There is a lot of furor about the rediscovered Selden map.
Academicians are discussing it with gusto and laboring on the minute aspects,
innumerable news articles introduce it and two great books have been written about
the map and its story. The map itself is all about the South China seas or what
we know today as parts of South East Asia and the land borders as seen from it.
It is quite important for many people studying such aspects as territorial
waters, the Spratly islands issues, the Fujian of Fukian trade networks and so
on, but what connection could it have with Calicut?
Well this relatively big and somewhat nontraditional
multicolor map, now restored to its full beauty, is available for study at the
Oxford - Bodleian library in England, to whom it was bequeathed by a relatively
staid lawyer named John Selden in 1659. Dating from the late Ming period, it
shows shipping routes with compass bearings from the port of Quanzhou to nearby
lands we know today as Korea, Japan, the Philippines, Indonesia, and Southeast
Asia. As the experts put it, this is the earliest Chinese map not only to show
shipping routes, but also to depict China as part of a greater East and
Southeast Asia, and not as the center of the known world, was largely unseen
and forgotten since the eighteenth century, but rediscovered in 2008 by the
historian Robert Batchelor. Since then there has been numerous theories and
discussions about how John Selden who never sailed got the map, about who the
cartographer could have been, for whom it was perhaps made, why and when it was
made and so on. Those interested may peruse the fine books of the two academics
involved, Batchelor and Brook.
My interest is the left extremity of the map where a
peculiar aspect can be noticed, just like it was by these eminent people. What
you will see is a small panel of text with a location listed as ‘Gu Li’ or
Calicut, and the box provides in three bullets directions of the routes to
Aden, Oman, and the Strait of Hormuz. I will get to the specifics shortly. However
the location of Calicut in an otherwise well-constructed map at least as far as
geography is concerned, is a total anomaly. It somewhat corresponds to Rangoon as
shown and has no relation to the Calicut or Gu li of the Chinese. At the same
time, the distances to the other locations are correct considering Calicut as
the sailing origin. Why so? Was it just shown is the extremity of the Chinese
and Fujian trade networks and a window to the Indian Ocean world with Calicut continuing
to be the key trading partner from the West? Let’s take a look.
For that you need a little perspective. The map itself was
constructed towards the end of the Ming period, i.e. early 1600’s. Calicut
though still important had slipped out of the early prominence and the Arabian
seas were mostly in the control of first the Portuguese and later the Dutch.
The English were waiting to slip in at an opportune time. The Moplah, Marakkar
and Arab sailors still plied the waters of the Arabian Sea and the Western powers
i.e. Dutch, English and Portuguese ran their own shipping vessels through these
waters carrying tons of spices and other goods back and forth to red sea ports.
The Ming Chinese voyages had ceased in the 15th century, a full 100 years or more before the Selden map was created. The junk trade was mostly restricted to the SE Asian areas (the area depicted in the map). So why place Gu Li at the corner or even mention it? It is not possible to discuss this topic without covering the Chinese trade with Malabar through the ages, albeit briefly.
The winds of trade were the monsoon winds which blows south
in the winter and north in the
summer and the ships went where the winds took them to start with. Sailing techniques then took them where they wanted to go and as we know, the ports of Malabar and Quilon became important and friendly stopover points for the Chinese and Arab sailors plying the routes. The consumption centers were the two extremities, them being China and Europe. The Suez Canal being nonexistent meant that goods landed on red sea or gulf ports and were transported over land and then again by sea to, multiplying the costs of goods many times by the time it reached the European customer. The route to China was initially controlled by royalty and so the prices were fully regulated by a single party, with of course costs coming in by way of a complex sailing route and large costs to fend off piracy while sailing from Malabar to various Chinese ports, most importantly Quanzhou or Canton. If you look the timing, Chinese merchants would leave southern China in Jan or Feb for Southeast Asia and make the return journey no later than late July.
summer and the ships went where the winds took them to start with. Sailing techniques then took them where they wanted to go and as we know, the ports of Malabar and Quilon became important and friendly stopover points for the Chinese and Arab sailors plying the routes. The consumption centers were the two extremities, them being China and Europe. The Suez Canal being nonexistent meant that goods landed on red sea or gulf ports and were transported over land and then again by sea to, multiplying the costs of goods many times by the time it reached the European customer. The route to China was initially controlled by royalty and so the prices were fully regulated by a single party, with of course costs coming in by way of a complex sailing route and large costs to fend off piracy while sailing from Malabar to various Chinese ports, most importantly Quanzhou or Canton. If you look the timing, Chinese merchants would leave southern China in Jan or Feb for Southeast Asia and make the return journey no later than late July.
Most ships crossing the Gulf ports left the east coast of
Arabia during the second half of November and the first half of December. Ships
leaving the Red Sea would start out the middle of October, as they could then
catch the winds directly to the Malabar cost, reaching the Malabar ports during
December. If they were journeying to China they would have to lie low so that
the cyclones of the Azyab died down in the Bay of Bengal and they could
continue on in January, crossing southern tip of India and head to the Kalah
Bar in the Malay Peninsula.
Arab ships usually did not venture farther than this as they
had to venture back to their shores laden with stuff to trade, as soon as the
kaws winds started to blow the other way. In any case, the Chinese junks
brought their trade goods to the Malay Peninsula and sometimes as far as
Calicut itself. Calicut or Gu Li went onto become the stop over point where
either the same ship continued on or the ships exchanged wares at Calicut. In
this way trade continued unabated for centuries between the traders and as an
ancillary, Calicut not only supplied the spices, but also strong wood for
ships, repair facilities and even dhow building facilities, while at the same
time remaining a secure port with just trade facilities and local markets. We dealt with all this in the Pragati article. As we mentioned previously, Calicut
was on the way to anywhere (remember the Abu Hasan fart story?) in those days,
west or east!
The Catalan Atlas is the most important Catalan map of the
medieval period (drawn and written in 1375. It was produced by the Majorcan
cartographic school and is attributed to Cresques Abraham, a Jewish book
illuminator who was self-described as being a master of the maps of the world
as well as compasses. You can for example see a Chinese ship on the Indian west
coast near Calicut signifying the importance of the port with respect to
Chinese trade. The connections between China and Malabar were thus strong even
before the arrival of Zheng He and his entourage and a vibrant junk trade was
witnessed and recorded by travelers such as Ibn Batuta.
In previous articles covering Chinese trade withMalabar, we traversed the 12th through 15th centuries. In the Chu Fan Chi
article we covered the early days, in the Shamiti and Zheng he articles we
covered the 15th century trade and then as we saw, it all ended abruptly as
testified by Joseph.
Joseph the Indian was in Lisbon around 1501, having gone
there with Cabral. I had written about all that earlier, so those interested in
his story may refer that. At 40, he was of sound mind and considered a very
honest person by his interlocutors. His accounts (though modified here and
there by his interlocutors) were published around 1510-1520. He is clear in
stating that there are many types of traders in Calicut amongst the countless
moors, and makes it amply clear that the trade had declined somewhat from the
times when the White Chinese with long hair, fez and head ornaments were
present in Calicut. He also mentions that around 1410-1420 AD the Chinese had a
factory at Calicut. He states – having been outraged by the King of Calicut,
they rebelled and gathering a large army came to the city of Calicut and
destroyed it. From that time and upto the present day they have never come to
trade in the said place and they go to a city of a King Naisindo which is
called Mailapet. We discussed this and the aftermath in the Chinese settlement article,where it is clear that the Chinese descendants and remnants
moved to the South sea ports, Madras and Coromandel ports. So was there some
kind of Chinese trade with Malabar after Joseph’s oft stated Chinese skirmish
with the Zamorin? It was not since the pepper trade and much more continued to
remain at Calicut and the Indian as well as Portuguese and Dutch ships brought
in their wares to these ports initially. The Casado traders were ensconced in
Cochin and Goa by then. And we see these
junks back in the Arabian seas, for there is a comment in history books that
the Kunjali Maraikkar (KM III) captured a Chinese treasure Junk laden with
goods somewhere near Goa in 1592. Is that why Gu Li is still mentioned in the
17th century Selden map? Let’s take a look at the Chinese trade
during the Portuguese and Dutch periods. But in general the reader must also
note that the largish Junks were not really suitable for shallow waters to the
south of India and the winds that lashed ports frequently in those months.
Furthermore they generally avoided the pirates that abounded the region as well
as the western ships with guns.
While the Indian embassies wound down by mid 15thcentury,
we find that some other Asian embassies such as those of Homruz and Ceylon
maintained connections with Ming China even as late as 1459. Malacca, Java and
Champa dispatched envoys upto the beginning of the 16th century, so the
connections remained. But the important thing to note is that while China was a
large producer of Silk and Porcelain much wonted in the west, they hardly
needed to import anything from the west. The question then asked is did they
continue to get spices and if so from where? Well, the answer to that is that
the coastal towns in the SE Asia by then had established networks with the
Indian especially Malabar spice traders and the Portuguese, Dutch and English
operating out of Goa, Cochin, Malacca and Java. With austerity setting in, the
consumption perhaps reduced and with the trade outflow vastly exceeding imports
presented no real problem for China.
Blusse in his fine paper provides great detail of the Fukien
trade with Batavia- The Fukienese were
without doubt the greatest Chinese seafarers. Living on a string of rather
infertile coast plains, and cut off from the hinterland by high mountains and
swift rivers, the Fukienese have been forced from early times to import rice
from the neighbouring provinces and to export industrial products like crude
porcelain, iron ware and textiles. During the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries,
coastal and overseas trade suffered from the raids of Japanese and Chinese pirates,
and private overseas trade which could hardly be distinguished from piracy was
strictly forbidden. Only tributary trade was allowed to continue. The gradual
suppression of the pirate raids and mounting pressure from Fukienese merchants
who wanted to resume legal private trade to Southeast Asia led to a new
orientation in the government policy. Beginning in 1567, 50 licenses per year
were handed out to private traders for overseas trade with Southeast Asia. In
his informative article on Chinese overseas trade in the late Ming period Ts'ao
Yung-ho speaks of a hundred licenses being issued in 1575, a number which was
restricted to 88 by 1589.
That the many problems with the Portuguese embargo resulted in privateering outside the reach of Goa is discussed briefly by scholars such as Roderich Ptak. Initial power holders were the rich local chieftains in Malabar such as the Zamorin who was assisted at sea by the Marakkars forming a network with bases in Ceylon and Malacca. But in general it must be kept in mind that the 15th and 16th century Chinese materialistic trader was officially illegal considering that China had closed its borders to shipping whereas Portugal encouraged it in its own terms, both with state owned ships and through private Casado traders. As time went by, the ‘illegal’ Fukien trade in the South Seas strengthened. The later parts of the 15th century led to the rise of Ryukyu merchants as there was a good amount of emigration from mainland Fukien areas to various SE Asian ports resulting in Chinese merchant communities. But these were not those the Chinese termed Wo-k’ou or pirates. The Fukien trade thus included Portuguese Casados and the Ming government collaborated with the Portuguese or vice versa (even though mainland Chinese referred to the Portuguese sometimes as Fo-lang-chi or Portuguese robber merchants). Even after the Portuguese decided to take Macao, they could not obtain an upper hand. The Red barbarians or red hairs, the covetous and cunning Dutch who came later with their double planked ships with spider web sails, also attacked the Fukien ships often. But by then, the Chinese had created their own community stronghold at Batavia and intermingled well with Indonesian women. Nevertheless, these Chinese as we saw before were not well regarded in China for abandoning their homeland and when they were massacred by the Dutch in 1740 at Batavia, Canton raised no eyebrows.
And then of course were various mafia organizations, as well
as the Chinese Muslim network. The Chinese expat living in Philippines or other
places such as Indonesia or Malaya was very much like an Indian today in the Middle
East, nurturing ways and dreams of going back to settle down and retire with
some money. At the same time, they were not welcomed back in the homeland and
they had left their homes and left without taking care of their ancestral
tombs. Lost in limbo, they stuck to their little coastal communities and made
small forays upto the borders of SE Asia, perhaps as far as Coromandel ports.
Sometimes a stray junk run was commissioned at the behest of a wealthy Gujarati
trader to Cambay or Malabar, but in general they did not stray too many times
into the western seas.
So even though large Chinese armadas were no longer sailing
by the early 17th century, the trade had become distributed and
though irregular, attained a sort of permanency. The Dutch were of course the masters
of the sea by then but less radical compared to the Portuguese. And so we come
to the early parts of the 17th century, to Fukian Guanzhou and SE
Asia, where the Selden map was made by somebody for somebody from whom it went
to Selden (Parts of that tale can be pieced together reading Brook’s book).
An early 1607 Ming encyclopedia map also came upto Burma but did not include Calicut in their map, though the Zheng ho maps on which these were based had many details of all the places along the route. Why was Calicut taken out? Was it because China broke off its links after the fallout with the Zamorin? Or was it because of the potential problems the Chinese faced from the Portuguese?
My contention therefore is that the Selden map depict the
Eastern seas of the Chinese while the Calicut cartouche was just a box
providing the next set of coordinates to yet another planned map of the Western seas (perhaps it was not even planned, as the network did not go beyond Burma) with other locales like Ormus, Dhofar and Aden. The placement of Calicut on
this map does not signify a location.
The person who sanctioned the making of the map is discussed in detail by both Batchelor and Brook who believes it to be Li Dan or Andrea Dittis, the Captain China of the Formosa trade. Li operated out of Manila for a time before moving to Hirado, in Japan and becoming a part of the Shuinsen trade, with a formal vermillion seal license from the Tokugawa shogunate. He served as the head of the Chinese community in Hirado, and maintained a residence in the English sector of the city to run the red seal ships. As Richard Cocks said – ‘This Andrea Dittis is now chosen capten and cheefe comander of all the Chinas in Japon, both at Nangasaque, Firando and else wheare.’
Let us look at Brook and his analysis around Calicut. One of
the first things he hovers on is the role played by Thomas Hayden an oriental
scholar in annotating the map together with a Chinese associate Michael Shun Fo
Chung. Hayden over time, also had his portrait made and in the portrait, he holds a scroll
with some Chinese characters. These Chinese characters are Gu Li or Calicut.
Why did this orientalist who otherwise did no research on India choose to
mention Calicut on the scroll held by him, that too in a portrait left behind for posterity?
Interestingly it is also conjectured that Hayden who did not know Chinese, laboriously
painted these characters himself into the scroll. Why of all the other places, did he
pick on Gu Li? Brook leaves that tantalizing question for readers to answer. I
would venture to state that by 1700 Calicut was of course very important for
the English and they were trying hard to find a foothold there. The English
Captain William Keeling, as we know had reached Calicut in 1615 and concluded a
treaty with Zamorin under which, among others, the English were to assist
Calicut in expelling the Portuguese from Cochin and Cranganore. Later on,
around 1664, Zamorin gave the English permission to build a "factory"
in Calicut but did not extend any other favors. Was Hayden by virtue of this
bluff trying to get a commission to Calicut from the EIC?
Well, let’s get back to Calicut on the Selden map. The
westward exit on the left near Johor on the Malay Peninsula and suddenly shows
Calicut on the map as a destination. But as we said before Calicut is much more
to the left and to get there, another sea the Bay of Bengal has to be crossed,
the southern tip has to be circumnavigated and the ship has to sail upwards to
get to the port town of Calicut, a lot of sailing still to do (as though a
panel of the map has been cut off). Well the map in my opinion provides
commentary on the next friendly (?) port of call and what other possibilities
are possible for ships choosing to take that venture. Strangely the
important port of Cambay and Surat is
missing, but the gulf ports are mentioned clearly with Aden 185 watches NW,
Djofar (Oman) 150 watches NW, and with more detail the directions to Hormuz.
But these were no longer important ports at that time, much like Calicut. So
why mention these Zheng He period ports complete with compass bearings? Brooks
assumes that the cartographer used a Ming map as a source and transcribed what
was in there with no special purpose other than to show Calicut as a boundary
before the Eastern mysteries.
That a current sailing map shows a bit of irrelevant
information across the borders is still a bit of a surprise. But then I remembered an interesting article by Calicut Heritage forum. It concludes thus - In 2007, Liu Yinghua had, while working with the manuscript
section of Calicut University under the guidance of Dr. C. Rajendran, Professor
of Sanskrit, discovered 15 Chinese coins being used to tie together the palm
leaves manuscripts. These coins belonged to much later period. Liu identified these as belonging to the
periods of Emperors Qianlong (1736-1795), Jiaqing (1796-1820) and Daoguang
(1821-1850). This probably showed that trade relations between Calicut and
China continued well into the second half of the 19th Century when the Opium
Wars soured the Sino-British relations.
So is there is more to this story??
References
Mr Seldens
map of China – Timothy Brook
The Selden
Map Rediscovered: A Chinese Map of East Asian Shipping Routes, c.1619 - Robert
Batchelor
Chinese
Trade to Batavia during the days of the VOC- Leonard BLUSSÉ
Merchants
and maximization – Roderich Ptak
Piracy along
the coasts of Southern India and Ming China – Roderich Ptak
China and
Portugal at Sea The early Ming trading system and the Estado Da India Compared
– Roderich Ptak
The Dutch
seaborne empire 1600-1800 Charles Boxer
with due acknowledgements and thanks to all image owners and providers
Some other day, I will tell you the story of the VOC-
Chinese Junk trade, the tale of Li Dan or Andrea Dittis and another person
called Tenjiku Tokubei, a famous Japanese adventurer a.k.a. the Marco Polo of
Japan as well as of the Red seal ships.
2 comments:
Maddy, Another excellent post. So much information of interest to someone with connections to Kerala. I can hardly wait for your next blog. When you get a chance, could you write a blog about kings and queens of Kerala and surrounding areas like Madras, Ceylon, Goa around the arrival of the Portuguese or refer me to a blog you might have already written on it. Keep up the good work. Ramu
thanks ramu..
this blog has many notes on the kings of malabar and travancore. Quilon and kolathunad have not been covered so far but will be ASAP. Just scroll thorugh the categories to get to your topic of interest.
i do not stray beyond malabar often..there are some topics on goa etc...you will also find a few at maddys ramblings
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