa).

    B. Inner Asia zone consisting of tributary tribes and states of non-Chinese

    nomadic or semi-nomadic peoples of Central Asia.

    C.

    The outer zone consisting of the outer barbarians (waiyi) further away

    including states of Southeast Asia, South Asia, Japan and Europe that were

    supposed to send tribute when trading.6

    According to Fairbank, China pursued a proactive interventionist approach in dealing

    with states in zones A and B, respectively, by using military or administrative

    control, and cultural or religious influence. However, towards the states in zone C,

    5 Fairbank, John King 1968, A Preliminary Framework, in John King Fairbank, eds.,

    The Chinese World Order Traditional Chinas Foreign Relations. Cambridge,

    Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. 2.6 .

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    China used a non-interventionist approach through material interest such as trade and

    imperial gifts, and diplomacy.

    The early Ming emperors Hongwu and Yongle adopted this traditional

    Chinese world order and Chinas foreign relations framework especially in dealing

    with Southeast Asian states. After ascending to the throne, Emperor Hongwu

    implemented a diplomacy of peace and fraternity with all foreign states. This policy

    was against the deployment of force when dealing with foreign states. He issued

    decrees to his ministers prohibiting them from launching military action against

    foreign native states.

    The Veritable Records of the reign of Emperor Hongwu records, The

    Emperor held an audience at Feng-tian Gate (Nanjing Palace) and instructed the

    Secretariat, Military Commission and Censorate officials saying: "Of the manand the

    yicountries abroad, there are some which are dangerous to China. They must be

    subject to suppression. However, we should not quickly raise troops against those

    which are not dangerous to China. The ancients had a saying: `Expanding territory is

    not the way to lasting peace. Troubling the people is the road to disorder.' For

    example, Emperor Yang of the Sui dynasty raised troops and subjugated Ryukyu,

    killing theyipeople, burning their palaces and houses and taking several thousand

    persons prisoner. He obtained the territory, but it could not provide even its own

    needs. He obtained the people, but they could not be employed. He merely longed for

    a name. Thereby, he brought disorder to China and was derided in the various

    subsequent history books. I feel that as the various small manandyicountries are

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    obstructed by mountains, are across the seas or are secluded in some corner, they do

    not pose a danger to China. I will certainly not attack them. It is only the huand the

    rong of the Northwest who have for generations posed danger to China.We must

    carefully guard against them. Ministers, you must bear my words in mind, so that you

    will know my will.7

    He further ordered his descendants not to invade neighbouring states in an

    imperial ancestral edict which states,

    Foreign states are sited in remote corners. To acquire their lands is

    unable to meet our needs. To acquire their peoples is unable to achieve

    our mission. If they are not aware of their limitations and attack our

    borders, they will be courting disaster. If they are harmless to China and

    we mount military action against them, it will also be inauspicious. I am

    afraid that my descendants might take advantage of Chinas might to

    invade others and harm peoples without cause and reason. So always

    remember [this ancestral edict].8

    In his imperial ancestral edict, Zhu Yuanzhang [Emporer Hung Wu, the

    first Ming Emperor], warned his descendants that there would be no tangible

    benefits from acquiring those remote undeveloped states. Wars that did break

    out were caused either by ignorant states attacking Chinas borders or by

    Chinese invasion without any cause and would inevitably lead to great

    7 Ming Taizu shilu: ch. 68. Geoff Wade tran.

    8 Huangming Zuxun:Ming Huidian,opening chapter.

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    damage. He wanted his descendants not to launch military campaigns against

    neigbouring states. He went one step further to list 15 native states including

    Japan, Korea, Ryukyu, Annam, Champa, Zhenla, Siam, Srivijaya, Java,

    Pahang, Samudra and Brunei as countries not to be invaded.9(Melaka was

    not in existence then).

    Emperor Yongle continued to implement the diplomacy of peace after

    ascending to the throne. He dispatched Zheng He on voyages to the Western Ocean

    on a mission of peace and good will. In 1409, he issued a decree to Zheng He which

    clearly spelt out his good neighbourliness foreign policy. He stated in the decree,

    I now send Zheng He on a mission with this imperial decree. You all

    should follow the heavenly path, obey the imperial order, restrain

    yourselves and well-disciplined; you should neither break rules nor bully

    the minority and the weak. Let everyone enjoy the happiness of peace. If

    they come to the court to make tribute sincerely, reward them with gifts. It

    is hereby proclaimed for everyone to note.10

    From 1405 to 1433, Zheng He was conducting his mission according to the

    Emperors directive on fostering good relationships with foreign states. As a supreme

    maritime power, Ming China sent out powerful fleets but it harboured no ambition to

    occupy native states visited by the fleet. In addition, under the tributary system, Ming

    China and vassal states would exchange visits by envoys. Vassal states regularly paid

    9 Huangming Zuxun: opening chapter;Ming Huidian, Chapter 105.

    10 Family geneological record of Zheng He.

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    tribute with foreign envoys commissioned by their kings or the kings themselves

    making trips to China bringing with them gifts such as local produce, precious

    products and exotic animals as a symbol of submission in return for Chinas

    recognition of sovereignty and protection. In return, the Ming court granted the

    tribute missions rich imperial gifts. Zheng Hes missions brought along the imperial

    decrees with valuable gifts such as mandarin hats, robes, gold and silver, porcelain

    and silk for the native rulers. Whenever Zheng He visited a native state, he would call

    on the ruler first and present him with valuable gifts and perhaps a Mandarin royal

    hat, seal and robe to acknowledge and respect his high position. Ming Chinas foreign

    relations with Afro-Asian states were based on non-intervention and aimed to

    establish a harmonious world.

    In foreign trade, Yongle forbade private foreign trade but he enforced a

    state foreign trade policy. He reinstated the offices of the Commissioners for Foreign

    Trade at Quanzhou, Guangzhou and Mingzhou (Ningpo) soon after his coronation in

    1403. He also allowed foreign tribute missions to bring in private goods for tax-free

    trading to be conducted within the official guest house, Hui Tong Guan, for three

    days. In business transactions, Zheng He applied Confucian ethics

    such as trust , integrity, amiabil i ty and co-operation. His business

    deals were based on a win-win formula which reflected bestowing

    valuable gifts worth more than what is received and valuing righteousness above

    material gain. In carrying out diplomatic activities and foreign trade within the

    tributary system, the Ming court was altruistic. It was obligatory on vassal states to

    make regular tribute of local produce to the Ming court. Likewise, Ming emperors

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    would return them with valuable gifts. When Ming envoys on mission abroad, they

    would bring with them imperial decree and mandarin robes as well as valuable

    presents such as silver, gold, porcelain and silk for the native rulers. Foreign envoys

    or rulers making their tributary trips to the Ming court with such local produce and

    rare and exotic animals like peacock and crane from Brunei, elephant and ivory from

    Champa, elephant, coral and pepper from Siam, and giraffe, lion and pearls from

    Hormuz. In return, the Ming court granted them gifts including tens of bales of silk,

    thousands of porcelain pieces, and silver and gold. Hence, the foreign trade was not

    in favour of the Ming court as Wade asserted but much in favour of the native states.

    Noted historians shared the above observations on tributary relations and

    tributary trade. Wang Gungwu observed,

    Obviously, from the emperors point of view, tributary relations were not to

    be conducted for profits. What does need to be emphazised is the emperors

    explicit policy of refraining from aggression against overseas countries. This

    striking new feature of an entire defensive policy towards countries to the

    south and east cannot be overemphasized. It not only confirmed the past

    practices of the Han, Tang and Song empires and rejected those of the

    Mongolian emperor Khubilai, but also established an important doctrine of

    Ming foreign policy.11

    11 , . ,

    11, . .

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    10

    Martin Stuart-Fox observed Southeast Asian states viewed tribute

    differently from the official and orthodox Chinese concept of tribute. For the

    Chinese tribute denoted not the transfer of economic resources, but symbolic

    submission. However, for Southeast Asian rulers, tribute paid to China did not

    carry the same connotation as tribute demanded from their own vassals, just because

    more valuable gifts were given in exchange. What was tribute for the Chinese was for

    Southeast Asian rulers the polite exchange of gifts as a formality that went with

    mutually beneficial trade. The accompanying ceremonial established status of

    hierarchy, but not vassalage in the Southeast Asian sense. It was acceptable for

    envoys to show proper respect to the Chinese emperor, just as Chinese envoys, for

    example, Zheng He, paid proper respect to Southeast Asian kings. 12

    II. Guanchang Supply and Trading Bases not Colonies

    Wade also argued that guanchang (government depots) set up by Zheng Hes fleet

    in strategic port cities such as Melaka were military bases or colonies. He wrote, To

    enable these great fleets to maintain thepax Ming in the immediate region and sail

    through the Indian Ocean to Africa, it was necessary to create staging posts in what is

    today Southeast Asia.13

    Along this wide and long maritime trade routes spreading from the Malay

    Archipelago to East Africa, Zheng Hes fleets and sub-fleets called at major ports to

    12 Martin, Stuart-Fox,A Short History of China and Southeast Asia: Tribute, Trade and

    Influence.NSW: Allen & Unwin, 2003. 53-54.

    13 , . ., .

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    11

    trade Chinese silk, tea and porcelain for local produce such as spices, medicinal

    herbs, etc. with traders from all over the world. As each overseas operation was a

    major one involving more than 200 ships and over 25,000 men and with large stocks

    of provisions, water, imperial gifts, tributes, arms and weapons, gold and silver, silk,

    tea and porcelain for trade, Zheng He had to set up strategic bases along the long

    journey ranging from months and even years to serve as mid-way houses while

    awaiting fair monsoon winds for home-bound voyages. Apparently, he divided his

    overseas operation into four zones: Malay Peninsula, Indonesia Archipelago, South

    Asia, and Arabia. He also identified four key ports of call within each zone as his

    administrative centres: Melaka, Samudra, Calicut (also known as Guli in Chinese

    sources) and Hormuz. These administrative centres were selected for their being

    regional commercial hubs which could facilitate carrying out his two vital

    diplomatic and foreign trade missions. Melaka being situated at the southern

    entrance of the Strait of Melaka, Zheng He had long realized that Melaka would

    become an important regional sea power in Southeast Asia. Samudra, also situated at

    the northern entrance of the Strait of Melaka, was a busy port in the Indonesia

    Archipelago in the Zheng He era. Ma Huan wrote, At this place, there are foreign

    ships going and coming in large numbers, hence all kinds of foreign goods are sold

    in great quantities in the country.14

    Arab and Indian Muslim and Chinese traders

    assembled here to conduct trade. Being close to the Strait of Melaka, Java and Spice

    Islands, it was made the headquarter of Zheng Hes operation in the spice trade in

    14 , . ... .

    . 10.

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    the Indonesia Archipelago zone covering Java, Spice Islands, Sumatra and Borneo.

    Calicut in the western coast of India was Zheng Hes third trading base in South

    Asia. Ma Huan wrote, foreign ships from every place come here; and the king of

    the country also sends a chief and a writer and others to watch the sales; thereupon

    they collect the duty and pay it in to the authorities15

    Ma Huan also told us that the

    chief, the traders and the Eunach would engage in the negotiation of transactions in

    the selling and buying of silk and local products16

    . Arab Muslim traders

    monopolized the trade between India and Europe. They provided the crucial links

    between high-valued Asian products such as silk, porcelain and spices, and

    European markets in the East-West international trade. Hormuz at the mouth of the

    Persian Gulf was a flourishing commercial hub in Arabia. Zheng He set up his

    fourth base there. Ma Huan witnessed in Hormuz foreign ships from every place

    and foreign merchants traveling by land all come to this country to attend the market

    and trade; hence the people of the country are all rich.17

    So Zheng He broke the

    monopoly of the Arab and Indian Muslim traders by forming a regional trading base

    in Hormuz to oversee the trade in Arabia and East Africa. 18Meanwhile, his staff

    also collected in these market places useful political and economic information like

    trade methods, local products, local currency, political systems and market demand

    for Chinese goods and the like.

    15 Ibid., 143.

    16 Ibid., 141.

    17 Ibid. 165.

    18 ,.17

    (03.2004),27-31.

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    Zheng He set up these official warehouses (guanchang)in these trading bases

    for the storage of goods and provisions. Ma Huan described the guanchangin Melaka

    as follows :

    Whenever the treasure-ships of the Middle Kingdom arrived there, they at

    once erected a line of stockading, like a city-wall, and set up towers for the

    bell and drums at four gates. At night they had patrols of police carrying

    bells. Inside they erected a second stockade, like a small city-wall, [within

    which] they constructed warehouses and granaries [and] all the money and

    provisions were stored in them. The ships which had gone to various

    countries returned to this place, and loaded foreign goods and loaded them

    in the ships, [then] waited till the south wind was perfectly favorable. In the

    middle of the fifth moon they put to sea and returned home.19

    According to the description by Gong Zhen and Ma Huan, the guanchangwas

    obviously a warehouse. It has been a normal practice to guard warehouses with some

    security measures, for example, deploying security guards.

    III. Grand Fleet

    Generally, each time when he set sail, his fleet consisted of more than two

    hundred ships of which more than 60 were large and medium treasure ships, and

    more than 28,000 crew members. The first expedition in 1405 was the grandest.

    Zheng He mobilized more than 200 ships and 28,700 crew members. Wade is of the

    19 Ma Huan, Mills tr., Ying-Yai Sheng-Lan The Overall Survey of the Oceans Shores. J.V.G.

    Bangkok: White Lotus Press, 1997: 113-114.

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    opinion that, the majority of the ships were warships, and, the majority of the crew

    were military men. He believed it is likely that all of the missions carried something

    in excess of 20,000 military men20

    . He added, with perhaps 26,000 out of 28,000

    members of some missions being military men.21

    He has not disclosed his source of

    information about the so-called majority claims. However, many historical sources

    show that Zheng Hes fleets consisted of a variety of ships, for example, treasure

    ships, supply ships, horse ships, water ships, troops ships and battleships but Wade

    has suggested that the majority were warships and military men. In fact, there was

    no strong maritime power within the trading zones of East Asia and Southeast Asia in

    the 15th

    century that warranted Zheng He s bringing along a great number of

    warships. At that time, the formerly great empires such as Majapahit of Java and

    Srivijaya of Sumatra had already declined and even disintegrated into small states.

    Meanwhile, in the vast ocean, piracy was rampant. If not supported by some troops,

    Zheng He during his first voyage would have been defeated by the pirate chief Chen

    Zuyi of Palembang. So, those military forces were meant for self-defence and to

    protect the valuable gifts and commodities on board and not for invasion. They were

    there simply to safeguard the safe journey of the fleet and safe passage of the trade

    routes as well as to ensure efficiency in performing duties of the mission.

    Wade strongly felt that Zheng He made effective use of such a large fleet to

    carry out his missions through coercionin several ways. Wade singles out threekey

    coercion scenarios. Firstly, they were engaged to control ports and shipping lanes and

    20 , .., .

    21 ., 1.

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    hence controlled trade, an essential element for the missions treasure-collecting

    tasks. The colonial armies manning these ships were the tool necessary to ensure that

    the control was maintained. Thus, Wade claims the Ming, through these maritime

    missions, was engaged in what might be called maritime proto-colonialism.22

    Secondly, such a force would have played a major threatening role in coercing

    foreign rulers to come to the Ming court.23

    Thirdly, the armies were used to attack

    native states.24

    Unfortunately, these allegations were not substantiated by historical

    facts.

    On the so-called Mings maritime proto-colonialism, Wade said it had its

    equivalent in the later maritime colonialism of the fifteenth and seventeenth-century

    Portuguese voyages .25

    This is a serious fallacy. The nature of Mings state foreign

    trade and Portuguese (and also Spanish) Crown or royal trade were entirely different.

    We have discussed earlier the need for Zheng He to set up strategic bases

    along the long journey to serve as mid-way houses for storage of cargo and

    provisions supply while awaiting fair monsoon winds for home-bound voyages. This

    was an essential logistical move. More importantly, Zheng He did not monopolize

    these markets but applied the Art of Collaboration to partner respective native rulers

    and international traders on mutual-beneficial win-win formula to develop the

    markets. Under his open and free market strategy, the key ports along the East-West

    22 ., 1.

    23 ., .

    24 .

    25 ., 1.

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    maritime highway like Melaka, Samudra, Calicut and Hormuz had become regional

    and international commercial hubs. The rise of Melaka as a regional commercial hub

    is a good example. Under Mings patronage, Melaka managed to free itself from

    constant threat of invasions by Majapahit and Siam. Zheng He made Melaka his

    regional headquarter to conduct regional diplomatic and entrepot trade activities in

    Southeast Asia. It greatly enhanced Melakas position as the most important regional

    entrepot trading centre in Southeast Asia. It attracted traders of all nationalities to

    trade in Melaka. The Southeast Asian traders brought their spices and other local

    produce to Melaka for re-export to other parts of the world. Indian and Arab traders

    brought in European, Persian and Indian goods and commodities, and Zheng Hes

    fleets came with Chinese tea, silks and porcelain. From 1434 to 1511, Melaka had

    become the largest international collection and distribution hub of commodities and

    entrepot trade centre in Southeast Asia.

    In contrast, the Portuguese Crown also realized the importance to capture key

    ports and shipping lines along the main East-West maritime highway in the 16th

    century. However, it adopted a high-handed approach by showing its hard power to

    force open the markets and eventually colonized Goa, Melaka and Macau by superior

    warships and colonial armies. The Crown of Portugal claimed a tight monopoly on

    the provision of ships for the Carreira, or passage to India, and on the trade in

    precious metals from Portugal and imports of pepper and spices.26

    M.N. Pearson

    26 M.N. Pearson, Merchants and States, The Political Economy of Merchant Empires:

    StatePower and World Trade, 1350-1750edited by James D. Tracey. Cambridge: Cambridge

    University Press, 1991. 77.

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    elaborated how the Portuguese Crown enforced its trade monopoly policy. No trade

    in any product was to take place except in ships that had taken a pass from the

    Portuguese, which in turn obliged these ships to call at Portuguese ports and pay

    customs duties. This policy in Asia was backed up by extensive naval patrolling and a

    string of ports around the littoral of the Indian Ocean, among them several of the

    great port cities which included Melaka, Diu and Hormuz.27

    Pearson labelled this as

    a protection racket. He described, Basically a tribute was demanded from Asian

    trade; the Portuguese created de novoa threat of violence to Asian shipping, and then

    sold protection from this threat, as seen in the requirement to take passes and pay

    custom duties. No service was provided in return, in modern terms this was precisely

    a protection racket.28

    Under this monopoly policy, Melaka under the Portuguese

    declined rapidly. Portuguese monopolistic economic policies chased away foreign

    traders to trade in other rising commercial centres in Java and Sumatra. Zhang Xie

    (1574-1640) had witnessed Melakas economic crisis and reluctance of Chinese junks

    calling at Melaka in the late 16 thcentury and early 17thcentury. He wrote that

    Melakas commercial activity under Portuguese occupation was declining and

    Chinese junks seldom called at Melaka because Chinese traders were always cheated

    by the Portuguese. Hence, the Portuguese resorted to robbing Chinese junks by

    intercepting them in the Strait of Melaka29

    . To sum up, Zheng He had not used

    coercion as accused by Wade in opening up the key port cities. Instead, it was the

    27 ., .

    28 ., .

    29 Zhang Xie (),Dongxiyang Kao().:, 1981. 66-70.

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    Portuguese who used coercion that led to the decline of these port cities. In 1511 the

    population in Melaka was about 15,000 of them and after the war, 10,000 of them

    were killed by the Portugese. However, in 1407 Zheng He fleet arrived with 28,700

    people but none of the 3,000 population in Melaka were killed.

    As regards Wades second allegation that foreign rulers were coerced to pay

    tribute to the Ming court, it is equally unfounded. In fact, foreign rulers were attracted

    by the favourable tributary trade to send tribute missions to the Ming court. Under

    this imperial system, China and vassal states would exchange visits by missions. The

    vassal states would pay tributes to China with their local produces regularly and in

    return the Ming court would bestow handsome imperial gifts to vassal states. The

    Ming missions would bring along the imperial decrees with valuable gifts such as

    hats, robes, gold and silver, porcelains and silks. When the rulers of the vassal states

    or their tribute missions came to the court, they would bring along local produces,

    animals and rare curios, treasures or luxury goods to present to the Ming emperors.

    These tributes included peacocks from Brunei, elephants, ivory and pepper from

    Siam, and lions, pearls and Zebras from Hormuz. To show off Chinas wealth and

    greatness, the Ming emperors would return them with tens of silks and thousands of

    porcelains. In terms of value, the exchange of gifts was absolutely unbalanced and

    lopsided, very much in favour of the vassal states.

    Besides tributes, foreign missions also benefitted tremendously from the

    ensuing private trade following ceremonial diplomatic functions. After having made

    tribute to the emperor, the Ming court allowed the tribute missions and its individual

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    members to engage in trading activities within the compound of the official guest

    house, Hui Tong Guan, for three days under the supervision of the Ming officials.

    According to the tributary regulations as laid down by Emperor Hongwu, tribute

    missions could bring in private goods for trading. The Ming government would

    acquire 60 per cent of these goods at a price much higher than the market price. The

    balance would then be traded in the market place, tax free.

    Over the years, in order to increase foreign trade with the Ming Empire so as

    to satisfy their demand for Chinese products, a few vassal states were found to have

    abused their tributary privileges by sending tribute missions more frequently and with

    larger entourages. The goods they purchased also exceeded their specified quota.

    Consequently, the Emperor had to impose regulatory measures to curb such abuse by

    regulating the frequency and duration of the tribute mission each vassal state could

    send. Some would make tributes every three years and some every five years. It was

    also stipulated that the tribute missions would proceed to the capital Nanjing via

    Guangdong, Fujian and Zhejiang provinces and they could only stay at three cities,

    Guangzhou, Quanzhou and Mingzhou. The number of ships, number of entourages

    and the type of tributary items were also specified. To prevent fake or illegitimate

    tribute missions from entering China for trading, all tribute missions were issued with

    official identity documents. If foreign states had to be coerced as Wade claimed to

    send tributary missions to the Ming court, it is extremely illogical for the Ming court

    to impose regulatory measures on frequency, duration and size of tributary mission to

    curb abuse. It is clear that it was the pull factor (substantial material gains made from

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    the tributary trade) that was responsible for native states sending tributary missions to

    the Ming court.

    The third charge against Zheng Hes military actions taken in Java,

    Palembang, Samudra and Sri Lanka was not justifiable. A Ming source, Shuyu

    Zhoushiluby Yan Congjian, gives an account on Zheng Hes military action in Java

    as follows:

    In the 4th

    year (1406) for the reign of Emperor Yongle, the Ruler of the

    West sent tributes like pearls and coral while the East Ruler sent horses.

    However, the two were at war, and the Ruler of the East was killed. At

    that moment, our mission was passing through the city of the East Ruler,

    the West Ruler killed 170 of our men. The West Ruler sent a messenger

    to say that the East Ruler should not have been installed and had

    therefore been killed. The West Ruler was severely reprimanded with a

    decree. In the 5th

    year (1407) , the West Ruler Dumaban asked for

    forgiveness and was prepared to compensate 60 thousand taels of gold.

    He also consented to accession of the son of the East Ruler. It was

    consented. In the 6th

    year (1408), the West Ruler Dumaban paid tribute of

    10 thousand taels of gold as a token of apology for his wrongdoing. The

    Minister of Rituals said that he had owed us 50 thousand taels of gold

    and asked an official to deal with him in accordance with the law. The

    Emperor noted, it was sufficient if people in far lands feared punishment

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    for their crimes. We were not interested in his gold! As long as he was

    remorse for his crime, paying gold as compensation was not required.30

    The narration above reveals that Zheng Hes men were not willfully killed

    and Zheng He had not sent troops to take revenge. He had just submitted the case to

    seek the emperors decision. There was no military action, and certainly no

    invasion.

    On Zheng Hes capture of the notorious pirate, Chen Zuyi, in Palembang,

    Ma Huanwho accompanied him on the trip wrote,

    During the 5th

    year of the reign of Emperor Yongle (1407), the emperor sent

    Eunuch Zheng He to lead a fleet of treasure ships and arrived at this place. A

    certain Shi Jinqin, originally from Guangdong, reported the atrocities

    committed by Chen Zuyi. He was arrested by Eunuch Zheng He and together

    with others was brought back to imperial court for execution.31

    Similarly, theMing Shi (The Official History the Ming Dynasty) records,

    During the 5th

    year (1407), Zheng He returned drom the West Ocean. The

    emperor sent for himZuyi plotted to rob Zheng He by pretending to surrender. A

    30 Yan Congjian ()Suyu Zhouzilu ().., 2000. 294-5.

    Ming Shihhas similar narration.

    31 Ma Huan (), Yingya Shenglan (). ,1955. 17.

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    certain Shi Jinqin informed Zheng He of the conspiracy. Zuyi was captured when

    he mounted an attack. He was presented to the emperor, and was executed.32

    At that point in time, Palembang was in name a vassal state of Majapahit

    but, in fact, the port of Palembang was governed by several Chinese. Chen

    Daoming and Chen Zuyi were the pirate chief and kangzu(port master)

    respectively. After Zuyi was defeated, Emperor Yongle established a separate

    mission in Palembang and appointed Shi Jinqin to be the commissioner there.

    Nevertheless, Palembang remained as a vassal state of Majapahit; there was no

    change of suzerainty. This helped to clamp down on piracy and thus was good for

    maritime trade. Zheng He did not send troops to occupy or invade Palembang.

    As regards the incident in Samudra, a small native state on the island of

    Sumatra, theMing Shistates: The ruler of Samudra was killed by a certain Batak

    king in a battle. As his son was too young to revengea fishermanthus led

    troops to defeat the Batak kingAs agreed the wife of the Samudra ruler married

    the fisherman and made him the kingIn the 10th

    year during the reign of Emperor

    Yongle (1412)the grown-up son of the former ruler conspired with troop leaders

    to murder the stepfather, the fisherman, usurped the throne and ruled the native

    state. The fisherman had a son called Sekander who escaped with his men and

    formed a settlement on a hill. In revenge he launched attack frequently. In the 13th

    year during Emperor Yongles reign (1415), Admiral Zheng He with his fleet of

    32 Ming Shi:, 1974. Vol 323-332. 408.

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    treasure ships arrived and captured Sekander33At the request of the ruler, Zheng

    He quelled the rebellion. Once the rebellion was over he left the native state. It

    would be most unreasonable to call him an invader and a colonialist.

    Wade also mentioned Zheng Hes military action in Sri Lanka. The military

    action in Sri Lanka is interesting but it is far from a planned deliberate invasion. The

    Ming Shiagain threw light on the incident: In the 9 thmonth of the 6thyear (1408)

    when Zheng He was passing by Ceylon (Sri Lanka) again, the king Alakeswara lured

    Zheng He into the country and demanded gold and silk while he sent troops to rob

    Zheng Hes ships. Realizing that most of the kings troops were out. Zheng He led

    2000-odd men and took the town by surprise. The king and his family members were

    captured. The ship robbers, on hearing of the attack, rushed back to town but they

    were badly defeated by the imperial troops. In the 6th

    month of the 9th

    year (1411),

    captives were presented to the imperial court. The emperor granted them amnesty and

    spared their lives. They were released and sent back to their native state.34Based on

    the above records, it appears that Zheng He mounted the military attacks in self-

    defence. It should also be pointed out that Emperor Yongle did not execute the

    captives as he had done in the case of the pirate chief, Chen Zuyi. Instead, he sent

    them home and installed another individual to be the king. In addition, there was no

    occupation of the native state. The episode though a military action but should

    therefore not be regarded as an act of invasion.

    33 Ibid. Similar story was carried by Ma Huan, 27-28, Gong Zhen ()Xiyang Fanguozhi

    (),1961. 18; and Fei Xin (),Xingcha Shenglan

    (),1954. 27.34

    ., . 0.

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    In the above cases, Zheng He acted as a peace-keeper and guardian of native

    states to maintain law and order of the region and safety of trade routes. Throughout

    his seven voyages, Zheng He did not occupy or colonize an inch of foreign land.

    Wades expansionist theory is not supported by valid evidence and therefore not

    plausible at all.

    III. Invasion and Occupation of Yunnan

    Located at the southwest corner of China, Yunnan has been part of the

    Chinese empire since the Han Dynasty. In 109 BC Emperor Wu ordered General

    Guo Chang to go to the south to establish Yizhou province and 24 regions. The

    capital should be in the Dianci region, todays Jinning, another region was called

    Yunnan. In 109 AD, the Han court established the county of Yunnan as

    commandant.35

    Yunnan was called Kunzhou in the Sui Dynasty and Nanzhao in

    the Tang Dynasty. Nanzhou was overthrown in 902 and in 937. Duan Siping

    established the Kingdom of Dali with Dali as its capital. It was ruled by a

    succession of 22 kings until the year 1253, when it was conquered by an invasion

    of the Mongol Empire. The Yuan Dynasty was the first regime in China to govern

    Yunnan under a strict administrative control. In 1253, Kublai Khans Mongol

    forces advanced to Yunnan and many other native regimes, including the

    controlling Dali Kingdom, who had to abdicate from their thrones. Thus, Yunnan

    became a province of Kublai Khan Empire. Zheng Hes 6thgeneration ancestor,

    35 Ming Shi, vol. 201.

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    Sayid Ajall ShamsuddinYunnan was posted by him to Yunnan as its governor.

    After the fall of the Yuan Dynasty, Yunnan province was thrown into chaos and

    anarchy. Remnants of the Mongol forces continued to rule Yunnan. It was 13 years

    later that Zhu Yuanzhang, sent his troops to crush the remnants of the Mongol

    forces in Yunnan in 1381. He sent 300 thousand-strong imperial troops led by one

    of his capable generals, Fu Youde to attack the last Mongol fortress in Yunnan.

    Yunnan was captured and China was unified. When Yunnan fell, a good number of

    young boys, including the 10-year old Ma He, were taken, castrated and brought

    back to the capital. Hence, the invasion and occupation of Yunnan was more a

    dynastic civil war between the Ming government armies and remnants of Mongol

    forces.

    IV. The Invasion of Annan, 1406

    Annan (Vietnam today) formed part of the Chinese empire before the Tang

    Dynasty as a province called Jiaozhi. The collapse of the Tang Dynasty provided

    an opportunity for Annan to break free of Chinese imperial control. In 966 AD, six

    years after the founding of the Song Dynasty, Dinh Bo Linh proclaimed Annans

    independence.36

    However, Annan continued to maintain vassal relations with

    China. Historians give a variety of causes which led to the Ming invasion on

    Annan in July 1406, ranging from Annans attack on Guangxi and Yunnan due to

    36 Martin Stuart-Fox, 45.

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    border disputes to Champas complaint to the Ming court about Annans invasion.

    37The direct cause seems to be the usurpation that took place in Annan in 1400. In

    that year a powerful Vietnamese mandarin, Hu Quy Ly, took advantage of the

    political turmoil in China to replace the emperor of Annan (last of the Tran

    Dynasty), with his own son and proclaimed a new dynasty. When Yongle ascended

    the throne, the new king sent tribute to him and was acknowledged as Annans new

    king. However, Yongle was annoyed when he discovered a few months later the

    man was a usurper. The sole remaining descendant of the Tran line was found and

    returned to Annan to be installed as the new king, but he was murdered on his

    arrival. Yongle gave his support to the Tran family and escalated the conflict with

    Annans usurped throne. An imminent war with Annan was looming large. Despite

    Annans non-invading status as laid down in his fathersAncestral Injunctions,

    Yongle believed that there was sufficient provocation in this instance according to

    theAncestral Injunction38

    to punish the usurper in a large-scale war. Twenty main

    crimes held against the usurper were listed as reasons for the military campaign.

    Prof. Wang Gungwu listed and analysed these crimes as follows:

    For the murder of the Tran King who was properly recognized by China;

    For the massacre of the Tran royal family;

    37

    ,

    00111

    38 Wang Gungwu, Chinese and the Chinese Overseas. 61.

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    For not using the Chinese calendar and for using his own reign-period;

    For ill-treating the Annamese people;

    For changing his own surname from Li to Hu;

    For deceiving the Ming emperor about his usurpation;

    For blushing the Ming emperor and resisting Ming missions;

    For murdering the legitimate Tran heir;

    For taking Chinese tribal territory at Ning-yuan Chou;

    For killing the tribal chiefs son-in-law and related crimes;

    For disturbing the peace among other border tribes;

    For taking Ssu-ming Fu territory and only returning parts of it;

    For inciting the tribes of His-ping Chou against the emperor;

    For invading Champa territory during the kings mourning period;

    For taking four chou from Champa and sacking them;

    For taking over one hundred elephants from Champa and some territory;

    For forcing Champa, a vassal of China, to use Annan seals and ceremonial

    dress instead of Chinese ones;

    For invading Champa because it acknowledged China as suzerain and not

    Annan;

    For capturing Chinese and Cham envoys at one of the Cham ports; and

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    For insulting China by sending a criminal as envoy.39

    Prof. Wang pointed out that one of the key words in the declaration of war

    appears to be that Annan was very closely related to China and it is in this context

    that the crimes can be seen as heinous. 40He added, I have listed them fully to

    show what vassalage to China meant at the time. The first eight may be described

    as moral and idealogical issues, the next five as security matters, the five after that

    as Annanese aggression against another vassal, and the final two as personal insults

    to the emperor.41Prof. Wang very correctly and aptly concluded, There are thus

    four groups of issues which purported to have aroused Yongle to take strong

    action. From his point of view, it may be argued that there was extreme

    provocation. From the point of view of the country (Cham) attacked, the list

    reveals the extent to which Chinese claims to suzerainty denied freedom and

    independence of action to the vassal state.42

    Concluding Remarks

    Dr. Wade attempted to interpret the role of the Ming Dynasty in general and

    Zheng Hes expeditions in particular, based on Chinese historical records but using a

    Western perspective. He was imaginative and very selective in arguing his cases but

    it was not adequately or correctly supported by historical records. In addition, he

    39 Tai-zong Shilu: juan 60.1a-4a.

    40 Wang Gungwu, China and Southeast Asia 1402-1424 in Jerome Chen & Nicholas Tarling

    eds., Studies in Social History of China and Southeast Asia.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,

    1970. 382.41

    .42

    ., .

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    purposely ignores the decrees issued by many Ming Emperors not to invade the

    foreign countries and concluded that Yongle's seven voyages was to launch invasions

    for the purpose of China southern expansion and for colonization.

    Zheng He was an admiral in the Ming Dynasty. He was instructed by the

    Ming emperor to project the power of Ming China (xuanyang guowei), and

    to implement the tributary system to States around the Western Ocean. He conducted

    his diplomacy in the context of the Chinese concept of world order and tributary

    system. His expeditions should be seen in that context rather than that of Western

    colonialism. There is always a danger to see history from a non-historical point of

    view; forcing a Western model and interpreting Chinese history pose pitfalls and will

    only distort our understanding of history.

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