Versuchen GOLD - Frei
WHEN PIRATES RULED ASIA'S WAVES
BBC History UK
|October 2023
Pirates didn't only spread chaos in Caribbean and Atlantic waters. Adam Clulow reveals how east Asian raiders terrorised China's shores from the 16th century
Spring 1553 brought terror to large swathes of the coast. Settlements along the shore were hit with successive assaults from the sea as, in “the third month… [pirates launched] a large campaign to attack [the coast]. The combined fleet consisted of several hundred warships that covered the sea.” This account, which goes on to list the towns and cities that fell to the marauders’ depredations, gives a sense of the scale of these raids, describing a vast armada of pirate vessels carrying thousands of men.
These large-scale series of raids weren’t launched on the Spanish Main by Caribbean buccaneers or by Barbary corsairs in the Mediterranean. In fact, the description comes from the Mingshi, a history of the Ming dynasty in China. It recounts an attack by so-called wakō, or Japanese pirates, under the command of their leader Wang Zhi, who assembled huge fleets for raids on the coast.
Piracy has always been a global phenomenon. For millennia, pirates have preyed on rich shipping lanes and vulnerable coastal settlements. Although European pirates dominate the popular imagination, east Asia – particularly China and Japan – was one of the great centres of historical piracy.
East Asian piracy was vast in scale and reach. It was also stunningly persistent with successive waves of large-scale piracy. And it was strikingly cosmopolitan, with multi-ethnic crews straddling national boundaries. In the 16th century, huge pirate fleets consisting of hundreds of vessels ransacked the Chinese coast. Although dressed as ferocious Japanese warriors, most of these pirates were in fact Chinese, and they were led by Chinese entrepreneurs based in Japan.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2023-Ausgabe von BBC History UK.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON BBC History UK
BBC History UK
Royal progress
Alice Loxton's new book begins with a compelling premise.
1 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
"Leaving Muslim contributions out of European history has allowed Islamophobic sentiment to flourish"
THARIK HUSSAIN speaks to Danny Bird about the long but often overlooked and distorted history of Muslims in Europe - and the enduring resistance to its reappraisal
9 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
7 UNMISSABLE TRIPS IN 2026
With new routes, big anniversaries and fresh ways of discovering familiar favourites, TOM HALL highlights historical destinations to explore this year
4 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
SOPHIE SCHOLL
Novelist Simon Scarrow chooses
2 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
Portrait of the artists
TRACY BORMAN is enraptured by a beautifully written and richly illustrated exploration of early modern English art
2 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
Humble heroes
Statues celebrate monarchs, rulers and conquerors - but who remembers the brave folk who gave their lives to save others? Anna Maria Barry recounts stories of selfsacrificing but otherwise ordinary people from the 19th and 20th centuries who are commemorated in one London park.
9 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
BACK FROM THE DEAD
Britain’s War Office thanked the SAS for its remarkable efforts in WW2 by abolishing it – yet soon realised the error of its ways. Gavin Mortimer tells the story of how the elite unit reinvented itself to confront the challenges of the postwar world
8 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
Q&A - A selection of historical conundrums answered by experts
Were Roman gladiators vegetarian?
8 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
Martha McGill on a pioneering study of folk beliefs in early modern England
I was recently chatting with a handful of early modernists about the history book we'd take to a desert island.
1 min
January 2026
BBC History UK
Independent empires
Viewing the British empire through an American lens provides an intriguing alternative perspective on the 'Land of the Free', says DAVID ARMITAGE
4 mins
January 2026
Translate
Change font size
