When China Ruled the Seas
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It seems as fantastic as a dream: less than a hundred years before Columbus and the dawn of the great age of European exploration in the amazingly brief period from 1405 to 1433 China ruled the worlds oceans. Under the command of the eunuch admiral Zheng He fleets of more than three hundred "treasure ships" - some measuring as much as 400 feet long with crews of 28 000 men - made seven epic voyages through the China Seas and the Indian Ocean. Unrivaled in size until the invasion fleets of World War I the fleets traveled from Taiwan to the Red Sea down the east coast of Africa Chinas El Dorado and perhaps even to Australia three hundred years before Captain Cooks "discovery." Bearing a costly cargo of the Ming empires finest silks porcelains and lacquerware the treasure fleets ventured forth ready to trade with all who recognized the authority of the dragon throne occupied at the time by the ambitious Zhu Di who also built Beijings Forbidden City. Far more than mere commercial missions however the expeditions churned up political and cultural currents in southeast Asia and precipitated the diaspora of the Chinese throughout the Indian Ocean basin. Half the world was thus in Chinas grasp and the rest could easily have been had the emperor so wished. But instead China turned inward resulting in the rapid demise of its navy and the loss of its technological and scientific edge over Europe. As had happened many times before in the countrys history - and has happened many times since - the gates that had swung so wide clanged shut and Chinas period of greatest expansion was followed by that of its greatest isolation. When China Ruled the Seas is popular history at its best. Drawing on new translations of eye-witness accounts and official Ming histories and including dozens of vivid illustrations this is the first full account of one of the most colorful chapters in Chinas past and its sudden enigmatic end.
