The Beijing Olympic Games started on Friday 8 August 2008
with a dramatic opening ceremony featuring a cast of thousands performers that
celebrated the arts and achievements of China's long history. Among the
tremendous events narrated by the ceremony was the evokation of Zheng He, the
Chinese Muslim admiral of the 15th century. Blue-robed oarsman enacted
seafarers travelling between Southeast Asia and the coast of Fujian, in
southern China. Their oars became sails, painted with the "treasure ships"
of Zheng He who reached Africa in the Ming Dynasty. On this occasion, we
republish the following short outline of Zhen He's life and achievement.
The Beijing Olympic Games started on Friday 8 August 2008
with a dramatic opening ceremony featuring a cast of thousands performers that
celebrated the arts and achievements of China's long history. Among the
tremendous events narrated by the ceremony was the evocation of Zheng He, the
Chinese Muslim admiral of the 15th century. Blue-robed oarsman enacted
seafarers travelling between Southeast Asia and the coast of Fujian, in
southern China. Their oars became sails, painted with the "treasure
ships" of Zheng He who reached Africa in the Ming Dynasty. On this
occasion, we republish the following short outline of Zhen He's life and
achievement.
Figure 1: Performers with sailing boats are pictured during
the Opening Ceremony for the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics at the National
Stadium on August 8, 2008 in Beijing, China. (Photo credit: Cameron
Spencer/Getty Images). (Source ).
Little did the famous Muslim geographer, Ibn Battuta know,
that about 22 years after his historic visit to China, the Mongol Dynasty
(called the Yuan Dynasty in China) would be overthrown. The Ming Dynasty (1368
- 1644) would begin. A Muslim boy would help a Chinese prince. That prince
would become emperor and the boy would grow up to be the "Admiral of the
Chinese Fleet."
His name... Zheng He. The ships that he would sail
throughout the Indian Ocean would retrace some of the same routes taken by Ibn
Battuta, but he would be in huge boats called "junks". He would go to
East Africa, Makkah, Persian Gulf, and throughout the Indian Ocean.
Speak of the world's first navigators and the names
Christopher Columbus or Vasco da Gama flash through a Western mind. Little
known are the remarkable feats that a Chinese Muslim Zheng He (1371-1433) had
accomplished decades before the two European adventurers.
The Foundation for Science Technology and Civilisation
retraces the route of China's 15th century admiral, Zheng He, who ranks as
perhaps the country's foremost adventurer. A Muslim and a warrior, Zheng He
helped transform China into the region's, and perhaps the world's, superpower
of his time.
Figure 2: Portrait of Admiral Zheng He. (Source.)
In 1405, Zheng was chosen to lead the biggest naval
expedition in history up to that time. Over the next 28 years (1405-1433), he
commanded seven fleets that visited 37 countries, through Southeast Asia to
faraway Africa and Arabia. In those years, China had by far the biggest ships
of the time. In 1420 the Ming navy dwarfed the combined navies of Europe.
Ma He, as he was originally known, was born in 1371 to a
poor ethnic Hui (Chinese Muslims) family inYunnan Province, Southwest China.
The boy's grandfather and father once made an overland pilgrimage to Makkah.
Their travels contributed much to young Ma's education. He grew up speaking
Arabic and Chinese, leaming much about the world to the west and its geography
and customs.
Recruited as a promising servant for the Imperial household
at the age of ten, Ma was assigned two years later to the retinue of the then
Duke Yan, who would later usurp the throne as the emperor Yong Le. Ma
accompanied the Duke on a series of successful military campaigns and played a
crucial role in the capture of Nanjing, then the capital. Ma was thus awarded
the supreme command of the Imperial Household Agency and was given the surname
Zheng.
Figure 3: Recent Chinese portrait (2005) of Admiral Zheng
He. ( Source).
Emperor Yong Le tried to boost his damaged prestige as a
usurper by a display of China's might abroad, sending spectacular fleets on
great voyages and by bringing foreign ambassadors to his court. He also put
foreign trade under a strict Imperial monopoly by taking control from overseas
Chinese merchants. Command of the fleet was given to his favorite Zheng He, an
impressive figure said to be over eight feet tall.
A great fleet of big ships, with nine masts and manned by
500 men, each set sail in July 1405, half a century before Columbus's voyage to
America. There were great treasure ships over 300-feet long and 150-feet wide,
the biggest being 440-feet long and 186-across, capable of carrying 1,000
passengers. Most of the ships were built at the Dragon Bay shipyard near
Nanjing, the remains of which can still be seen today.
Zheng He's first fleet included 27,870 men on 317 ships,
including sailors, clerks, interpreters, soldiers, artisans, medical men and
meteorologists. On board were large quantities of cargo including silk goods,
porcelain, gold and silverware, copper utensils, iron implements and cotton
goods. The fleet sailed along China's coast to Champa close to Vietnam and,
after crossing the South China Sea, visited Java, Sumatra and reached Sri Lanka
by passing through the Strait of Malacca. On the way back it sailed along the
west coast of India and returned home in 1407. Envoys from Calicut in India and
several countries in Asia and the Middle East also boarded the ships to pay
visits to China. Zheng He's second and third voyages taken shortly after,
followed roughly the same route.
Figure 4: A display at the Ibn Battuta Mall in Dubai
purports to compare the size of ships used by Zheng He and by Christopher
Columbus.(Source).
In the fall of 1413, Zheng He set out with 30,000 men to
Arabia on his fourth and most ambitious voyage. From Hormuz he coasted around
the Arabian boot to Aden at the mouth of the Red Sea. The arrival of the fleet
caused a sensation in the region, and 19 countries sent ambassadors to board
Zheng He's ships with gifts for Emperor Yong Le.
In 1417, after two years in Nanjing and touring other
cities, the foreign envoys were escorted home by Zheng He. On this trip, he
sailed down the east coast of Africa, stopping at Mogadishu, Matindi, Mombassa
and Zanzibar and may have reached Mozambique. The sixth voyage in 1421 also
went to the African coast.
Emperor Yong Le died in 1424 shortly after Zheng He's
return. Yet, in 1430 the admiral was sent on a final seventh voyage. Now 60
years old, Zheng He revisited the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea and Africa and died
on his way back in 1433 in India.
Zheng He's Junks
Zheng He's flag "treasure ship" was four hundred
feet long - much larger than Columbus's. In this drawing, the two flagships are
superimposed to give a clear idea of the relative size of these two ships.
Columbus's ship St. Maria was only 85 feet long whilst Zheng He's flag ship was
an astonishing 400 feet.
Figure 5: The Honil Gangni Yeokdae Gukdo Jido ("Map of
Integrated Lands and Regions of Historical Countries and Capitals", short
name Gangnido (Kangnido)) is a map of the world made in Korea in 1402. It is
158.5 cm by 168.0 cm, painted on silk. The Kangnido map predates Zheng's
voyages and suggests that he had quite detailed geographical information on
much of the Old World. (Source).
Imagine six centuries ago, a mighty armada of Zheng He's
ships crossing the China Sea, then venturing west to Ceylon, Arabia, and East
Africa. The fleet consisting of giant nine-masted junks, escorted by dozens of
supply ships, water tankers, transports for cavalry horses, and patrol boats.
The armada's crew totaling more than 27,000 sailors and soldiers.
Loaded with Chinese silk and porcelain, the junks visited
ports around the Indian Ocean. Here, Arab and African merchants exchanged the
spices, ivory, medicines, rare woods, and pearls so eagerly sought by the
Chinese imperial court.
Seven times, from 1405 to 1433, the treasure fleets set off
for the unknown. These seven great expeditions brought a vast web of trading
links -- from Taiwan to the Persian Gulf -- under Zheng He's imperial control.
This took place half a century before the first Europeans, rounding the tip of
Africa in frail Portuguese caravels, 'discovered' the Indian Ocean.
His humble tomb
Zheng He (1371-1433), or Cheng Ho, is arguably China's most
famous navigator. Starting from the beginning of the 15th Century, he traveled
to the West seven times. For 28 years, he traveled more than 50,000 km and
visited over 37 countries. Zheng He died in the tenth year of the reign of the
Ming emperor Xuande (1433) and was buried in the southern outskirts of Bull's
Head Hill (Niushou) in Nanjing.
Figure 6: Zheng He's tomb in Nanjing located near the new
museum devoted to Zheng He. (2007, photo by Peter Pang, Released into the
public domain by the author).
In 1983, during the 580th anniversary of Zheng He's voyage,
his tomb was restored. The new tomb was built on the site of the original tomb
and reconstructed according to the customs of Islamic teachings.
At the entrance to the tomb is a Ming-style structure, which
houses the memorial hall. Inside are paintings of the man himself and his
navigation maps. To get to the tomb, there are newly laid stone platforms and
steps. The stairway consists of 28 stone steps divided into four sections with
each section having seven steps. This represents Zheng He's seven journeys to
the West. Inscribed on top of the tomb are the Arabic words "Allahu Akbar
(God is Great)".
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