Times with APEC held in Beijing, Economist, Nov 15, 2014 has
(a) a cover showing Obama and Xi about to shake hand, in between being "Bridge over troubled water[;] A 14-PAGE SPECIAL REPORT ON THE PACIFIC RIM;" and
(b) "The Pacific Age" (the special report).
In the latter, I see three essays somewhat noteworthy.
(1) Galleons and Gunships; Pacific history has been defined by bullies enforcing their rules.
www.economist.com/news/special-r ... lleons-and-gunships
Note:
(a) "THE RUINS OF St Paul’s church on a hill in the Malaysian city of Malacca"
St Paul's Church, Malacca
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Paul's_Church,_Malacca
("built in 1521. It is located at the summit of St Paul's Hill;" section 1.2 Reconsecration and abandonment: [now a ruin])
(b) "From its beginning, Malacca has been an entrepot between the Pacific and the rest of the world. Shortly after the city was founded in 1400, a Chinese Muslim from the Ming court, the eunuch Zheng He, used it as a base for his 'treasure ships.' * * * But after 1433 China abruptly stopped trading missions to the outside world [starting in 1405] * * * St Paul’s [church], originally called Our Lady of the Hill [actually in Portuguese: Nossa Senhora da Annunciada], was built by the Portuguese after they blitzed Malacca in 1511, driving out the sultan. It was a staging post for undermining Venice’s monopoly over the trading of Asian spices through the Mediterranean. Portugal wanted its own monopoly, and got it."
(i)
(A) Strait of Malacca
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strait_of_Malacca
(named after the Malacca sultanate that ruled over the archipelago between 1400 and 1511)
(B) Malacca City
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malacca_City
(ii) Republic of Venice
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republic_of_Venice
(697-1797 [carved up 瓜分 by Austria and France (Napoleon))
(iii)
(A) spice trade
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spice_trade
two consecutive paragraphs:
"Until the mid 15th century, [spice] trade with the east was achieved through the Silk Road, with the Byzantine Empire and the Italian city-states of Venice and Genoa acting as a middle man. In 1453, however, the Ottomans took Constantinople and so the Byzantine Empire was no more. Now in control of the sole spice trade route that existed at the time, the Ottoman Empire was in a favorable position to charge hefty taxes on merchandise bound for the west. The Western Europeans, not wanting to be dependent on an expansionist, non-Christian power for the lucrative commerce with the east, set about to find an alternate sea route around Africa.
"The first country to attempt to circumnavigate Africa was Portugal, which had, since the early 15th century, begun to explore northern Africa under Henry the Navigator. Emboldened by these early successes and eyeing a lucrative monopoly on a possible sea route to the Indies the Portuguese first crossed the Cape of Good Hope [so named 'because of the great optimism engendered by the opening of a sea route to India and the East' Wikipedia] in 1488 on an expedition led by Bartolomeu Dias. Just nine years later in 1497 on the orders of Manuel I of Portugal, four vessels under the command of navigator Vasco da Gama rounded the Cape of Good Hope, continuing to the eastern coast of Africa to Malindi to sail across the Indian Ocean to Calicut in south India [arriving in 1498]-the capital of the local Zamorin rulers .The wealth of the Indies was now open for the Europeans to explore; the Portuguese Empire was the earliest European seaborne empire to grow from the spice trade.
(B) Europe no longer needed silk from China. See silk
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silk
(the secret of silk-making only reached Europe around AD 550, via the Byzantine Empire. Legend has it that monks working for the emperor Justinian I smuggled silkworm eggs to Constantinople in hollow canes from China)
(iv) Battle of Diu (1509)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Diu_(1509)
(Feb 3, 1509; Location Diu, India; introduction) |