Quilon and its trade links with China
Posted by Labels: Chinese trade - Quilon, Chinese trade MalabarThat Quilon was well known to seafarers is not surprising, for it is well situated in the South West of the Indian coast. It was well known not only to Greek and Roman seafarers going back in time before Christ but also to later entrants such as the Arabs, Persians and Chinese into the Indian Ocean. If we dig deep into historic accounts left behind by some of the sailors or visitors, we can come up with a decent silhouette of the entrepot Quilon once was, as well as the preeminent position it held among the trading ports of Malayala, as Kerala was then known. Its name got attached to the Malayalam Calendar Kolla Varsham and for a time was reason enough to associate with a popular proverb in the Malayalam language which meant 'one who has seen Kollam, forgets his house’.
Before we get to the Chinese and their links to Quilon, let
us check if the Persian and Greek-Roman seafarers mentioned or stopped by
Quilon. Cosmas mention the existence of a bishopric in Calliana (Quilon) on the
coast of Malabar, whose bishop is consecrated in Persia. While some believed
that Calliana may have been Kalyan near Bombay or Callianpore in the Coromandel,
it is now accepted that Quilon was the seat of Nestorian Christians, as
mentioned. Quilon was also mentioned by Nestorian friar’s way back and we come
across a letter from the Nestorian Patriarch, Jesujabus of Adiabene, who died
in 660 A.D. talking about an area “which extends from the coast of the kingdom
of Fars to Colon, a distance of 1200 parasangs, where Colon ostensibly means
Quilon according to MH Nainar. He mentions of an extract in Land's Anecdota
Syriaca that three Syrian missionaries came to Kaulam in 823 A.D. and got
permission from the king to build a church and city at Kaulam. The decline of the Roman empire and the spread
of Islam brought to an end these ancient trade links and traders from Middle
East and China now began to concentrate on Quilon (Kollam) on the southern part
of the Malabar coast.
The real fame for the port came with trade and this was
brought about by the merchants and Christian immigrants from Persia, as
evidenced by the privileges obtained by Mar Sapor from the local chief. Their
connections linked Quilon to Persia while the Jews who arrived linked the city
Abbassids of Persia and the Fatimids of Egypt through the Anjuvanam guilds (The
local trading groups such as the Manigramam too shifted their activities to
Quilon). A robust dhow trade developed what with the great demand for the local
produce of pepper, ginger, and other goods like fine cotton, aromatic products
and stones/pearls.
When the seaborne trade stretched out to Canton in China,
Kulam Male or Quilon became an important stopover, and so we will now focus on
the Chinese Quilon links in this article, especially with the port of Kulam
Male serving as a fulcrum, as an entrepot facilitating transshipment between
the Chinese and the Western buyers.
Eight Arab writers, Suleyman, Ibn Khurdadhbeh, Ibnul Faqih
Idrisi, Yaqut, Qazwini, Dimishqi and Abul Fida who preceded Ibn Battuta (1355
A.D.) speak about Kawlam. They mention it differently (Mulay—Ibn Khurdadhbeh,
Kulam Mali—Suleyman, Kulu Mali—Ibnul Faqih, Kukam Li, Kulam Mali, Jazirat
Mali—Yaqut and Qazwini, Madinat Kulam and Jazirat Mali—Dimishqi, Kawlam—Abul
Fida, Kawlam—Ibn Battuta).
Suleyman mentions that Chinese ships had to pay a much
higher duty of one thousand dirhams when the other ships pay a sum ranging from
one to ten dinars (10-20 dinars according to Ibnul Faqih) and we read also from
the other chronicles that Quilon provided safe haven, lots of freshwater, a
vibrant local market, support from traders and the ruling kings/queen, trade security
etc. We also get to know that they had a separate quarter for Muslims in the
city, so also a cathedral. The city is situated on a plain, its earth is sandy
and dotted with many gardens here. While pepper and other spices were
indigenous, the local potters made their black pottery, ostensibly passed off
as Chinese vases.
Yaqut adds that vases are made in Kulam and sold in our
countries as Chinese vases, but they are not Chinese, for the Chinese clay is
harder than that and it is more fire-resisting. Kulam pottery is black, but
that which comes from China is white and of other colors, sometimes translucent.
Qazwini has the vague remark “when their king dies the
people of the place choose another from China.” It could of course have alluded
to a local Chinese headman for the Chinese village in Quilon, and that this
person was selected based on orders from China.
Circumventing India was a bit tricky in those days. The
straits were shallow and rocky, while the waters around Ceylon treacherous for
sailing boats. Mariners of ancient days had a strong aversion to sailing around
capes, perhaps due to sail types, wind aspects and rough seas around capes. Ships
plying the eastern seas docked at the Southern or South Eastern ports and the
ships from the Arabian ports docked at India’s west coast ports. The connection
between the two was the overland trade route through the large Palghat gap across
the western ghats as well as some smaller gaps south. While larger ships did
sail around Ceylon, especially on the China run, after paying the larger
1000-dirham duties, smaller ships did not.
The Chinese links
Chinese intercourse with Indian ports dates back to ancient
times. As early as 140-86 B.C., we can
observe that the Han Emperor Wu Ti had dispatched envoys by sea to Huang Chih,
identified to be Kanchipuram near Madras, the capital of the Pallavas. From
that time onwards the South China seas had multiple craft belonging to the Malay,
Javanese, Champa, Indian and Arab nations, competing for space and resulting
not only in sea battles but also many opportune acts of piracy.
It was probably around the period 420-479 AD that China
first began to build craft for the sea-going trade, though trade was conducted in
Arab dhows. By about 520 AD the
conditions of sea travel had improved and sea-journeys were preferred overland
between India and China, thus the seaborne trade to China steadily increased. From
the fifth to the twelfth centuries, skippers guided their ships using land-marks
and if they did venture away from land, they trusted regular monsoon winds,
steering solely by the sun, moon, and stars, taking frequent depth soundings. Carrier-pigeons
were used to send and receive messages from land posts.
As we will see, the commercial contacts between Quilon and
China continued through the reigns of the four major Chinese dynasties namely
Tang (618-907 CE), Song (960-1229 CE) Yuan (1229-1368 CE) and the early part of
the Ming period (1368-1644 CE).
Even though there are mentions of Chinese ships, many
historians feel that the ships which plied the China route were not always
Chinese owned and were usually manned by non-Chinese sailors. Hourani mentions
that in the fifth century, Chinese ships probably met those from the western
side, whatever they were, in the ports of Ceylon. He concludes it likely that Persian
ships were trading with China before the advent of Islam. Once Canton (Khanfu,
Quanzhou) was reopened in 792 AD, things started to change. Though not
established, one historian clarifies thus - “that the Chinese introduced the
Arabs to navigation towards eastern Asia; it was aboard their junks that the
merchants from the Persian Gulf first sailed to the southern seas”.
Mahlai mentioned in records of Tang dynasty, ruling through
China’s golden era, is possibly Kulam Male and we do have clinching evidence with
several Tang period coins in Quilon excavations. The use of Persian Cobalt,
Indian cotton printing techniques etc signifies more interactions with the Tang.
During that period, Chinese ships rarely ventured into the Indian Ocean or even
to Malabar (but there are mentions of Junks going to Ceylon, avoiding the
shallow straits). This was a period when
the Sriwijaya’s controlled the trade routes in the South China Sea. Arab and
Persian ships were of course sailing to China, probably even before the second
half of the seventh century, and we read of a massacre of all the foreign
merchants at Canton by rebel forces revolting against the Tang dynasty, in 879
AD. Interestingly even the discovery of the compass, the ‘south-pointing
needle’, did not provide the impetus for Chinese ships sailing beyond Quilon,
according to Chong Su See (Thesis Foreign trade). But Arab manned Chinese trade
ships traversed the whole route.
The Book of Routes and Realms (Kitab al-Masalik
wa-l-mamalik) of Ibn Khurdadbeh (d. 885) provides great detail– He explains the
ocean part of the voyage thus - The ships cut across the ocean to the port
of Kollam Malay on the southwestern coast of India, where large China-bound
ships were assessed a toll of 1000 dirhams (in contrast to other ships, which
were assessed only 10 or 20 dirhams). From there, the China-bound ship skirted
the southern coast of Ceylon, made for the Nicobar Islands in the Bay of Bengal
to replenish food and water, stopped at Kalah Bar in Malaya, passed through the
Malacca Straits, made additional stops at the island of Tiyumah, Sanf in Champa
and the nearby island of Sanf Fulau, and finally headed to Khanfu. The
author provided a general timetable for the whole trip: roughly a lunar month
(29–30 days) for each of the four legs of the trip, marked by Kollam Malay,
Kalah Bar, Sanf and Khanfu. With stops, the whole trip would take around six
months. The stop at Quilon allowed them to restock, pick up goods, conduct
repairs and get ready for the next legs.
We now know that the Chinese vessels were of three kinds;
large ships called chunks/junks, and middle ones called zaws (dhows), and small
ones called kakams. The heavily planked, multi-decked Chinese ships known as
junks began to sail towards South East Asia only from the later Tang period and
could not reach the commercial emporia of the Malabar coast until the accession
of the Sung dynasty. With the turmoil in China as well as the South East Asian
empires, trading declined till the Sung (North and South 960-1297 AD) Dynasty
emerged. Under the Southern Sung Dynasty (1127-1279) the Chinese began to get
sea-minded and established control over the sea-routes to South East Asia and
India. But it is clear from all studies that Quilon, visited by Cantonese junks
in the twelfth century, was still the furthest point west reached by Chinese
ships until the ascent of the Ming dynasty.
China ships would sail down the Persian Gulf with the
monsoon winds, cross from Masqat to Malabar and they would spend the last two
weeks, typically in December, trading at Kulam Mali (Quilon). By January they
would head through the Malacca Strait, in time to use the southern monsoon
through the Sea of China. After a summer at Canton, the ship would return with
the northeast monsoon to the Malacca Strait between October and December, cross
the Bay of Bengal in January, head out from Kulam Mali to the gulf early next
year. Thus, the round trip took a year and a half, leaving a summer at home
before the next trip. So now you can imagine why the goods, especially pepper
became so pricy at the consumer end. Traders also transshipped at Quilon to
access Kaveripattanam, on the Eastern coast.
According to Zhou Qufei’s statements, the critical point of
transshipment for the Sino-Islamic trade was Quilon on India’s southwest coast,
where seafarers transferred goods to ships that traveled either east to China
or west to the Arabian Peninsula across the “Eastern Sea of the Muslims” or the
Arabian Sea. Chinese maritime trade with the countries of the Indian Ocean now
reached its zenith and Chinese navigation improved with the adoption of the
mariner's compass, which the Chinese first used at the end of the eleventh
century, though records state sailors still depended on winds and reckoning
with the sun and stars.
With the arrival of the Mongols and Kublai Khan of the Yuan
dynasty during the 13th CE, things changed and the Chinese upped the
ante as Kublai Khan attempted to create a Chinese hegemony over the countries
in the South. Kings were summoned to come or send envoys to the Chinese Court
to show their allegiance and they were then regarded as vassals. As Mills
explains - The foreign commerce of China was still maintained about its
highest peak: and in the thirteenth century, the Chinese junks threatened the
trade of the Arabs in the Indian Ocean. In 1284 the Chinese Government
attempted to increase its profit from foreign trade: it built boats, chose men,
provided them with capital, and sent them abroad to trade, taking 70% of the
profits for itself: private trading was prohibited with heavy penalties, but
the oft-repeated prohibition was far from successful.
There was an uninterrupted stream of voyagers from Quilon
(Kulam) and Zaytun, and of Chinese merchandise moving from Zaytun to Quilon
(for Ormuz). We also see Chinese now going North to Calicut and beyond and Mills
explains - Chinese junks called regularly Kaveripattanam, Cail, Quilon, and
Ceylon with many kinds of silks. On the west coast of India, Chinese ships traded
only ports of Calicut, Quilon, and " Hili " as they passed "
winter" at Fandarayna (Pantalayani Kollam). Most of the Chinese merchants
went to Quilon, which was the nearest of the Malabar towns to China, and had
from very early times been the trans-shipment port for the Chinese trade. In
the China Sea traveling was done solely in Chinese ships. The largest Chinese
ships were built only at Ch'uanchow Canton: they had four decks, were divided
into water-tight compartments, and had a complement of 1,000 men, of whom 400
be men-at-arms: they had four to six masts and might carry many as twelve
sails. The Chinese type of sail was superior Arab types.
During the thirteenth century, when the Mongols ruled over
China, it appears that Quanzhou was being administered as an almost independent
polity, funded through its trade with Southeast Asia and beyond while the
trading ports and mercantile guilds of the Chola kingdom according to Tansen
Sen, played a significant role in linking the markets of China to the rest of
the world. We can also see that Chinese
ships were armed heavily by now far beyond the Naphtha flame throwers they
earlier carried due to the acts of piracy in the South China seas.
During the period of the Yuan dynasty (1271-1368), the
Chinese traveler, Wang Dayuan, sailed twice to India and other countries and
returned with pepper. Ma’abar had already accepted the status as a nominal Yuan
vassal, but Kollam and some other ports were still outside of Kublai’s reach.
Hence, in early 1280, Yang Tingbi, one of the more frequently referred to Yuan
diplomats traveling to maritime Asian countries, was sent to Kollam to induce
its lord to follow the example to Ma’abar and submit tribute as well. Sastri
explains - "In the 2nd moon of
the 19th year (1282) he arrived in the kingdom of Kulam where the king and his
minister Mohammed and others received the Imperial letter with the Privy Seal
with deep prostrations. In the third moon he ordered his minister
Chu-a-lisha-mang-li-pa-ti to depart with present to Court. At the same time
(the head of the) Yeh-li-k'o-wen, Wu-tsa-erh-sa-li-ma, and Mohammed, the head
of the Mussulmans, and others of the country, having heard of the coming of the
Imperial envoy, all came and requested that they be allowed to send yearly
presents to Court. They therefore sent a representative to be received at the
audience. In the autumn of 1282 the envoys from Kulam, Na-wang, Su-mu-ta and
Su-mu-tu-la arrived at Kublai's court. The ruler of Ku-lan sent a mission with
a memorial, and presented valuable articles and one black ape. The chief of the
Yeh-li-k'o-wen (Thomas Christians) resident in the kingdom of Ku-lan, sent also
a messenger with a memorial who presented a gorget set with different kinds of
jewels, and two flacons of drugs. Furthermore Mohammed, the head official of
the Mussulmans, also sent a messenger and a memorial. After this, thirty years
appear to have elapsed before another mission was sent to Southern India, for
it is only in the year 1344 that mention is made of an envoy being sent to
Kulam, when, as in 1283, he carried the king, or Wa-ni, a tiger-badge and the
title of imperial son-in-law or fu-ma.
Marco Polo on his return voyage from China (C.1293 CE.)
touched the Kerala ports in the kingdoms of ‘Comari’ (Cape Comorin), ‘Coilum’
(Quilon) and ‘Eli’ (Elimala) and ‘Melibar. He gives us fuller details of the
country, its people, its products, etc. “When you quit Malabar and go 500
miles towards the southwest, you come to the kingdom of Coilum. The people are
idolators, but there are also some Christians and some Jews. The merchants from
Manzi (China) and from Arabia, and from the Levant come thither with their
ships and their merchandise, and make great profits both by what they import
and by what they export”.
Wang Dayuan reports on the horse trade and the transshipping
of horses. “[Sometimes these merchant vessels] arrive late [due to] the
direction of winds – [i.e.], after the departure of the horse ships [from
Hormuz] – and cannot take on a full cargo.”
The indigenous Malayalam literature of the 13th
to the 16th century also refer to the Chinese contacts with the
Malabar Coast. A mid-fourteenth-century poem called Unnunili Sandesam mentions
the Chinese junks (chunks) which came to the shore of Kollam.
After the decline resulting from the Yuan naval expeditions
at the end of the thirteenth century, noted above, Quanzhou went on to become a
great port again in the fourteenth century. Ibn Battuta visiting Quilon says - On
the tenth day we came to the town of Kulam (Quilon), one of the most beautiful
towns in Malabar. Its bazaars are splendid and its merchants are known as Soils.
They are very rich; any one of them will buy a vessel with its tackle and load
it with merchandise from his own house. There are in Kulam many Muhammadan
merchants; their chief is Ala-ud-din Alavji, native of Avah in Iraq. He is a
rafizi (or partizan of 'All) and has friends who openly follow the same
doctrine. The Qazi of Kulam is a distinguished man from Qazwin; the head of all
the Muslims in this town is Muhammad Shah Bandar, the chief of the port, who
has an excellent and generous brother, Taqi-ud-din, the principal mosque there
is admirable; it was built by the merchant KHwaja Muhazzab. Kulam is, of all the
towns of Malabar, the nearest to China, and most of the Chinese merchants come
there. Mussulmans are honoured and respected there. The Sultan of Kulam is an
idolater, Tirwari (Tiruvadi) by he respects Muslims and severely punishes
thieves and malefactors. He then details a macabre incident where a murderer is
killed and left to rot and after further travels returns to Quilon to spend three
months there before the return voyage. Ibn Battuta recorded seeing a big
Chinese cock for the first time in Quilon.
It appears that the civil war affected Fujian, causing the
flight of many Muslims to Southeast Asia. As warfare broke out in and around
Quanzhou in 1357 where most Muslims resided on the southern Chinese coast. This
escalated into mass killings and as revolts against Yuan rule expanded, a rebel
leader known as Zhu Yuanzhang was gradually able to secure control over increasingly
large areas and establish a new Chinese state in 1368, which he named Great
Ming. The Ming dynasty had arrived.
It is not only from foreign notices that we establish Kulam
or Quilon as an important link in the seaborne Chinese trade. Further proof of the patronage is obtained
from the discovery of several coins belonging to the Tang dynasties as early as
621-718AD, the Zhou dynasties, the Northern and Southern Song dynasties, the
Jin dynasty and through to the Yuan dynasties until the 13th
century. More details of these coins can be obtained from Beena Sarasan’s work
on the subject.
As the Caliphate empire began to decline during the mid-11th
centuries, its collapse paved the way for the Turks and was the reason for a commercial
decline in West Asia. Quilon was naturally
affected as it depended much on those trade patrons and its trade with the
Persian Gulf declined rapidly. At this juncture two changes took place, the
first being the restriction of trade due to the drain of coin currency in China
and the displacement of Chinese, Jewish and Syrian Christian traders and guilds
by the Pardesi Karimi and Mamluk Arabs. Meanwhile, important changes were
occurring in Malabar and Quilon. The Persians, the Iraqi – Baghdadi’s were
getting sidelined by the Karimi’s and Mamluk merchants who wanting no great
friendship with the Christians and Jews at Quilon and nearby environs, perhaps
affected by the crusades, and the Zamorin’s support, simply moved to Calicut.
As a result, Calicut’s fortunes surged. We also start to see mentions in
Chinese records that Kulin or Quilon had in their eyes, become a dependency of
Calicut (Nan-pi country). Thus, by the time the Ming Voyages and with Zheng He started
in the 15th century, the port of Quilon though still in use, had
fallen out of favor and the main trade stops were at Calicut.
The Chinese were not forgotten by Quilon for they left
behind small communities, and we hear of the remnants at Thangassery and Neendakara.
At Quilon, the present small Bazaar (Chinnakada) was once a predominant Chinese
pocket in the town bearing appropriately the name Cheenakada, viz., Chinese
Bazaar. Even today you can see the influence of the Chinese in some old
buildings with curved roofs, we can see the snake boats, the floating Chinese
nets, so also the Chinese names of several items and produce used in day-to-day
life such as chinacatti, chinavala, cheenimulaku, china odam, china bharani,
and china vedi just to name a few.
References
Arab Seafaring
– George F. Hourani
Chinese cash in
Ku-Lin – Beena Sarasan
Quilon, An
Indian port of Former days – Calcutta Review April 1901, K Padmanabhan Thampi
Kollam – Dr SMH
Nainar (Studies in Indology, In Honour Of Dr. Radha Kumud Mookerji)
Historical
contacts between Quilon and China – Haraprasad Ray
Notes on Early
Chinese Voyages – JV Mills (The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great
Britain and Ireland, Apr.,1951)
Allusions and
Artefacts of Chinese Trade from Kollam, South Kerala, India — Ajit Kumar,
Vinuraj.B, Rajesh S. V, Abhayan G. S and H.Sasaki
Foreign notices
of South India from Megasthenes to Ma Huan – K A Nilakanta Sastri
Notes
4 comments:
Interesting read!
Along with the movement of the Persians and Iraqis to Calicut, are there any other proposed causes for the rise of Calicut in Kollam's place?
Interestingly, there are oral traditions of Chinese vessels, namely junks and sampans (chongu and champan in Malayalam), sailing through the Neendakara bar in Kollam into the Ashtamudi Lake. In fact, there is even a place named Chambranikodi by the shores of the lake near Prakkulam, which is one of the stops for the Kollam-Guhanandapuram boat service. The name points to its connection with ancient Chinese sampans anchoring there. Even today, one can find people with Mongoloid facial features in Neendakara and its neighbouring areas as well as certain hamlets along the Ashtamudi lake.
hi mohshin,
yes, of course, and are connected with the ambitions of the Zamorin, I have covered those over many articles in the past.
thanks, Renjith,
makes me think a bit. sampan as in rowboat I presume, but those are for local transportation, not long distance. I am wondering if it was connected to frankincense trade which was super important for China. Sambrani as you know is frankincense.
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