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The Formation of the Modern East Asian Economy
Korean trade also was concerned
with weapons. From China they imported, by land, large
amounts of the materials needed to make good bows; from
Japan they imported a large amount of swords (*) swords
also entered Korea in large numbers, until Japanese captives
from Hideyoshi's invasions of Korea revealed some Japanese
techniques for sword-making.
And of course, there was the rifle,
introduced by the Portuguese and Dutch, briefly used by
the Japanese, and little employed by the Chinese and Koreans.
On land, the bow, the spear, and the sword remained the
most common weapons, while on sea the sword, preferably
the Japanese sword, held sway.
By the mid-seventeenth
century, all this trade in essentials, in luxury goods,
and in instruments of warfare was interrupted. In all
the capitals of East Asia, strategic concerns over land
and sea took precedence over the growth of trade. Fearful
of the troubles along their coasts, these states shut
their doors to begin what the Japanese have called the
age of seclusion. I shall question the full appropriateness
of this term in subsequent lectures. But the mid-seventeenth
century undeniably saw a dramatic increase in hostility
toward foreign trade and foreigners throughout East Asia.
The Tokugawa government feared further loss of Japanese
silver and intrusions by Westerners; consequently, from
the late 1630s it barred all Japanese from going abroad,
tolerated only Chinese and Dutch foreign merchants at
the single port of Nagasaki, and banned Christianity.
The Koreans closed their country off even more, out of
fear of further invasions by the Japanese and the new
rulers of China, the Manchus. These soldiers shared the
Japanese anxiety about a "silver dearth" and "copper shortage."
But they were worried more about Chinese pirates than
Western traders and missionaries. Aware of these pirates'
long developed links to supplies and manpower on land,
the Qing government forcibly moved all coastal residents
of southeast China, from the Lower Yangtze delta to the
Canton delta, to over 15 miles inland. It built a wall
between them and the sea, eventually subduing the coastal
pirates that had so long plagued these waters. In 1661,
it banned, for the next 23 years, Chinese private engagement
in foreign trade, just at the time the Japanese were about
to stop the outflow of their silver.
Through all of these traumatic
changes, these nations never negotiated or discussed their
problems with one another. They never even made use of
the middlemen their societies so often rely on to solve
problems. Confronted with unwanted trade and violence,
these uncertain governments shut their doors and harbours
and brought an end to a long cycle of maritime war and
trade, particularly in southeast Asia.
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