Thursday, June 23, 2005

Rotund Ming Eunuch In Kerala

From Sepia Mutiny comes the interesting tale of the many voyages of the Ming admiral Zheng He (pronounced JUNG HUH) and his huge fleet of ships. Why I hadn't heard of this impressive man before today, despite knowing of Vasco Da Gama and Marco Polo, is clear evidence of holes in my school history curriculum. Particularly interesting to me is the story of Zheng's visit to India --- specifically the malabar coast. I remember the picturesque "Chinese fishing nets" from my childhood summers in Cochin but never really found out how they got there.

Following up on a recommendation by an SM commenter, I borrowed Louise Levathes' "When China Ruled The Seas" --- a book based, among various other sources, on the official Ming scribe Ma Huan's account, Triumphant Visions of the Ocean's Shores. Jumping ahead to the chapter entitled "Destination:Calicut" we find :

In autumn of 1405, the fleet of 317 brightly painted junks with a total crew of more than 27,000 [!] men was ready to depart from Nanjing....The destination of the treasure ships was Calicut--- the powerful city-state in Kerala on the west coast of India that had a market for spices a rare woods that attracted traders throughtout the Indian Ocean.
The chapter doesn't have a lot about Calicut itself, and mostly describes the journey to Calicut (called "the great Country of the Western Ocean" by the Chinese) via Java, Sumatra and Ceylon. It talks of the Chinese influence on the economies and politics of all the countries they visited --- including their role in the installation and toppling of the rulers of Ceylon and Calicut. An interesting detail described is the Chinese rendering of the story of Moses and Aaron that they heard in Kerala (possibly from some of my ancestors ?):
...the Chinese heard for the first time the curious story of a holy man called Moses and the incident involving Aaron and the golden calf, which they wrongly assumed had taken place in Calicut and was linked to the Hindu veneration of the cow.
Levathes also includes the inscription on the stone tablet that Zheng erected in Calicut "commemorating the warm relationship between the two countries".

Also via SM I found this well-written 2001 article from Time Magazine describing Aparisim Ghosh's search to find Zheng He's legacy in Cochin and Calicut, spurred partly by Ghosh's interest in the chinese fishing nets that he knew from his cochin childhood. He finds a plaque posted by modern-day Cochin municipal office saying that nets were brought to Kerala between 1350 and 1450, and, intriguingly, "Guangzhou-made porcelain tiles" in the floor of the old jewish synagogue of Cochin. In Calicut he finds "Silk Street" --- the Chinese Quarter of 15th century Calicut (?!), but no proof of the chinese presence, not even Zheng He's commemorative plaque. He does find what he thinks might be the way the Chinese and Indian traders did business :

[A] secret ritual, practiced by spice traders for over a millennium: the bargaining of prices. Buyer and seller clasp right hands under a towel or handkerchief and, thus hidden, make offers and counteroffers with a system of finger signals...

...This undoubtedly is how the admiral's minions conducted negotiations while they were here. (Ma Huan's account, Triumphant Visions of the Ocean's Shores, cites deals sealed by the clasping of hands.) The finger-code system was devised to allow traders from all over the world to do business here without having to learn Malayalam, the local language. The towel keeps the deal-making under wraps, a useful precaution in an overcrowded bazaar where the next man might try to undercut you.

Another commenter mentioned the presence of a chinese community in Quilon (Kollam) at that time. Levathes confirms that the Chinese traded with Quilon and Cochin even before Zheng He got there. And some googling lead me to this sentence ( of questionable veracity, if you ask me) trying to link Quilon's chinese past to the present:
Traces of a once prosperous trade with China are still seen in the form of Chinese fishing nets, huge Chinese water pots, blue and white porcelain and sampan-like boats.
I don't know about the blue and white porcelain. Ghosh's account also mentions the water pots (Chinna-Bharani). But sampan-like boats ? Are they saying that vallam-like boats are exclusive to kerala and south-east asia ? Interesting if true.

3 Comments:

Blogger Sunil said...

Nice post....especially since I just finished reading the National Geographic issue! :-)

But I don't really doubt that trade existed between the two regions long before Zheng. The Chinese were regular visitors for a long time to the land of the Buddha :-)

Fa Hien and Heiun Tsang (sp) wrote detailed chronicles about India, and required caravans of camels to take it back (much more than the one camel that the much publicized Al barouni needed). :-)

6/27/2005 09:34:00 PM  
Blogger ashvin said...

Thanks. I haven't actually seen the NG article yet. Does it have much about India/Kerala, or is it mostly about Zheng's other voyages ?

Yes, I was aware about Fa Hien and Heiun Tsang (transliteration of chinese into english is not a science apparently: there are about 4 or 5 different english spellings of each of these two names, so it can get confusing). Heiun Tsang came as far south as kanchipuram: perhaps he came by my home in vellore even. I've got to check out his writings sometime. I'm somehow more fascinated with sea voyages than land ones though.

Hadn't heard of Al barouni before. Now i know.

6/28/2005 05:01:00 PM  
Blogger Sunil said...

There's only a little bit about Kerala......about 2 pages....mostly prose, and little historical detail. Except that Cochin was a multicultural/multireligious place (which we know), and that there was a high degree of religious tolerance (tell me something I don't know), and that spice traders even then worked on verbal contracts. It's just a nice colorful article.

6/29/2005 02:36:00 PM  

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