1434: The Year a Chinese Fleet Sailed to Italy and Ignited the Renaissance. Gavin Menzies

1434: The Year a Chinese Fleet Sailed to Italy and Ignited the Renaissance - Gavin  Menzies


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      1434

      THE YEAR

      A MAGNIFICENT CHINESE FLEET

      SAILED TO ITALY

      AND IGNITED THE RENAISSANCE

      GAVIN MENZIES

      This book is dedicated to my beloved wife, Marcella, who has traveled with me on the journeys related in this book and through life

       CHINESEN OMENCLATURE

      Most names are rendered in Pinyin, which is now standard in China— for example, the modern spelling Mao Zedong, not Mao Tse-tung. For simplicity, however, I have retained the older form of Romanization known as Wade-Giles, for names that have long been familiar to Western readers. The Wu Pei Chi, for instance, is more readily recognized than the Wu Bei Zhi. I have also kept the more established spellings of Cantonese place-names, writing of Hong Kong and Canton, rather than Xianggang and Guangzhou. Inscriptions on navigational charts have been left in the older form, as have academic texts in the bibliography.

      CONTENTS

       CHINESEN OMENCLATURE

      INTRODUCTION

      I Setting the Scene

      1 A LAST VOYAGE

      2 THE EMPEROR’S AMBASSADOR

      3 THE FLEETS ARE PREPARED FOR THE VOYAGE TO THE BARBARIANS

      4 ZHENG HE’S NAVIGATORS’ CALCULATION OF LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE

      5 VOYAGE TO THE RED SEA

      6 CAIRO AND THE RED SEA–NILE CANAL

      II China Ignites the Renaissance

      7 TO THE VENICE OF NICCOLO DA CONTI

      8 PAOLO TOSCANELLI’S FLORENCE

      9 TOSCANELLI MEETS THE CHINESE AMBASSADOR

      10 COLUMBUS’S AND MAGELLAN’S WORLD MAPS

      11 THE WORLD MAPS OF JOHANNES SCHÖNER, MARTIN WALDSEEMÜLLER, AND ADMIRAL ZHENG HE

      12 TOSCANELLI’S NEW ASTRONOMY

      13 THE FLORENTINE MATHEMATICIANS: TOSCANELLI, ALBERTI, NICHOLAS OF CUSA, AND REGIOMONTANUS

       14 LEON BATTISTA ALBERTI AND LEONARDO DA VINCI

      15 LEONARDO DA VINCI AND CHINESE INVENTIONS

      16 LEONARDO, DI GIORGIO, TACCOLA, AND ALBERTI

      17 SILK AND RICE

      18 GRAND CANALS: CHINA AND LOMBARDY

      19 FIREARMS AND STEEL

       20 PRINTING

      21 CHINA’S CONTRIBUTION TO THE RENAISSANCE

      III China’s Legacy

      22 TRAGEDY ON THE HIGH SEAS: ZHENG HE’S FLEET DESTROYED BY A TSUNAMI

      23 THE CONQUISTADORES’ INHERITANCE: OUR LADY OF VICTORY

       Acknowledgments

       Notes

       Bibliography

       Permissions

       Photograph Credits

       Index

      Also by Gavin Menzies

       Copyright

      About the Publisher

       INTRODUCTION

      One thing that greatly puzzled me when writing 1421 was the Olack of curiosity among many professional historians.

      After all, Christopher Columbus supposedly discovered America in 1492. Yet eighteen years before he set sail, Columbus had a map of the Americas, which he later acknowledged in his logs. Indeed, even before his first voyage, Columbus signed a contract with the king and queen of Spain that appointed him viceroy of the Americas. His fellow ship’s captain Martín Alonso Pinzón, who sailed with him in 1492, had too seen a map of the Americas—in the pope’s library.

      How do you discover a place for which you already have a map?

      Why was the strait named after Magellan when Magellan had seen it on a chart before he set sail? It doesn’t make sense.

      The paradox might be explained had there been no maps of the strait or of the Pacific—if, as some believe, Magellan was bluffing about having seen a chart. But there were maps. Martin Waldseemüller published his map of the Americas and the Pacific in 1507, twelve years before Magellan set sail. In 1515, four years before Magellan sailed, Johannes Schöner published a map showing the strait Magellan is said to have “discovered.”

      The mystery only deepens when we consider the two cartographers, Waldseemüller and Schöner. Were these two hoary old sea captains who had made heroic voyages across the Pacific before Magellan? Should we rename the strait after Schöner? Hardly.

      Schöner never went to sea. He flunked his exams at the University of Erfurt, leaving without a degree. He became an apprentice priest in 1515 but for failing to celebrate mass, was relegated to a small village, where his punishment was officiating at early-morning mass. So how did a young man from rural Germany with no maritime tradition produce a map of the Pacific well before Magellan discovered that ocean?

      Like Schöner, Waldseemüller had never seen the sea. Born in Wolfenweiler near Freiberg in 1475, he spent his working life as a cannon at Saint-Dié in eastern France—a region famed for its plums but completely devoid of maritime tradition. Waldseemüller, too, left university without a degree. Yet his map of the Americas showed the Sierra Madre of Mexico and the Sierra Nevada of North America before Magellan reached the Pacific or Balboa reached its coast.

      These two rustic mapmakers were not the only Europeans with an uncanny prescience about unseen lands. In 1419, before European voyages of exploration even began, Albertin di Virga published a map of the Eastern Hemisphere that shows northern Australia. It was another 350 years before Captain Cook “discovered” that continent. Similarly, Brazil appeared on Portuguese maps before the first Portuguese, Cabral and Dias, set sail for Brazil. The South Shetland Islands were shown on the Piri Reis map four hundred years before Europeans reached the Antarctic.

      The great European explorers were brave and determined men. But they discovered nothing. Magellan was not the first to circumnavigate the globe, nor was Columbus the first to discover the Americas. So why, we may ask, do historians


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