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Sino-Dutch conflicts

Sino-Dutch conflicts

A Dutch illustration of the surrender of Zeelandia on Formosa to China in 1662
Date1620s–1670s
Location
Fujian, Amoy, Penghu, Liaoluo Bay, Kinmen, Tainan, Taiwan
Result Ming Chinese victory
Belligerents
Ming dynasty
Southern Ming dynasty
Kingdom of Tungning
Portuguese empire
Dutch East India Company
Chinese pirates
Commanders and leaders
Shang Zhouzuo (Shang Chou-tso)
Nan Juyi (Nan Chü-i)
General Wang Mengxiong
Zheng Zhilong
Zheng Chenggong (Koxinga)
Zheng Jing
Cornelis Reijersen
Christian Francs (POW)
Marten Sonck
Hans Putmans
Frederick Coyett
Liu Xiang
Li Guozhu

The Sino-Dutch conflicts were a series of conflicts between the Ming dynasty (and later its rump successor the Southern Ming dynasty and the Ming loyalist Kingdom of Tungning) of China and the Dutch East India Company over trade and land throughout the 1620s, 1630s, and 1662. The Dutch were attempting to compel China to accede to their trade demands, but the Chinese defeated the Dutch forces.

Sino-Dutch conflicts

1620s

The Dutch East India Company used their military power in the attempt to force China to open up a port in Fujian to their trade. They demanded that China expel the Portuguese from Macau. (The Dutch were fighting in the Dutch–Portuguese War at the time.) The Dutch raided Chinese shipping after 1618 and took junks hostage to coerce China into meeting their demands. All these actions were unsuccessful.[1][2][3]

The Dutch were defeated by the Portuguese at the Battle of Macau in 1622. That same year, the Dutch seized Penghu (the Pescadores Islands), built a fort there, and continued to demand that China open up ports in Fujian to Dutch trade. China refused, with the Chinese governor of Fujian (Fukien) Shang Zhouzuo (Shang Chou-tso) demanding that the Dutch withdraw from the Pescadores to Formosa (Taiwan), where the Chinese would permit them to engage in trade. This led to a war between the Dutch and China between 1622 and 1624 which ended with the Chinese being successful in making the Dutch withdraw to Taiwan and abandoning the Pescadores.[4][5]

The Dutch threatened that China would face Dutch raids on Chinese ports and shipping unless the Chinese allowed trading on Penghu and that China not trade with Manila but only with the Dutch in Batavia and Siam and Cambodia. However, the Dutch found out that unlike smaller Southeast Asian kingdoms, China could not be bullied or intimidated by them. After Shang ordered them to withdraw to Taiwan on September 19 of 1622, the Dutch raided Amoy on October and November.[6] The Dutch intended to "induce the Chinese to trade by force or from fear" by raiding Fujian and Chinese shipping from the Pescadores.[7] Long artillery batteries were erected at Amoy in March 1622 by Colonel Li Gonghua as a defence against the Dutch.[8]

On the Dutch attempt in 1623 to force China to open up a port, five Dutch ships were sent to Liu-ao and the mission ended in failure for the Dutch, with a number of Dutch sailors taken prisoner and one of their ships lost. In response to the Dutch using captured Chinese for forced labor and strengthening their garrison in Penghu with five more ships in addition to the six already there, the new governor of Fujian Nan Juyi (Nan Chü-yi) was permitted by China to begin preparations to attack the Dutch forces in July 1623. A Dutch raid was defeated by the Chinese at Amoy in October 1623, with the Chinese taking the Dutch commander Christian Francs prisoner and burning one of the four Dutch ships. Yu Zigao began an offensive in February 1624 with warships and troops against the Dutch in Penghu with the intent of expelling them.[9]

The Chinese offensive reached the Dutch fort on July 30, 1624, with 5,000 Chinese troops (or 10,000) and 40-50 warships under Yu and General Wang Mengxiong surrounding the fort commanded by Marten Sonck, and the Dutch were forced to sue for peace on August 3, withdrawing from Penghu to Taiwan. The Dutch admitted that their attempt at military force to coerce China into trading with them had failed with their defeat in Penghu. At the Chinese victory celebrations over the "red-haired barbarians" as the Dutch were called by the Chinese, Nan Juyi paraded twelve Dutch soldiers who were captured before the Emperor in Beijing.[10][11][12][13] The Dutch were astonished that their violence did not intimidate the Chinese and at the subsequent Chinese attack on their fort in Penghu since they had thought them timid and from their experience in Southeast Asia had regarded them as a "faint-hearted troupe".[14]

1630s

After the Dutch defeat and expulsion from the Pescadores in the 1622–1624, they were totally driven off China's coast. The pirates Liu Xiang and Li Guozhu also joined the Dutch, and for a time it seemed the Dutch would triumph as the head of a new pirate coalition that operated off the coast of China, with at least 41 pirate junks and 450 Chinese soldiers.[15] However they were decisively defeated by Chinese forces under Admiral Zheng Zhilong at the Battle of Liaoluo Bay in 1633.[16][17][18][19] The Chinese used fireships disguised as warships to fool the Dutch into thinking they were going into pitched battle.[20]

1660s and 1670s

In 1662 the Dutch were defeated and driven off Taiwan at the Siege of Fort Zeelandia by Chinese forces under Zheng Chenggong (Koxinga). The Dutch looted relics and killed monks after attacking a Buddhist complex at Putuoshan on the Zhoushan islands in 1665 during their war against Zheng Chenggong's son Zheng Jing.[21]

Zheng Jing's navy executed thirty four Dutch sailors and drowned eight Dutch sailors after looting, ambushing and sinking the Dutch fluyt ship Cuylenburg in 1672 on northeastern Taiwan. Only twenty one Dutch sailors escaped to Japan. The ship was going from Nagasaki to Batavia on a trade mission.[22]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Cooper (1979), p. 658.
  2. ^ Freeman (2003), p. 132.
  3. ^ Thomson (1996), p. 39.
  4. ^ Covell 1998, p. 70.
  5. ^ Wright 1908, p. 817.
  6. ^ ed. Twitchett & Mote 1998, p. 368.
  7. ^ Shepherd 1993, p. 49.
  8. ^ Hughes 1872. p. 25.
  9. ^ ed. Goodrich 1976, p. 1086.
  10. ^ ed. Goodrich 1976, p. 1087.
  11. ^ ed. Twitchett & Mote 1998, p. 369.
  12. ^ Deng 1999, p. 191.
  13. ^ Parker 1917, p. 92.
  14. ^ ed. Idema 1981, p. 93.
  15. ^ Andrade 2004, p. 438.
  16. ^ Blussé, Leonard (1 January 1989). "Pioneers or cattle for the slaughterhouse? A rejoinder to A.R.T. Kemasang". Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde. 145 (2): 357. doi:10.1163/22134379-90003260. S2CID 57527820.
  17. ^ Wills (2010), p. 71.
  18. ^ Cook 2007, p. 362.
  19. ^ Li (李) 2006, p. 122.
  20. ^ Andrade, Tonio (2011). Lost Colony: The Untold Story of China's First Great Victory Over the West (illustrated ed.). Princeton University Press. pp. 47–48. ISBN 978-0691144559.
  21. ^ Hang, Xing (2016). Conflict and Commerce in Maritime East Asia: The Zheng Family and the Shaping of the Modern World, c.1620–1720. Cambridge University Press. p. 154. ISBN 978-1316453841.
  22. ^ Hang, Xing (2016). Conflict and Commerce in Maritime East Asia: The Zheng Family and the Shaping of the Modern World, c.1620–1720. Cambridge University Press. p. 190. ISBN 978-1316453841.

Bibliography

  • Cook, Harold John (2007). Matters of Exchange: Commerce, Medicine, and Science in the Dutch Golden Age. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300134926.
  • Cooper, J. P., ed. (1979). The Decline of Spain and the Thirty Years War, 1609-59. Vol. 4 of The New Cambridge Modern History (reprint ed.). CUP Archive. ISBN 978-0521297134.
  • Covell, Ralph R. (1998). Pentecost of the Hills in Taiwan: The Christian Faith Among the Original Inhabitants (illustrated ed.). Hope Publishing House. ISBN 978-0932727909.
  • Deng, Gang (1999). Maritime Sector, Institutions, and Sea Power of Premodern China (illustrated ed.). Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0313307126. ISSN 0084-9235.
  • Freeman, Donald B. (2003). Straits of Malacca: Gateway or Gauntlet?. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. ISBN 978-0773570870.
  • Goodrich, Luther Carrington; 房, 兆楹, eds. (1976). Dictionary of Ming Biography, 1368-1644, Volume 2. Association for Asian Studies. Ming Biographical History Project Committee (illustrated ed.). Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231038331. Retrieved May 25, 2017.
  • Hughes, George (1872). Amoy and the Surrounding Districts: Compiled from Chinese and Other Records. De Souza & Company.
  • Idema, Wilt Lukas, ed. (1981). Leyden Studies in Sinology: Papers Presented at the Conference Held in Celebration of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Sinological Institute of Leyden University, December 8-12, 1980. Vol. 15 of Sinica Leidensia. Contributor Rijksuniversiteit te Leiden. Sinologisch instituut (illustrated ed.). BRILL. ISBN 978-9004065291.
  • Li (李), Qingxin (庆新) (2006). Maritime Silk Road (海上丝绸之路英). Translated by William W. Wang. 五洲传播出版社. ISBN 978-7508509327.
  • Parker, Edward Harper, ed. (1917). China, Her History, Diplomacy, and Commerce: From the Earliest Times to the Present Day (2 ed.). J. Murray.
  • Shepherd, John Robert (1993). Statecraft and Political Economy on the Taiwan Frontier, 1600-1800 (illustrated ed.). Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0804720663.
  • Thomson, Janice E. (1996). Mercenaries, Pirates, and Sovereigns: State-Building and Extraterritorial Violence in Early Modern Europe (reprint ed.). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1400821242.
  • Twitchett, Denis C.; Mote, Frederick W., eds. (1998). The Cambridge History of China: Volume 8, The Ming Dynasty, Part 2; Parts 1368-1644. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521243339.
  • Wills, John E. (2010). China and Maritime Europe, 1500–1800: Trade, Settlement, Diplomacy, and Missions. Contributors: John Cranmer-Byng, Willard J. Peterson, Jr, John W. Witek. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521432603. OL 24524224M.
  • Wright, Arnold (1908). Cartwright, H. A. (ed.). Twentieth century impressions of Hongkong, Shanghai, and other treaty ports of China: their history, people, commerce, industries, and resources, Volume 1. Lloyds Greater Britain publishing company.

sino, dutch, conflicts, dutch, illustration, surrender, zeelandia, formosa, china, 1662date1620s, 1670slocationfujian, amoy, penghu, liaoluo, kinmen, tainan, taiwanresultming, chinese, victorybelligerentsming, dynastysouthern, ming, dynastykingdom, tungningpor. Sino Dutch conflictsA Dutch illustration of the surrender of Zeelandia on Formosa to China in 1662Date1620s 1670sLocationFujian Amoy Penghu Liaoluo Bay Kinmen Tainan TaiwanResultMing Chinese victoryBelligerentsMing dynastySouthern Ming dynastyKingdom of TungningPortuguese empireDutch East India CompanyChinese piratesCommanders and leadersShang Zhouzuo Shang Chou tso Nan Juyi Nan Chu i General Wang MengxiongZheng ZhilongZheng Chenggong Koxinga Zheng JingCornelis Reijersen Christian Francs POW Marten Sonck Hans Putmans Frederick CoyettLiu XiangLi Guozhu The Sino Dutch conflicts were a series of conflicts between the Ming dynasty and later its rump successor the Southern Ming dynasty and the Ming loyalist Kingdom of Tungning of China and the Dutch East India Company over trade and land throughout the 1620s 1630s and 1662 The Dutch were attempting to compel China to accede to their trade demands but the Chinese defeated the Dutch forces Contents 1 Sino Dutch conflicts 1 1 1620s 1 2 1630s 1 3 1660s and 1670s 2 See also 3 References 3 1 Citations 3 2 BibliographySino Dutch conflicts Edit1620s Edit The Dutch East India Company used their military power in the attempt to force China to open up a port in Fujian to their trade They demanded that China expel the Portuguese from Macau The Dutch were fighting in the Dutch Portuguese War at the time The Dutch raided Chinese shipping after 1618 and took junks hostage to coerce China into meeting their demands All these actions were unsuccessful 1 2 3 The Dutch were defeated by the Portuguese at the Battle of Macau in 1622 That same year the Dutch seized Penghu the Pescadores Islands built a fort there and continued to demand that China open up ports in Fujian to Dutch trade China refused with the Chinese governor of Fujian Fukien Shang Zhouzuo Shang Chou tso demanding that the Dutch withdraw from the Pescadores to Formosa Taiwan where the Chinese would permit them to engage in trade This led to a war between the Dutch and China between 1622 and 1624 which ended with the Chinese being successful in making the Dutch withdraw to Taiwan and abandoning the Pescadores 4 5 The Dutch threatened that China would face Dutch raids on Chinese ports and shipping unless the Chinese allowed trading on Penghu and that China not trade with Manila but only with the Dutch in Batavia and Siam and Cambodia However the Dutch found out that unlike smaller Southeast Asian kingdoms China could not be bullied or intimidated by them After Shang ordered them to withdraw to Taiwan on September 19 of 1622 the Dutch raided Amoy on October and November 6 The Dutch intended to induce the Chinese to trade by force or from fear by raiding Fujian and Chinese shipping from the Pescadores 7 Long artillery batteries were erected at Amoy in March 1622 by Colonel Li Gonghua as a defence against the Dutch 8 On the Dutch attempt in 1623 to force China to open up a port five Dutch ships were sent to Liu ao and the mission ended in failure for the Dutch with a number of Dutch sailors taken prisoner and one of their ships lost In response to the Dutch using captured Chinese for forced labor and strengthening their garrison in Penghu with five more ships in addition to the six already there the new governor of Fujian Nan Juyi Nan Chu yi was permitted by China to begin preparations to attack the Dutch forces in July 1623 A Dutch raid was defeated by the Chinese at Amoy in October 1623 with the Chinese taking the Dutch commander Christian Francs prisoner and burning one of the four Dutch ships Yu Zigao began an offensive in February 1624 with warships and troops against the Dutch in Penghu with the intent of expelling them 9 The Chinese offensive reached the Dutch fort on July 30 1624 with 5 000 Chinese troops or 10 000 and 40 50 warships under Yu and General Wang Mengxiong surrounding the fort commanded by Marten Sonck and the Dutch were forced to sue for peace on August 3 withdrawing from Penghu to Taiwan The Dutch admitted that their attempt at military force to coerce China into trading with them had failed with their defeat in Penghu At the Chinese victory celebrations over the red haired barbarians as the Dutch were called by the Chinese Nan Juyi paraded twelve Dutch soldiers who were captured before the Emperor in Beijing 10 11 12 13 The Dutch were astonished that their violence did not intimidate the Chinese and at the subsequent Chinese attack on their fort in Penghu since they had thought them timid and from their experience in Southeast Asia had regarded them as a faint hearted troupe 14 1630s Edit Main article Battle of Liaoluo Bay After the Dutch defeat and expulsion from the Pescadores in the 1622 1624 they were totally driven off China s coast The pirates Liu Xiang and Li Guozhu also joined the Dutch and for a time it seemed the Dutch would triumph as the head of a new pirate coalition that operated off the coast of China with at least 41 pirate junks and 450 Chinese soldiers 15 However they were decisively defeated by Chinese forces under Admiral Zheng Zhilong at the Battle of Liaoluo Bay in 1633 16 17 18 19 The Chinese used fireships disguised as warships to fool the Dutch into thinking they were going into pitched battle 20 1660s and 1670s Edit Main article Siege of Fort Zeelandia In 1662 the Dutch were defeated and driven off Taiwan at the Siege of Fort Zeelandia by Chinese forces under Zheng Chenggong Koxinga The Dutch looted relics and killed monks after attacking a Buddhist complex at Putuoshan on the Zhoushan islands in 1665 during their war against Zheng Chenggong s son Zheng Jing 21 Zheng Jing s navy executed thirty four Dutch sailors and drowned eight Dutch sailors after looting ambushing and sinking the Dutch fluyt ship Cuylenburg in 1672 on northeastern Taiwan Only twenty one Dutch sailors escaped to Japan The ship was going from Nagasaki to Batavia on a trade mission 22 See also EditCambodian Dutch War Trịnh Nguyễn WarReferences EditCitations Edit Cooper 1979 p 658 Freeman 2003 p 132 Thomson 1996 p 39 Covell 1998 p 70 Wright 1908 p 817 ed Twitchett amp Mote 1998 p 368 Shepherd 1993 p 49 Hughes 1872 p 25 ed Goodrich 1976 p 1086 ed Goodrich 1976 p 1087 ed Twitchett amp Mote 1998 p 369 Deng 1999 p 191 Parker 1917 p 92 ed Idema 1981 p 93 Andrade 2004 p 438 sfn error no target CITEREFAndrade2004 help Blusse Leonard 1 January 1989 Pioneers or cattle for the slaughterhouse A rejoinder to A R T Kemasang Bijdragen tot de Taal Land en Volkenkunde 145 2 357 doi 10 1163 22134379 90003260 S2CID 57527820 Wills 2010 p 71 Cook 2007 p 362 Li 李 2006 p 122 Andrade Tonio 2011 Lost Colony The Untold Story of China s First Great Victory Over the West illustrated ed Princeton University Press pp 47 48 ISBN 978 0691144559 Hang Xing 2016 Conflict and Commerce in Maritime East Asia The Zheng Family and the Shaping of the Modern World c 1620 1720 Cambridge University Press p 154 ISBN 978 1316453841 Hang Xing 2016 Conflict and Commerce in Maritime East Asia The Zheng Family and the Shaping of the Modern World c 1620 1720 Cambridge University Press p 190 ISBN 978 1316453841 Bibliography Edit Cook Harold John 2007 Matters of Exchange Commerce Medicine and Science in the Dutch Golden Age Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300134926 Cooper J P ed 1979 The Decline of Spain and the Thirty Years War 1609 59 Vol 4 of The New Cambridge Modern History reprint ed CUP Archive ISBN 978 0521297134 Covell Ralph R 1998 Pentecost of the Hills in Taiwan The Christian Faith Among the Original Inhabitants illustrated ed Hope Publishing House ISBN 978 0932727909 Deng Gang 1999 Maritime Sector Institutions and Sea Power of Premodern China illustrated ed Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0313307126 ISSN 0084 9235 Freeman Donald B 2003 Straits of Malacca Gateway or Gauntlet McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 978 0773570870 Goodrich Luther Carrington 房 兆楹 eds 1976 Dictionary of Ming Biography 1368 1644 Volume 2 Association for Asian Studies Ming Biographical History Project Committee illustrated ed Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231038331 Retrieved May 25 2017 Hughes George 1872 Amoy and the Surrounding Districts Compiled from Chinese and Other Records De Souza amp Company Idema Wilt Lukas ed 1981 Leyden Studies in Sinology Papers Presented at the Conference Held in Celebration of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Sinological Institute of Leyden University December 8 12 1980 Vol 15 of Sinica Leidensia Contributor Rijksuniversiteit te Leiden Sinologisch instituut illustrated ed BRILL ISBN 978 9004065291 Li 李 Qingxin 庆新 2006 Maritime Silk Road 海上丝绸之路英 Translated by William W Wang 五洲传播出版社 ISBN 978 7508509327 Parker Edward Harper ed 1917 China Her History Diplomacy and Commerce From the Earliest Times to the Present Day 2 ed J Murray Shepherd John Robert 1993 Statecraft and Political Economy on the Taiwan Frontier 1600 1800 illustrated ed Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804720663 Thomson Janice E 1996 Mercenaries Pirates and Sovereigns State Building and Extraterritorial Violence in Early Modern Europe reprint ed Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1400821242 Twitchett Denis C Mote Frederick W eds 1998 The Cambridge History of China Volume 8 The Ming Dynasty Part 2 Parts 1368 1644 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521243339 Wills John E 2010 China and Maritime Europe 1500 1800 Trade Settlement Diplomacy and Missions Contributors John Cranmer Byng Willard J Peterson Jr John W Witek Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521432603 OL 24524224M Wright Arnold 1908 Cartwright H A ed Twentieth century impressions of Hongkong Shanghai and other treaty ports of China their history people commerce industries and resources Volume 1 Lloyds Greater Britain publishing company Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sino Dutch conflicts amp oldid 1136934051, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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