The Chinese Columbus?
Zheng He ran one of the
greatest fleets of all time. Did he discover the New
World?
By Caroline Hsu
In the graceful East Asian reading room at the Library of Congress, one can
view a 21-foot-long map--a series of coastlines and Chinese place names traced
in black ink on thin, almost translucent paper. This is the Wu Bei Zhi, a copy of the actual map
used by Zheng He, the famed 15th-century Chinese
explorer who made seven voyages from Asia to Africa at the height of
Chinese maritime dominance.
Zheng He
(pronounced jung huh) was a
skilled commander who may have stood nearly 7 feet tall. He was also a eunuch
and a devout Muslim--in short, an unlikely commander of the largest maritime
expedition the world had ever seen: 28,000 people sailing on 300 ships. It was
a fleet whose size and grandeur would not be matched until World War I. Zheng He himself rode in the jewel of the fleet, an
enormous hardwood treasure ship filled with porcelain, silks, books, musical
instruments--the finest material and cultural exports China
had to offer. The ship boasted nine masts and 12 enormous red sails and
measured some 400 feet--about the size of a small aircraft carrier. For
comparison's sake, when Christopher Columbus sailed to America
nearly a century later, his three ships held 90 men each, and the longest of
them was the 85-foot Santa Maria.
But while Columbus and other European explorers are
celebrated in every American child's history books, Zheng
He remains relatively uncelebrated even in his home country. After his last
expedition, in 1433, the Chinese ruling class went through a major
philosophical shift, gradually turning inward to deal with famine, plague, and
military threats. Confucian court officials closed down ports, forbade sea
voyages of almost any kind, and systematically suppressed all traces of the Zheng He journeys. "China never even claimed
that Zheng He was a great explorer," says Chi
Wang, head of the Chinese section at the Library of Congress.
Yet here in the West a sort of Zheng
He craze is going on. It's attributable largely to the 2002 bestseller 1421:
The Year China Discovered America, in which British writer Gavin Menzies claims to have irrefutable evidence that Zheng He's fleet didn't turn back after reaching the east
coast of Africa as previously believed. Menzies argues that the fleet actually continued around the
Cape of Good Hope, discovered the Americas some 70 years before Columbus, and
went on to circumnavigate the world, 100 years before Magellan. The fleet
probably had the seamanship and resources to complete such a voyage. Menzies's scholarship has been attacked by academics, but
if book sales are any indication, the theory has struck a nerve.
How did a Muslim eunuch come to command such a powerful
force and accomplish these feats at sea? Zheng He was
one of thousands of Muslims living in a surprisingly diverse China of six centuries
ago. Both his grandfather and father were known as hajji, meaning that they had
made the pilgrimage to Mecca, a journey that Zheng also later completed.
In 1381, when Zheng He was 10
years old, the imperial Army attacked his province, an isolated area on China's lawless
southwestern border that was a hideout for outlaws from the ousted Mongol
regime. Zheng's father was killed in the fighting. As
was the custom in times of war, young male children of the enemy were
castrated. (Survivors of the brutal procedure were sometimes handed their
preserved genitals in a jar, which they would keep with them throughout their
lives in the hope that after burial they would be made whole in the afterlife.)
Special Report 2/23/04
The Chinese Columbus?
(Page 2 of 3)
Zheng's castration had
historical reverberations. As a eunuch, he was taken as a servant into the
household of his enemy, Zhu Di, the emperor's fourth
son. Though robbed of a family, he was well cared for and educated--in fact,
given advantages that he probably never would have received otherwise.
Eunuch power. Though the custom
of castration seems bizarre today, eunuchs were actually a powerful force in
the society of imperial China. Part of their
power came from their intimate access to powerful women and their children.
Child eunuchs often grew up with future princes and emperors. Indeed, eunuchs
garnered so much wealth and political influence from their close contact with
royal families that commoners sometimes had their sons castrated in the hopes
of improving the family lot.
Zheng He grew up strong and intelligent,
apparently impressing his young master, Zhu Di. In
short order he went from houseboy to right-hand man, plotting strategies with
the prince and riding next to him in battle. He later assisted Zhu Di in a brilliant and bloody coup to usurp the throne. When
Zhu Di became the third Ming emperor of China in 1402, he soon
named his loyal eunuch and friend admiral and commander in chief of the huge
treasure fleet.
The admiral's ships sailed to many lands in Southeast Asia, where the admiral
not only collected cultural observations but also used his influence and
military strength to manipulate regimes. Although China was a lone
superpower at the time, with the military force to crush almost any opposition,
the foreign policy of 15th-century China was oddly modern.
Unlike other warlike invaders and colonizers, the Chinese preferred trade
sanctions. Trade-friendly regimes were rewarded, while fractious states were
undermined--not through direct confrontation but through aid to enemy states. Siam and Sumatra, for example,
which were growing powerful, were subdued when China decided to
recognize Malacca, an upstart city-state in Siamese (modern Thai) territory.
Standing between Siam and Sumatra, Malacca became
the precursor to present-day Malaysia.
"The Chinese had no desire to establish colonies,"
says Louise Levathes, author of When China Ruled the
Seas. "Their focus was trade--acquiring things the empire needed, such as
medicinal herbs and incense, hardwoods, pepper, precious stones, African ivory,
Arabian horses for the imperial cavalry," she says. "They clearly
knew about Europe from Arab traders but thought that the
wool and wine, all they heard Europe had to offer, were
not very interesting."
Zheng's fleet made seven
voyages in all, and the commander probably died near Calicut, in present-day India, at about age 62.
Upon returning to China, Zheng's crew found that the expeditions, rather than being
celebrated as heroic, were slandered by the Confucian court officials as
indulgent adventures that wasted the country's resources. Zheng
He's trip logs were "lost" by officials seeking to suppress further
overseas travels.
In many respects, Zheng He stood
at a pivotal point in world history, according to many scholars of the colonial
period. Had his magnificent fleets been maintained and had China not turned inward
and willingly lost its vast scientific and military advantage, Europeans most
likely could not have taken over the spice trade and subjugated the Asian and
African continents. And had China had the interest,
it could have colonized Australia and the Americas before the
Europeans.
Special Report 2/23/04
The Chinese Columbus?
(Page 3 of 3)
That, of course, is an alternative history that
didn't happen. Although there is compelling evidence that the Chinese reached Australia
and South America before Cook and Columbus, contact
probably occurred centuries before Zheng He set sail.
Zheng He's greatest legacy is the vast diaspora of Chinese entrepreneurs who, with Zheng He as inspiration, broke with imperial edicts and the
classical Confucian custom of staying near home and ancestry to seek out lives
of commerce in foreign lands. The trickle of deserting sailors from the fleet
opened a floodgate of emigration that continues to this day: Ethnic Chinese
still dominate the economies of many Southeast Asian countries. In Indonesia,
Zheng He is revered as a local god; thousands visit a
temple dedicated to him every year. Even in Africa,
there are many who claim Chinese heritage. Indeed, some believe they are
descendants of Zheng He's shipwrecked sailors.
Today, more than 34 million Chinese live overseas in 140
countries, spreading over all the known lands depicted in the 21-foot scroll
map, the Wu Bei Zhi, and
beyond. A beguiling passage on a 1432 stone tablet erected by Zheng He survives in Fujian province, a
maritime area that has provided much of the Chinese diaspora.
It reads: "We . . . have beheld in the ocean huge waves like mountains
rising sky high, and we have set eyes on barbarian regions far away hidden in a
blue transparency of light vapors, while our sails, loftily unfurled like
clouds day and night, continued their course [as rapidly as] a star, traversing
those savage waves as if we were treading a public thoroughfare."
DID YOU KNOW?
The first European to see North America
may have been Bjarni Herjolfsson.
According to Norse sagas, the Viking trader was sailing from Iceland
to Greenland in 986 when he got lost in the fog. He made
his way to "a flat and wooded country"--Canada,
no doubt--but never left the boat. The sagas tease him for his timidity. But he
did share his news with (and sell his ship to) the next Euro-visitor to the Americas,
Leif Ericson.