The yuloh is a single oar, used in ship propulsion.
Author Archives: Tina Schivatcheva
Happy Chinese New Year! 新年快乐!
春节愉快! 新春志禧! 恭贺新禧!
Civilizations in Contact warmly wishes its friends and followers a Happy Chinese New Year!
Song Dynasty Football demonstrations at Qingming shanghe yuan 清明上河园 Kaifeng
Song dynasty Football demonstration at Qingming shanghe yuan 清明上河园 (Theme Park for the Song dynasty Painting “Going up the River for the Qingming Festival”), in Kaifeng.
ZHENG HE: AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE PLAUSIBILITY OF 450-FT TREASURE SHIPS
ZHENG HE: AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE PLAUSIBILITY OF 450-FT TREASURE SHIPS
Dr. Sally K. Church
This paper examines the issues and arguments surrounding the question of
whether Zheng He’s 鄭和ships could have been the size recorded in the official
Ming history (Ming shi 明史), that is, 44 zhang long by 18 zhang wide, or 447
by 183 feet.* It first examines the written sources, which include stone inscriptions,
first-hand accounts, the Ming Shilu 實錄 or “Veritable Records,” official
and unofficial histories, illustrations, and shipyard treatises. It focuses primarily
on sources dating before 1597 because of the relatively recent (in the last decade)
assertions that the dimensions recorded in the Ming shi may have originated in
the novel by Luo Maodeng 羅懋登 published in that year. In addition, it investigates
the archaeological evidence derived from shipwrecks that have been excavated
off the coast of China and Korea, and analyses the way in which one fine in
particular – the 11-metre-long rudderpost discovered at the treasure-ship shipyard
in Nanjing – has been interpreted.
To read and download the full paper, please press on the link below:
You can access and read more of Dr. S. Church’s publications HERE