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Zheng He's Tomb Found in Nanjing
CRI ^ | 26 June 2010 | CRI

Posted on 06/26/2010 11:45:40 AM PDT by Palter

A recently excavated tomb in Nanjing has been confirmed to be the grave of Zheng He, a eunuch from the early Ming Dynasty who led historic voyages to Southeast Asia and eastern Africa. The tomb was discovered accidentally on June 18th by workers at a construction site near Zutang Mountain that also holds the tombs of many other Ming Dynasty eunuchs, the Yangtse Evening News reported.

The tomb was 8.5 meters long and 4 meters wide and was built with blue bricks, which archaeologists said were only used in structures belonging to dignitaries during the time of Zheng He.

But experts believed his remains were not placed in the tomb because of the long distance between Nanjing and India, where he died during a visit in 1433.

Born in 1371, Zheng He was an excellent navigator and diplomat in the Ming Dynasty. He led the royal fleet to southwest Asia and east Africa on seven occasions from 1405 to 1433, nearly a century before Christopher Columbus discovered the American continent in 1492.


A worker clean soil at the entrance to the tomb.


TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS: china; godsgravesglyphs; qinshihuang; sanxingdui; shucivilization; terracotta; terracottaarmy; tomb; zhenghe
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1 posted on 06/26/2010 11:45:42 AM PDT by Palter
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To: Palter; SunkenCiv

bump


2 posted on 06/26/2010 11:51:48 AM PDT by GeronL (Just say NO to conservativecave.com, it rots your teeth!)
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To: Palter

What a bummer if he spent all that time and labor but never got to use it.


3 posted on 06/26/2010 11:53:39 AM PDT by bgill (how could a young man born here in Kenya, who is not even a native American, become the POTUS)
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To: GeronL; Palter; SunkenCiv
Explorer From China Who 'Beat Columbus To America'


4 posted on 06/26/2010 11:55:19 AM PDT by blam
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To: blam

I’ll keep the tiny ship and my stones, thanks.


5 posted on 06/26/2010 12:02:20 PM PDT by skeeter
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To: blam

I enjoy this type of reading. Interesting.....


6 posted on 06/26/2010 12:03:30 PM PDT by gulfcoast6
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To: Palter

Zeng who?

Oh, wait, who’s on first. He’s on second.


7 posted on 06/26/2010 12:03:29 PM PDT by Larry Lucido
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To: Palter

Who He?


8 posted on 06/26/2010 12:18:26 PM PDT by beethovenfan (If Islam is the solution, the "problem" must be freedom.)
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To: blam

but they shrugged and went home and didn’t bother to colonize did they? same with the Vikings or the Polynesians.


9 posted on 06/26/2010 12:30:10 PM PDT by GeronL (Just say NO to conservativecave.com, it rots your teeth!)
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To: Palter
Zheng He's Tomb Found in Nanjing

It should be: Zheng. His Tomb Found in Nanjing.
Third person, possessive... :0)

10 posted on 06/26/2010 12:31:17 PM PDT by Cowboy Bob (Socialism: Subsidizing Chaff at the expense of Wheat)
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To: skeeter
I’ll keep the tiny ship and my stones, thanks.

ROFL!

11 posted on 06/26/2010 12:35:14 PM PDT by ItsForTheChildren
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To: blam; SunkenCiv; Palter
He led the royal fleet to southwest Asia and east Africa on seven occasions from 1405 to 1433,

Really? Then there will no doubt be fascinating artifacts in his tomb which will be traced back to the New World.

12 posted on 06/26/2010 12:37:26 PM PDT by BenLurkin
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To: beethovenfan

Hu He was his smarter brother...


13 posted on 06/26/2010 12:49:20 PM PDT by mikrofon (Zheng Yu)
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To: beethovenfan
Wan Hoo almost beat Armstrong and Aldrin!

According to one ancient legend, a Chinese official named Wan-Hoo attempted a flight to the moon using a large wicker chair to which were fastened 47 large rockets. Forty seven assistants, each armed with torches, rushed forward to light the fuses. In a moment there was a tremendous roar accompanied by billowing clouds of smoke. When the smoke cleared, the flying chair and Wan-Hu were gone.

14 posted on 06/26/2010 12:49:44 PM PDT by Young Werther ("Quae cum ita sunt" Since these things are so!)
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To: Cowboy Bob
Actually it should read Cheng Ho's Tomb Found in Nanking.

Just because the Communists like pinyin doesn't mean we have to use it.

15 posted on 06/26/2010 12:58:51 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: Palter

Aside from all the jesting and stupid comments -— I find this interesting.

Zheng He is an interesting individual from Chinese history. If the point of Menzies book is true, then the course of this country’s history would be changed.

Who knows where that age of exploration would have led if China hadn’t withdrawn into itself.


16 posted on 06/26/2010 1:37:30 PM PDT by Exit148 (Loose Change Club Founder. Save your pennies for the next Freepathon. A little goes a long way!)
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To: GeronL; blam; BenLurkin; StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 240B; ...

· join list or digest · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark · post a topic · subscribe ·

 
Gods
Graves
Glyphs
Thanks GeronL, blam, and BenLurkin.

To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list.
GGG managers are SunkenCiv, StayAt HomeMother, and Ernest_at_the_Beach
 

·Dogpile · Archaeologica · Mirabilis.ca · LiveScience · Biblical Archaeology Society ·
· Discover · Nat Geographic · Texas AM Anthro News · Yahoo Anthro & Archaeo · Google ·
· Archaeology · The Archaeology Channel · Excerpt, or Link only? · cgk's list of ping lists ·


17 posted on 06/26/2010 2:37:43 PM PDT by SunkenCiv ("Fools learn from experience. I prefer to learn from the experience of others." -- Otto von Bismarck)
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To: Exit148

They’d have built the railroads fifty years sooner?

But seriously, Zheng He didn’t make it to America, even though IMHO Columbus was by no means the first to sail over.


18 posted on 06/26/2010 2:42:52 PM PDT by SunkenCiv ("Fools learn from experience. I prefer to learn from the experience of others." -- Otto von Bismarck)
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To: BenLurkin

:’) That will be a good test.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/2119140/posts

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19 posted on 06/26/2010 8:17:14 PM PDT by SunkenCiv ("Fools learn from experience. I prefer to learn from the experience of others." -- Otto von Bismarck)
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http://wwics.si.edu/outreach/wq/WQCURR/WQBKPER/PER-15.HTM

The Ming Voyages

“China, the West, and World History in Joseph Needham’s Science and Civilisation in China” by Robert Finlay, in Journal of World History (Fall 2000), Univ. of Hawaii Press, 2840 Kolowalu St., Honolulu, Hawaii 96822.

Thanks to British scholar Joseph Needham’s monumental Science and Civilisation in China (1954-98), westerners have a whole new appreciation of China’s richly inventive past. Especially compelling was his account of 15th-century Chinese expeditions to Southeast Asia and, through the Indian Ocean, to India, Arabia, and Africa. Renowned now as voyages of discovery, they show up in many notable treatments of world history. Needham drew a sharp contrast between those peaceful Ming dynasty expeditions (1405-33) of Zheng He, whom he portrays as China’s answer to Vasco da Gama, and the early-16th-century Portuguese voyages of conquest. But Needham’s portrait of the Ming expeditions is “seriously skewed,” argues Finlay, a historian at the University of Arkansas.

Though Needham (1900-95) acknowledged that the motives behind the seven expeditions by Zheng Heís 300-odd junks were mixed, he claimed that the chief purpose, growing stronger with each expedition, was “proto-scientific” — the scholarly gathering of rare materials and knowledge. Trade, though extensive, was incidental, he maintained, and the peaceful fleet’s 26,000 troops had “primarily ceremonial” duties since they were part of “a navy paying friendly visits to foreign ports.” Far more important than merchants and military men, according to Needham, were the fleet’s astronomers, geomancers, physicians, and naturalists.

The reality was quite different, Finlay argues. The eunuch admiral Zheng He “did not, as Needham asserts, inspire the Ming voyages, and there is no significant sense in which he can be regarded as an explorer. He commanded the maritime expeditions as a military agent of the Yongle emperor, a ruler who had no interest in voyages of discovery. . . . Aggressive and ruthless, Yongle was one of the most militaristic rulers in Chinese history.” He had come to power in a bloody civil war, personally commanded campaigns against the Mongols, and, starting in 1406 — the year after Zheng He’s fleet first sailed to Southeast Asia — sent an army of more than 200,000 men to invade Vietnam. “Yet the emperor does not figure in Needham’s analysis,” Finlay observes.

The 26,000 troops on the Chinese junks were not “a ceremonial cortege for diplomatic occasions” (being much too numerous and expensive for that), Finlay says, but rather “an expeditionary force for executing the emperor’s will, whether that meant militarizing the tribute system, suppressing piracy in Southeast Asia, bringing overseas Chinese ports under control, or even making Siam and Java vassal states of the empire.” And the many “experienced, heavily armed” troops, not the “’calm and pacific’” nature of the Chinese, were the reason that the voyages were generally tranquil. Nor was trade merely incidental, “for Yongle evidently intended to harness the force (and profits) of seaborne commerce to serve the purposes of imperial hegemony in Southeast Asia.”

Needham, a former biochemist who subscribed to an idiosyncratic blend of Marxism and Christianity, was determined, says Finlay, “to present the Ming expeditions as embodying the virtues of China in contrast to the vices of the West.” Science and Civilisation in China is an encyclopedic survey of Chinese accomplishments in science and technology. But, “as with the voyages of Zheng He,” Finlay says, Needham’s account of those accomplishments “ignores social, political, and economic contexts.” Needham’s claims about the impact of Chinese inventions on Europe are also suspect, Finlay thinks. Yet, despite its flaws, he says, the late scholarís masterwork “remains an extraordinary achievement.”

Reprinted from the Spring 2001 Wilson Quarterly


20 posted on 06/26/2010 8:18:43 PM PDT by SunkenCiv ("Fools learn from experience. I prefer to learn from the experience of others." -- Otto von Bismarck)
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