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The Formation of the Modern East Asian Economy
To prove this assertion
in detail, however, is far from easy. Any Chinese merchant
engaged in this trade would have readily been labeled
a smuggler. Smugglers, as a rule, do not like to leave
traces of their activities, particularly when in the Chinese
case that would have meant execution and confiscation
of their cargo. And it must be confessed that contemporary
Chinese sources contain little to reveal their movements
and contradict the conventional view of overseas Chinese
trade. Seventeenth century sources, for instance, explain
that from the early fifteenth century, the Fukienese fishing
port of Yuegang underwent rapid development into a major
port hosting trade from southeast Asia and the Ryukyu
Islands. But early or late fifteenth century sources tell
us precious little of this port. And so, as scholars usually
write about only what they read, until recently little
serious research has questioned the blinkers of our Ming
sources.
Yet in this re-assessment
of our problem lies our solution. We sinologists tend
to read only Chinese textual sources to learn about China.
In the case of foreign trade, any effort to demonstrate
its absence should require confirmation in the foreign
record as well. And the search there, in Korean, Japanese,
and southeast Asian sources-some printed, some archival,
some archaeological, and some visual-has turned up considerable
evidence at odds with the Chinese official record. This
evidence obliges us to recognize not only the continuation
of much Chinese and East Asian trade during these two
centuries of the imperial ban, but also the ongoing links
between trade and war, or piracy and private merchants
during both of the two centuries Anthony Reid has called
"the Age of Commerce."
First, the Ming ban did
not prevent private trading under its auspices. Its ban
was essentially intended to establish a kind of state
monopoly, rather than an outright ban. Thus, many Chinese
merchants accompanied Zheng He's fleets on their foreign
voyages to sell Chinese products and acquire foreign goods.
Likewise, when foreign states' tribute missions came,
they also brought their private merchants. For example,
from 1433 onwards the Japanese tribute ships regularly
included many merchants independently financed or engaged
by powerful figures like daimyos, temples, and shrines
to acquire highly profitable Chinese goods for the Japanese
market. Later on, the Ming government actually relaxed
its ban somewhat, allowing some Chinese merchants to set
sail annually from Fukien to southeast Asia between 1457
and the 1540s.
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