460 likes | 479 Views
The age of global change in the 1500s saw Europeans arriving in East and Southeast Asia, impacting Asian commerce. While China and Japan initially resisted European influence, trade relations shifted. Portuguese and Spanish empires emerged, engaging in commerce and colonization. The Dutch and British East India Companies established trade dominance. Despite European involvement, major Asian powers maintained control. Japan's response evolved as feudalism transitioned under the Tokugawa Shogunate, adapting to European influences.
E N D
1500s • Europeans arrive in East & Southeast Asia • Asia not much affected at first • China & Japan strong enough to resist http://home.planet.nl/~eljee/J.htm
Vasco da Gama • 1498 voyage to India • Opened the way east for Europeans • Europe had little to trade • Asians not interested in Christianity http://college.hmco.com/history/west/mosaic/chapter9/images/vasco_da_gama.jpg
Limits to European success • Sea power allowed: • Control of spice exports • Regulation of some areas in Asian trade network • Europe participation, not control • Tribute regimes http://www.thegutsygourmet.net/post-spice.jpg
Europeans and Asian Commerce Goal of Europeans in Asia = trade, not empire-building
Portuguese empire http://geography.ucdavis.edu/njrallan/class/geo10/slides/images/Geo10-124_jpg.jpg
A Portuguese Empire of Commerce • Portugal created a “trading post empire” within the Indian Ocean • Goal = control co • mmerce, not large territories or populations • Goal = control trading posts by force of arms, not by economic competition • Major thing Portugal controlled = the spice trade
Portuguese Policies in the Indian Ocean • Required all merchant vessels to purchase a cartaz (pass) to sail throughout the region • Charged merchant vessels taxes of 6-10% of their cargoes • Blocked the Red Sea route to the Mediterranean Sea • Monopolized the trade route around Africa to Europe
Portuguese Control in the Long-Run • Portugal never succeeded in controlling more than half of the spice trade to Europe • By 1600 = the Portuguese trading post empire was in steep decline • Competition from other European powers • Competition from rising Asian states like Japan and Mughal India
Spain and the Philippines • Spain was the first to follow in Portugal’s footsteps • Established itself on the Philippine islands • Named after King Philip II of Spain • Spain set up outright colonial rule because: • Close to China and the spice islands • Small and militarily weak societies on the Philippines • No competing claims for the islands
What effect do you believe the Spanish will have on the Philipines?
Spain and the Philippines • With Spanish rule came: • Mass conversion to Christianity • Relocation from scattered settlements to permanent, concentrated Christian communities • Taxes, tribute, and unpaid labor • Large estates owned by Spanish settlers or prominent Filipinos • Responses to colonial oppression = short-lived revolts; flight to the interior mountains or bustling capital of Manila
Dutch trading empire, 1650 http://occawlonline.pearsoned.com/bookbind/pubbooks/brummett_awl/chapter20/medialib/thumbs/ch20_378.html
The East India Companies • British and Dutch East India Companies • Both militarily and economically stronger than Portugal quickly overtook Portugal within the Indian Ocean network in the early 1600s • Established their own parallel and competing trading post empires • Dutch = focused on Indonesia • British = focused on India
The East India Companies • East India Companies = private trading companies that use merchant investors to raise money and share risks • These companies were granted charters by their governments that allowed them to: • Make war • Govern conquered peoples • Hold trading monopolies
Dutch East India Company Trading posts = in Indonesia Controlled production and shipping of: cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg, and mace (all spices) Seized control of spice-producing islands with force and bloodshed
British East India Company • Trading posts = in India • Did not practice “trade by warfare” like the Dutch were no match for the Mughal Empire in India • Secured their trading bases on the coast with the permission of Mughal authorities • Usually took substantial payments and bribes • Focus = Indian cotton textiles
Asian Commerce Impact of European involvement in Asian commerce = not very big on the major powers of South and East Asia (Mughal India, China, and Japan) Europe posed no real military or economic threat to them Were able to get rid of European intruders if need be
Overall, • South & Southeast Asia • Europeans stronger, • But most Asians kept control • East Asia • Ming China & Tokugawa Japan dominant
Japan and the Europeans • When European merchants first arrived in Japan (1500s) Japan = civil war between daimyos (feudal lords), each with his own band of samurai • Result = it was easy for the Europeans to stay there • European ideas taken by the Japanese = shipbuilding skills, military technology, geographic knowledge, commercial opportunities, and religious ideas
Japan and the Europeans • Early 1600s = Japan unified politically by Tokugawa Shogunate • Brought all daimyos under his authority • Civil wars ended • Shoguns began to see Europeans as a threat to Japan’s new unity Tokugawa Ieyasu
Edo castle http://dougukan.jp/B24.html
Tokugawa years • Great Peace through dictatorship • Monopoly on gunpowder technology • Rigid class system http://www.hogaku.it/storia/azuchi_momoyama/map2.gif
Attempted to attack Korea • 1592, 1597 • Defeated • “Turtle Boats” • First ironclad warships http://www.pennfamily.org/KSS-USA/690428-621.htm
Restricted Europeans’ access to Japan • 1500s: Portuguese, Spanish Dutch arrived • Traders & missionaries • Francis Xavier • By 1614, up to 300,000 converts • 10% of population • http://www.frontpagemag.com/articles/Printable.asp?ID=3993 “Portuguese arrive in Japan” Thomas Kostecki http://www.kostecki.de/en/chegada.htm
Japan and the Europeans • Result = Japan did the following: • Expelled Christian missionaries (banned in 1614) • Violently suppressed the practice of Christianity • Included: Torture and execution of missionaries and converts • Forbade Japanese people from travelling abroad • Banned European traders from entering Japan • Result = Japan became isolated from the world of European commerce for 2 centuries (1650-1850) • Maintained trading ties with only China and Korea Monument to Nagasaki martyrs
Shogunate’s accomplishments • Peace restored • Population grew • Roads, canals, internal economy grew • Tokugawas dynamic through mid-1700s • Inflexibility • Tokugawa rule ended 1868 when USA forces them to trade
Ming Dynasty • 1368-1644 • Ruled world’s most populous state • Restored ethnic Chinese rule after 400 years’ foreign domination http://acc6.its.brooklyn.cuny.edu/~phalsall/
Founder • Zhu Yuanzhang • Peasant origins • Buddhist monk • Military commander in revolt against Mongols • Became emperor • Laws favorable to peasants http://www.paulnoll.com/China/Dynasty/history-Ming-emperors.html
Hall of Harmony – Forbidden City http://www.historywiz.com/forbiddencity.htm
Dragon throne http://www.historywiz.com/qing.htm
Peak of cultural grandeur & elegance Zhuxi (Neoconfucian) • Confucianism revived • Civil service exams reinstated, expanded • Return to scholar-gentry dominance Kaifeng
Foreign relations: Most dynamic dynasty • 1300s-1400s: active in conquering neighbors • Population growth based on new American crops • Corn • Potato • Sweet potato • (Cotton) Ming peasant with wheelbarrow
Great Wall • Final & lasting reconstruction • Built last 1000 kilometers http://www.free-beauty-tips.com/bw3.html
Culture • Principal strength in 1500s-1600s • Art & literature • Novels • Silk • Porcelain http://www.jozan.net/Artikelbilleder/MTA2003/Textile17ct-Ming-noah1_gr.jpg
Ming porcelain • Emperors were biggest customers • Prized by wealthy across Eurasia • Rougher, more durable pieces sold to foreigners • For silver • American silver gave Europeans much greater access to Chinese markets
Europeans began arriving • Portuguese, then Spanish • China was too big to conquer • Established trading houses Chinese image of 18th-century European sailor
Matteo Ricci • Jesuit priest & scholar • Respected by Chinese • Traveled in China • 1583-1610 • Adopted Chinese dress • Learned language • Appointed court mathematician & astronomer • Little success in spreading Christianity
Voyages of discovery • Zheng He • Mongol, eunuch • 7 naval voyages, 1405-1433
7 Voyages of Zheng He http://www1.cs.columbia.edu/~tliu/chinese/zhenghe.html
Zheng He’s fleet • 1st expedition: • 62 large ships • 200 smaller ships • 28000 men
Compared to Europeans • Zheng He’s ships 400 feet long • Santa Maria 85 feet
Why did they stop? • Interesting but not practical • Giraffes, zebras • Glamorous but expensive • Analogy: US cut back space program
Chinese/European point of view • Chinese: • Emperor: curious, ambitious • Merchants opposed—China is rich already • Scholar gentry opposed • waste of money • threat to their power • Confucian bias against merchants & trade • Europeans: wide support • Increase national & personal wealth, power • Spread Christianity
Fall of Ming • Poor leadership • Internal corruption • Peasant revolts • Manchu (Northern nomads) invaded • Founded Qing dynasty http://www.regenttour.com/china/history/qing.htm