|
|
Bronze statue of Wang Zhi outside of Matsura Historical Museum,
Japan.
|
Self-titled
Wu Feng Chuan Zhu (五峰船主,
lit. 'Captain of the Five Peaks'),
Jing Hai Wang (淨海王, lit.
'King of the Clean Ocean') and later
Hui Wang (徽王, King of
Huizhou), Wang Zhi was perhaps the most famous and most powerful of the Wokou
leaders. In fact, many prominent Wokou leaders were his former
collaborators or subordinates.
Originally a sea trader, Wang Zhi traded between China, Japan, and even
ventured as far as Siam. He accumulated great wealth, and commanded the
respect of both Portuguese and Japanese. In 1544, Wang Zhi came into
contact with the smuggler-pirates at the haven of Shuangyu, and
joined their smuggling business. After Shuangyu was destroyed by Zhu Wan
(朱紈) in 1548 in an attempt to clamp down on illegal trade, he retreated
to Japan, and set up a new base of operation on
Gotō Islands
on the invitation of Matsura Takanobu (松浦隆信). Wang Zhi assisted Ming
army to attack one of his competitors, a pirate named Chen Si Pan (陳思盼)
in 1552, and captured his nephew Chen Si (陳四). He used Chen Si as a
bargaining chip to acquire Ming's unofficial permission to continue his
business, and set up a new port at Li Gang (瀝港), Zhejiang. However, an
ambush led by Yu Da You (俞大猷) in 1553 destroyed Li Gang. Although Wang
Zhi escaped to Japan, his family was arrested by Yu Da You.
No longer trustful of the Ming court that went back on its word, Wang Zhi
began overseeing Wokou raids from Japan, turning Jia Jing Da Wo Kou into
overdrive.
In 1554, Hu Zong Xian (胡宗憲) took office as the Grand coordinator of
Zhejiang (浙江巡按監察御史) and sent two envoys to Japan to negotiate with
Wang Zhi. He promised Wang Zhi legal trade rights on the condition that
Wang Zhi would assist him to get rid of the Wokou. To show
his sincerity, Hu Zong Xian set Wang Zhi's family free and left one
of his envoys at Japan as hostage. Although Wang Zhi was tempted by the
prospect of legal trade, he wasn't so foolish as to fall to empty promise
once again, so he sent his adopted son Wang Ao (王滶) back to China first.
For a time, Wang Ao assisted Hu Zong Xian to clear out other Wokou. He
also wrote a letter to inform Xu Hai (徐海) about Wang Zhi's negotiation
of surrender upon the request of Hu Zong Xian.
Wang Zhi was eventually persuaded by his adopted son Wang Ao, now trustful
of Hu Zong Xian, and returned to China. While Hu Zong Xian did intend to
uphold his part of the bargain, pressure from Ming court forced him to
change his mind. Wang Zhi was arrested in 1558 and executed in 1559.
Nowadays Wang Zhi is best remembered for (indirectly) introducing
matchlock firearms
to Japan in 1543, as well as his contribution in developing
Hirado
into a bustling trading port-town.
Chen Si Pan (陳思盻) (active ? – 1552)
Chen Si Pan was a powerful pirate from Guangdong (although some sources
claim he was from Fujian), and the largest competitor of Wang Zhi before
the latter's ascendance to primacy. Based in Heng Gang (橫港) port,
Chen Si Pan frequently preyed on Wang Zhi's shipment as Heng Gang was
strategically positioned to allow for easy interdiction of ships
coming in and out of Lie Gang, Wang Zhi's base of operation.
An exceedingly cruel person, in 1552 Chen Si Pan murdered an ally that come
to join him and forcibly absorbed his subordinates into his own crew.
While sources disagree on the identity of the victim, who was either Wu
Mei Gan (吳美幹, see below) or a sea trader named Wang Dan (王丹), they all
agree that this act of cruelty ultimately proves to be Chen Si Pan's
undoing. Harbouring resentment over the death of their former master,
Chen Si Pan's new but browbeaten subordinates secretly got into
contact with Wang Zhi, who had long desired to get rid of him. Thus,
with helps from these turncoats, as well as support from coastal gentry
and fellow smuggler Chai De Mei (柴德美), Wang Zhi launched a surprise
attack on Heng Gang on the night Chen Si Pan was holding his birthday
banquet, killing him and taking over his pirate crew.
Wu Mei Gan (吳美幹) (active after the destruction of Shuangyu)
A
Yi Guan (義官, lit. 'Honourary official', a directly nominated or
awarded position that can engage in local government affairs, but is not
paid) from
Fuqing County
that was called to take part in Zhu Wan's anti-smuggling campaign, but
instead engaged in smuggling activities himself. When it became apparent
that his despicable conduct was causing troubles, Wu Mei Gan was ordered
to disband his followers immediately. However, he only dismissed half his
men, and led the other half to openly engage in illegal activities.
Depending on the source, he either joined Wang Zhi's faction directly, or
joined Chen Si Pan's faction but was later murdered by him.
He Ya Ba (何亞八) (active at least since 1551 – 1553~4)
He Ya Ba was a notorious Cantonese pirate that terrorised
Pearl River Delta region. Unlike many of his peers in Zhejiang, he mostly traded in Southeast Asia, notably
Patani Sultanate, while using the pirate hub at
Shangchuan Island as a base to launch raids on Guangdong's coasts. Following the destruction of Shuangyu, He Ya Ba also formed a loose cooperation with the Portuguese that returned to Guangdong and used Shangchuan Island as a temporary foothold.
In 1553 He Ya Ba went to Patani and recruited significant numbers of Patani pirates. Upon returning, he recruited thousands more from Fujian, then launched a massive simultaneous pirate raid against the coasts of Guangdong and eastern Zhejiang along with other prominent pirate lords including Wang Zhi. The sheer scale and mayhem caused by the raid finally prompted Ming court to decide to permanently get rid of He Ya Ba. Nevertheless, to directly confront such powerful pirate was no easy task, so Guangdong Provincial Admiral Wang Bo (汪柏) secretly contacted Captain-Major
Leonel de Sousa and made peace with the Portuguese, in exchange for them looking the other way while Ming navy focus on the destruction of the pirates. The Portuguese gladly complied, and He Ya Ba's pirates were thus destroyed in a Ming ambush while he himself was captured and executed shortly after. For their cooperation, the Portuguese successfully got on the good side of the Chinese, fast-tracking them towards the
Luso-Chinese agreement of 1554.
Li Da Yong (李大用) (active ? – 1550)
Li Da Yong was a pirate that terrorised the sea of Guangdong, as well
as the leader of a powerful pirate crew, of which some of
its members like Lin Guo Xian (林國顯) later became legendary pirate
lords in their own right. Ironically, despite his notoriety most
historical records about him speak of his defeats.
Li Da Yong seems to work with Wang Zhi since his earliest days,
although at some point they drifted apart, with Wang Zhi turning his focus on
Zhejiang and Fujian whereas Li Da Yong going to Guangdong. In 1544 he
launched a raid on Zhelin Town (柘林鎮) inside
Raoping County
with more than a hundred ships, but the raid was resisted through the
combined effort of local Ming garrison and militia from Zhelin Town
and Xiadai Village (下岱村). Later that night the pirates were ambushed
by the militia and fled to the sea in a panic, causing many to drown.
Some sources claim that Li Da Yong also drowned when his pirate fleet
was subsequently hit by a storm with all but two ships lost, but this
appears not to be the case, as he was still able to launch a
raid on
Hui'an County
in 1546, pillaging several villages but eventually repelled by
Ming commander Zhu Rong (朱肜). Outraged by the failure, Li Da Yong launched
another raid on Hui'an in 1550, only to be defeated by Zhu Rong once
again.
Li Da Yong faded into obscurity afterwards, presumably died. His pirate crew was subsequently broken up by his subordinates to form their
own crews.
Lin Guo Xian (林國顯) (active at least since 1550 – 1565)
Lin Guo Xian, also known by his moniker
Xiao Wei Lao (小尾老, lit. 'Little tail elder'), was one of the most notorious and powerful pirate lords in Guangdong and Chaozhou during this period. Born in
Zhao'an County, Lin Guo Xian had been a pirate pretty much since he was of age, initially working as an underling of pirate lord
Li Da Yong (李大用) along with several of his fellow countrymen such as Shen Men (沈門) and Tian Lang Guang (田浪廣). After Li Da Yong's death, he absorbed the remnants of his crew and stroke out on his own, quickly growing in power and influence and eventually becoming a pirate lord in his own right.
Soon after, Lin Guo Xian relocated to Japan, leaving the operation of his pirate crew in China in the hands of Shen Men, although an incident involving some Wokou seizing the cargo of another Chinese smuggler later reunited the two in Japan. While in Japan, they planned and then launched the
first ever large-scale Wokou raid on Chinese soil in 1552, unleashing tens of thousands of Wokou and pirates on the entire coasts Zhejiang as well as Zhangzhou and, for the first time ever, managed to capture and pillage a county-level city—
Huangyan City. This nation-shaking incident later came to be known as
Renzi Crisis (壬子之變), and marked the beginning of the height of Jia Jing Da Wo Kou. Unable to openly oppose such a powerful pirate, local authorities attempted to rein him in by first arresting his son, then release him from jail but demand him to persuade his father to surrender. Unsurprisingly, the attempt backfired, as once freed Lin Guo Xian's son immediately joined up with his father, and their outlawry had only become ever more blatant.
In 1554, Xu Wei Xue (徐惟學), uncle of
Xu Hai (徐海) and subordinate of
Wang Zhi (王直),
had a falling out with his leader and broke off from his crew to join Lin Guo Xian. He swore Lin Guo Xian as his blood father, and guided him to take over the strategic pirate lair of
Nan'ao Island, while he himself continued to operate in Huangyan County. Fortunately, their cooperation was short-lived. On November 29, 1554, an untimely gale blew their smuggling voyage to Japan off-course, forcing the duo to change their plan into raiding Zhelin Town instead. However, the raid didn't go as planned, as Ming navy under commander Hei Meng Yang (黑孟陽) crushed the pirate fleet and pursued them to Nan'ao Island. Xu Wei Xue was either captured or drowned during escape, whereas Liu Guo Xian fled to Japan.
Lin Guo Xian spent several years in Japan rebuilding his pirate crew, and finally returned to China in 1563. He immediately pillaged Shang Li (上里, part of present-day
Beiliu City) and set up a new base of operation at the outskirts of Lin Cuo (林厝), resuming his smuggling business as well as launching frequent raids against the surrounding villages essentially unopposed. He finally met his end in 1565, after unexpectedly running into a Ming patrol during a pirate raid in
Chaoyang County.
Renzi Crisis / Height of Jia Jing Da Wo Kou (1553 – 1558)
Wang Zhi escaped to Japan and unleashed the Wokou
Xu Hai (徐海) (active ? – 1556) (Undergoing revision)
Xu Hai was originally a Buddhist monk from Huizhou, but gave up the life
as an ascetic and joined the smuggling syndicate of Wang Zhi (汪直) with
his uncle Xu Wei Xue (徐惟學). After some time, Xu Wei Xue broke off from
Wang Zhi's crew and started his own smuggling business.
Unfortunately, Xu Wei Xue's attempt was a failure, and he ended
up indebted. To pay off his debt, Xu Hai was sold by his uncle to a
band of Japanese pirates.
In a strange twist of fate, Xu Hai eventually became the leader of said
pirate band. He quickly expanded his influence by forming a coalition
with
Chen Dong (陳東) and
Ye Ma (葉麻), and commanded a Wokou fleet
of more than ten thousand men. He also married a famous prostitute Wang
Cui Qiao (王翠翹). Xu Hai fought with Ming commander Zong Li (宗禮) at
Zhejiang in 1556 and was defeated thrice, but managed to mount a
counterattack that defeated Ming army and killed Zong Li. Along with Chen
Dong and Ye Ma, he laid siege to
Tongxiang in the same year, almost succeeding in capturing it. Hu Zong Xian
(胡宗憲) was forced to bribe him with heavy ransom. Xu Hai called off the
siege after he received ransom, while Chen Dong and Ye Ma were forced to
retreat along with him, as they no longer had enough troops to continue
the siege.
Knowing he couldn't defeat Xu Hai's Wokou coalition without suffering
innumerable loss, Hu Zong Xian devised a cunning plot to get rid of him.
He sent Luo Long Wen (羅龍文), a fellow of Xu Hai from Huizhou, as an
undercover agent into Xu Hai's Wokou coalition. Luo Long Wen sowed discord
between Wokou leaders, and slowly gained the favour of Wang Cui Qiao with
gifts. He deceived her into believing that they would be pardoned and put
into favourable position if they surrender to Hu Zong Xian. To add more
weight to his word, Hu Zong Xian also brought the news of Wang Zhi's
negotiation of surrender to Xu Hai through a letter written by Wang Ao
(王滶).
Shocked by the news and persuaded by his concubine, Xu Hai too agreed
to surrender. To prove his loyalty, he lured Chen Dong into a trap by
forging a letter from Satsuma Island. After Chen Dong's capture, Hu Zong
Xian immediately forced Chen Dong to write a letter to inform his
subordinates about Xu Hai's betrayal. Furious, Chen Dong's subordinates
attacked Xu Hai's Wokou band, but both were annihilated by Ming army
unleashed by Hu Zong Xian, who had waited for this moment all along.
Realising the betrayal of Hu Zong Xian, Xu Hai drowned himself in
despair.
Legend has it that Wang Cui Qiao also drowned herself after she realised
that her words cause the death of Xu Hai. Wang Cui Qiao's tragic fate
earned the sympathy of the people, and her story was adapted into many
novels and operas during Qing period.
Chen Dong (陳東) (active ? – 1556) (Undergoing revision)
Chen Dong originally worked as a clerk for "Lord of the
Satsuma Island and his brothers", most likely referring to Shimazu Yoshihisa
(島津義久) and his younger brothers, Shimazu Yoshihiro (島津義弘) and
Shimazu Toshihisa (島津歳久). He later joined the smuggling syndicate of
Wang Zhi (汪直) and became a collaborator of Xu Hai (徐海).
He was betrayed and captured by Xu Hai due to the machination of Hu Zong
Xian (胡宗憲), and was executed shortly after.
Ye Ma (葉麻) (active at least since 1554 – 1556)
Ye Ma, also known as
Ye Ming (葉明) and
Ma Ye (麻葉), was one of the co-leaders of a huge Wokou coalition along with
Xu Hai (徐海) and
Chen Dong (陳東), and was particularly renowned for his ferocity in battle. He seemed to be originally a salt peddler from Tongxiang, although how or why he later turned to a life of crime have remained unknown. In any case, Ye Ma led a pirate crew consisted of mostly Japanese Wokou from
Chikuzen (筑前, present-day
Fukuoka Prefecture), Izumi, Hizen, Satsuma, Kiinokuni, Hataka, and
Bungo (丰后, present-day
Ōita Prefecture) and was active around Laohezui (老鶴嘴, lit. 'Old crane's beak', at the river mouth of Yangtze River) and Huangwan Town (黃灣鎮, southeast of Haining City).
Ye Ma's first known raiding activity was a raid against Yuanhua Town (袁花鎮, east of Haining City) on May 13, 1554 with more than a thousand Wokou, where he abducted a beautiful woman known only by her surname Zhu (祝) to be his slave-consort. He also attacked
Haining City itself and the nearby Xiashi Town (硤石鎮, now Xiashi Neighbourhood) but was repelled, although he still pillaged other nearby villages and settlements. Later in that year Ye Ma joined up with Xu Hai to form a powerful Wokou coalition and launched a large-scale raid against Zhapu and its surrounding area, as well as capturing and devastating the county seat of Chongde County. Thereafter, Ye Ma temporarily split away from Xu Hai to continue terrorising
Jiangnan region.
At some point, Ye Ma took a pity to his slave-consort who had been separated from her family for a long time, and decided to free her. However, Xu Hai, who was known to be lecherous, requested to take the women as his concubine during a feast between Wokou coalition leaders, which greatly angered Ye Ma. Although Xu Hai quickly dropped the issue, resentment and suspicion inevitably began to form between the two. Ye Ma even dispatched six ships to Yuanhua Town to re-kidnap the woman on June 25, 1555 in case Xu Hai went back on his words.
On the other hand, due to the severity of the incursion, Ming army under Zhang Jing (張經) was mobilised to contain the situation. The brilliant Ming commander was able to deal a major blow to the Wokou coalition during Battle of Wangjiangjing, forcing Xu Hai to eventually retreat to Japan, although Ye Ma remained in China to continue resisting Ming army. However, Xu Hai quickly rebuilt his strength and returned to China on March 1556 to rejoin the Wokou coalition. The strengthened coalition immediately struck out to terrorise Jiangnan and beyond again, and was able to crush a Ming army as well as laying siege to Tongxiang City.
It was at this point Hu Zong Xian (胡宗憲) realised that he could not defeat the Wokou with brute force alone, and resorted to cunning deceptions and schemes instead. Unfortunately for Ye Ma, Xu Hai fell right into Hu Zong Xian's ploy and sold him out to Ming authorities on August 7, 1555. Ye Ma was subsequently executed in Jiaxing on October 10, 1555, and his head was paraded through the streets of Beijing.
Xiao Xian (蕭顯) (active ? – 1553)
(to be updated)
The "Fifty-three Rōnin" (active 1555) (Undergoing revision)
The so-called "Fifty-three Rōnin (although sources vary from sixty to seventy-two)" were a small group of unnamed Wokou
that landed at
Shangyu in June 1555 and rampaged through Zhejiang, Wun Sheng (皖省,
present-day
Anhui) and
Jiangsu, raiding no less than twenty towns and villages over the course of
eighty days and even attempted to lay siege on
Nanjing. By the time these Wokou were
put down, they had rack up a body count of no less than three
thousand, including several civil officials and military officers.
Some
sources suggest that unlike other Wokou, their only purpose was to
kill, and did not engage in plundering or rape.
Wokou remnant period (1558 – 1566)
after the arrest and execution of Wang Zhi
Most prominent Wokou leaders of Jiajing period were single-handedly eradicated by Hu Zong Xian (胡宗憲) through clever use of guile and subterfuge. The death of Chinese Wokou leaders, particularly Wang Zhi (王直), caused the Wokou to lose all semblance of self-control, hence some of the most intense raids and vilest atrocities were committed during this period.
Fortunately, the death of Chinese leaders also deprived the Wokou of competent leadership, management and planning, and the same period also saw the rise of a more experienced, better trained and disciplined, and more responsive Ming army. Despite the initial surges of chaos and mayhem, these intensified Wokou incursions were quickly contained and eventually eradicated.
Mao Hai Feng (毛海鋒) (active 1556 – ?) (Undergoing revision)
Also known as Mao Lie (毛烈), Mao Hai Feng was the adopted son of Wang Zhi
(汪直), from him he received another name Wang Ao (王滶). Like his adopted
father, he stayed at Japan during much of the early phase of the Jia Jing
Da Wo Kou. In 1556, He returned to China on the invitation of Hu Zong Xian
(胡宗憲), and helped him to curb the Wokou problem on the promise that
Ming court would grant Wang Zhi legal trade rights.
Little did he know, he was merely a pawn in Hu Zong Xian's plan to get rid
of Xu Hai (徐海), Chen Dong (陳東), and earn the trust of Wang Zhi. After
Wang Zhi was betrayed and captured, a furious Mao Lie swore vengeance. He
dismembered Xia Zheng (夏正) a trusted aide of Hu Zong Xian, gathered Wang
Zhi's men and occupied Cen Gang (岑港) in an attempt to enact vengeance.
Xie He (謝和) (active ? – 1559)
Also known as
Xie Ce (謝策) and
Xie Lao (謝老, “Elder
Xie”), Xie He had been Wang Zhi's partner in crime since his earliest
days as a sea trader. He followed Wang Zhi when the latter fled to Japan
in 1553, although he appeared to return to China ahead of Wang Zhi,
possibly on the same voyage as Mao Hai Feng, Ye Zong Man, and Ming envoy
Chen Ke Yuan (陳可願). On July 20, 1557 he suddenly joined force with Xu
Chao Guang (許朝光) and raided Yue Gang (月港) at the mouth of
Jiulong River, burning down thousands of households and taking thousands of slaves,
then split up with him again after the raid.
Xie He stayed in Cen Gang during Wang Zhi's negotiation with Ming
court, and was one of the pirate leaders that swore vengeance and fought
a year-long siege with Ming army after Wang Zhi's arrest in 1558. After
Cen Gang fell in July 1558, survivors of the siege hastily relocated to
the nearby Kemei (柯梅, part of
Dinghai District) and continued to resist Ming army for some
time, until Xie He and Hong Di Zhen (洪迪珍,
see below) led 2~3,000 remnants to
set up a new base of operation on Wuyu Island (浯嶼島) on December
22, 1558. Xie He was known to take part in Hong Di Zhen's raid against Yue Gang and Fu'an City in 1559, although he seems to fade into obscurity afterwards.
Hong Di Zhen (洪迪珍) (active 1556 – 1563)
Also known as Hong Ze Zhen (洪澤珍) and Hong Lao (洪老, "Elder Hong"),
Hong Di Zhen was a follower of Wang Zhi and became his sort-of successor
after the latter's downfall. Originally a sea trader, Hong Di Zhen
amassed vast wealth by bringing rich Japanese smugglers to trade
in Nan'ao Island in 1555~1556, and unlike many of his peers he did not engage in
piracy initially and even helped to ransom captives from the Wokou, making him a
well-liked local hero. All this changed in 1558, however, as he went to
reactivate his old base on Wuyu Island, and many ruffians and
undesirables flocked under his banner. To slow the uptick of crime and
illegal activities, local authorities tried to set up sea patrols, but
the patrols failed to arrest anyone, and in their incompetence even
detained legitimate merchant ships to pass them off as smugglers. This
caused Hong Di Zhen to begin to look down on Ming authorities. To make
the matters worse, local authorities then arrested family members of Hong Di
Zhen, which enraged him and pushed him to openly rebel against Ming
Dynasty.
On April 27, 1558, Hong Di Zhen led thousands of Wokou and landed in
Putian. After pillaging several villages, he went on to attack
Xinghua City on May 1, 1558. The city was only saved because it just happened
that thousands of Ming troops (Miao auxiliary) from
Hunan
were passing by, and the locals hired them at a high price to defend the
city. In the following month, Hong Di Zhen burnt down his lair on Wuyu
Island, then launched a raid on
Tong'an, although the attack was driven back by county magistrate Xu Zong Shi
(徐宗奭). He then launched another raid on Tongshan (銅山, now part
of
Dongshan County),
Zhangpu County and Zhao'an County in November or December 1558, however the second attack also
failed. Not to be deterred easily, on December 22, 1558 Hong Di Zhen and
Xie He (謝和,
see above) led several thousand Wokou—survivors of Siege of Ceng
Gang that included significant numbers of Japanese under
direct command of Ōtomo Sōrin (大友宗麟) from a tribute
mission-turned-piracy—and established a new base of operation on Wuyu
Island.
Now bolstered by large numbers of battle-hardened veterans and deadly
Japanese warriors, Hong Di Zhen became far more dangerous than before.
He launched a new raid in February or March 1559, first pillaging Yue
Gang and seizing a number of large ships from the port, then dispersing
his men to attack Zhupu (珠浦, present-day
Jincheng Township), Guanyu (官嶼, part of
Jinsha Township) and several other places on
Kinmen before returning to Wuyu. He then joined force with other Wokou freshly
arriving from Japan to launch a large-scale raid against Funing in April
or May 1559, capturing Fu'an City and massacring more than 3,700 people,
then attacked Fuzhou and laid waste to
Yongfu County. It was only through the effort of Ming commander Li Peng Ju (黎鵬擧)
that he was finally defeated. Fujian's grand coordinator Wang Xun (王詢)
and several Ming commanders then took to the sea to pursue him,
successfully sinking 78 pirate ships and killing, drowning and capturing thousands of Wokou. Hong Di Zhen fled to
Haitan Island whereas some of his men retreated to Nan'ao Island, although he quickly resumed piratical activities in
Zhangzhou and raided
Dadeng Island in the same month. Nevertheless, he noticeably scaled down his piratical activities in the following year and even agreed to
help Ming authorities to put down a rebellion in Yue Gang for a price in 1561, likely due to
considerable numbers of Wokou from Ceng Gang leaving him and returning
to Japan after his recent defeat.
Hong Di Zhen made a strong resurgence in 1562 just as Fujian was plunged into an unprecedented maelstrom of violence and chaos. With new waves of
Wokou freshly arriving from Japan, Wokou remnants from Zhejiang surging into
Fujian after being defeated by Ming commander Qi Ji Guang (戚繼光), and
Chinese pirates elsewhere coming to Wuyu Island, Fujian now faced possibly the largest ever Wokou incursion of Jia Jing Da Wo Kou period. Countless Wokou
rampaged across Fujian, laying waste to numerous villages, towns and
cities, even setting up many strongholds and stockades on China's soil.
The crisis was so dire that Qi Ji Guang was eventually called in to deal
with the Wokou. Mustering his elite
army, Qi Ji Guang swiftly eradicated the pirate lair on Hengyu Island (橫嶼島) and a series of Wokou strongholds around Niutian
(牛田, present-day Longtian Town, Fuqing City), then
pursued Wokou remnants to Lindun (林墩, part of
Putian City) before utterly annihilating them. Meanwhile, Ming commander Yu Da You
(俞大猷) and Liu Xian (劉顯) were also called in to destroy the pirate
lair on Wuyu Island. Eventually, anti-Wokou operation in Fujian cumulated
into a major military action where all three Ming commanders join force to destroy the last Wokou
stronghold at Pinghaiwei Guard (平海衛, now part of
Xiuyu District) on May 12, 1563. With his power base severely diminished after
suffering a series of devastating losses at the hands of Ming army, Hong Di Zhen was left
with no other choice but to surrender to Ming authorities later in the
same year. He was promptly executed.
Yan Shan Lao (嚴山老) (active at least since 1558 – 1559)
Yan Shan Lao was a pirate based in Yue Gang who seemed to be closely associated with Hong Di Zhen (洪迪珍,
see above). His first appearance in historical records was due to a raid on Andong County (安東縣, present-day
Lianshui County) in 1558, although he was already a notorious and cruel pirate by then.
Yan Shan Lao took part in Hong Di Zhen's large scale raid against Fujian in April 1558, as part of the tens of thousands of Wokou that besieged Fuzhou City for fifty days. The city was only saved thanks to the valiant and astute effort of Ming minister and famous poet Zong Chen (宗臣), although the victory did little to deter the Wokou, as they quickly dispersed to pillage smaller cities nearby. Yan Shan Lao himself led four thousand Wokou and swiftly captured Fuqing City after battering its city walls with cannons from a nearby hill. He brutalised the hapless populace of Fuqing for two days, only leaving due to the long overdue arrival of Ming army.
After the Fuqing massacre, roughly a thousand Wokou split off to attack Putian (the city was only saved thanks to locals hiring a contingent of passing-by Guangdong auxiliary troops to resist the Wokou, although the auxiliaries later pillaged the city themselves), whereas Yan Shan Lao brought the other three thousand to Quanzhou and besieged
Chongwu Garrison (崇武所)
as well as the nearby county seat of Hui'an. Qian Chu (錢儲), battalion commander of Chongwu Garrison, resolutely resisted the Wokou, going so far as to using his personal wealth to fund the operation of the entire garrison, and finally repelled the siege after nearly twenty days even though both sides suffered considerable casualties.
Meanwhile, resigned county magistrate Lin Xian (林咸) and retired official Li Kai (李愷) were recalled to defend Hui'an City with only several hundred soldiers. The Wokou employed then cutting-edge
matchlock guns to inflict heavy casualties on the defenders, made several attempts to climb over city wall using rope ladders, and at one point even built several
siege towers to attack the city. Fortunately, thanks to the valiant effort of Lin Xian and Li Kai, the timely reinforcement of Li Feng (李鳳) and forty Ming arquebusiers, the city managed to hold out for seven days until a larger relief force forced Yan Shan Lao to lift the siege. Yan Shan Lao then split out his crew into two groups. One group returned to Hui'an mere three days later to enact vengeance, attacking the nearby Yashan (鴨山) to lure out Lin Xian and killing him in an ambush, while the other group rampaged through Nan'an County (which was already evacuated) and attempted to besiege Quanzhou City and Yongnin City, although both attempts were repelled. The next month, Yan Shan Lao returned to Fujian and attacked Zhendong Guard (鎮東衛, inside
Haikou Town), killing the local volunteer leader Xie Jie Fu (謝介夫) who tried to resist him.
Fortunately, Yan Shan Lao's reign of terror wouldn't last for much longer, as he was soon caught up in the Ming counterattack against Hong Di Zhen in 1559. While Hong Di Zhen managed to escape and even made a resurgence several years later, Yan Shan Lao wasn't as lucky and became one of the prominent Wokou leaders to be captured by Ming navy in that operation.
Twenty-four generals of Yue Gang (月港) (active 1557 – 1561)
Zhang Lian (張璉) (active 1558 – 1562)
Though often listed among the Wokou leaders, Zhang Lian was actually a mountain bandit and rebel that only had minimal contact with the Wokou, making this a case of unfortunate mistaken identity. His story is available to my Supporter-tier patrons only
Xu Chao Guang (許朝光) (active ? – 1566)
Wu Ping (吳平) (active 1557 – 1566) (Undergoing revision)
Wu Ping was born in Zhao'an. He was a slave since youth and suffered abuses from his employer,
but later escaped and joined a band of Wokou, where he served as
their scout. Wu Ping gradually rose to power by absorbing Wokou
remnants defeated by Ming forces elsewhere. At the height of his
power, he commanded more than ten thousand men, and earned the
respect from other Wokou leaders.
Wu Ping frequently raided the coasts of
Chaozhou
and Huizhou, causing untold mayhem. In 1564, Ming army led by Yu Da You
(俞大猷) cleared out most of the Wokou at Chaozhou and Huizhou, and Wu
Ping was forced to surrender and received pardon. However, Wu Ping
rebuilt his fleet in secret and reverted to his old way in the same
year.
Yu Da You wrote to Wu Gui Fang (吳桂芳) and Qi Ji Guang (戚繼光) and
devised a plan to surround Wu Ping from three sides and destroy him once
and for all. However, his plan was rejected and Ming army from Fujian
attacked prematurely (in part fearing Wu Ping might be able to regroup
with the rest of his Japanese allies). Alerted, Wu Ping fled to
Nan'ao
Island
and built a fortified base. In 1565, a thirty thousand
strong combined force led by both Yu Da You and Qi Ji Guang laid siege
and captured Wu Ping's holdout, forcing him to fled to Annam
(present-day Vietnam) on captured ships. He was defeated again by Tang Ke Kuan (湯克寬) at Wanqiaoshan (萬橋山), but managed to escape once more. Finally, Tang Ke Kuan surrounded and defeated Wu Ping at Yazhou Bay (崖州灣) in 1566.
Wu Ping's defeat marked the last major victory of the anti-Wokou campaign, and the passing of Jia Jing Da Wo Kou era.
Post-Jiajing period
Longqing Opening and the decline of Wokou
Having their backs broken by the hardened Ming military, the Wokou were severely depleted and diminished, although never quite completely wiped out. Gone were the days when these violent outlaws were able to make headway into China easily, and skirmishes and battles that ended with Wokou losing hundreds or even thousands of personnel to Ming military, or even wiped out before they made landing, became a common occurrence.
In their place saw the rise of Chinese pirates, who, despite occasional hiring of Japanese nationals and opportunistic forays with actual Wokou to raid China's coasts, were no longer beholden to Japanese masters or benefactors, nor closely integrating with Japanese pirates at the organisational level. Still, Chinese pirates faced the same dilemma as their diminished Wokou counterparts, and eventually those not outright annihilated by Ming military were forced to flee to Southeast Asia.
The situation continued to improve during Wangli period, as the number of Wokou dwindled further. In addition, many former Wokou were absorbed into Japanese navy at the onset of Imjin War, while Ming court also bolstered its coastal defence in preparation for a potential naval invasion from Japan, making Wokou raid even more risky. Both factors greatly contributed to the near-disappearance of Wokou from China's coasts.
Zeng Yi Ben (曾一本)
Available to my Supporter-tier patrons only
Lin Dao Qian/Lim To Khiam (林道乾) (active 1561 – early 17th century) (Undergoing revision)
|
|
Original Seri Patani cannon, also known as Phraya Tani,
currently kept outside of Ministry of Defence building, Bangkok.
|
Also known as Lin Wu Liang (林悟梁),
Vintoquián in Spanish and
Tok Kayan in Malay, Lin Dao Qian was born in
Chenghai. He briefly served as a county servant before turning to
piracy. Lin Dao Qian's career as a pirate is shrouded in mystery.
It is known that he raided Zhao'an in either 1563 or 1566 (or
both), but was defeated by Yu Da You (俞大猷) and forced to flee to
Cambodia. He later converted to Islam and settled in Sultanate of
Patani, where he either held a high government position, or wed Ratu
Hijau (Malay for Green Queen), Queen Regent of Sultanate of
Patani.
Legend has it that Lin Dao Qian cast two heavy siege cannons,
known as
Seri Patani
and Seri Negara, for Ratu Hijau. However he lost his life trying to
cast the third cannon, which resulted in a catastrophe. After the fall
of Sultanate of Patani to
Rattanakosin Kingdom of Siam in 1785, the Siamese attempted to bring the cannons
back to Bangkok as spoils of war. Though they successfully brought Seri
Patani back to Bangkok, where it still stands to this day, Seri Negara was lost to the storm during transit.
Lin Feng/Lim Hong (林鳳) (active 1567 – 1589) (Undergoing revision)
|
|
'Ang Pagsalakay ng mga Kawal ni Limahong', an oil painting
by Juanito Torres in 2011, depicting Lin Feng's siege
of Manila.
|
Also known as Lin A Feng/Limahong (林阿鳳), Lin Feng joined the
pirate band of Tia La Ong/Tial Lao (泰老翁) at the age of nineteen,
and soon succeeded him as leader of the pirate band. Many sources
(including some Ming records) mistook Lin Feng and Lin Dao Qian
(林道乾) to be the same person, while in reality they were two
different figures, contemporary but also rival of each other. Lin
Feng rose to prominence in 1573 and managed to defeat and absorb the
pirate fleet of Lin Dao Qian, replacing him as the largest pirate
faction of the time.
After he suffered repeated defeats by Ming navy in 1574, he
retreated to
Penghu, then to Wang Gang (魍港, present-day location uncertain), defeated and terrorised the aboriginals. Ming navy sent
out a pursuit force and got into contact with the aboriginals, and
the combined force defeated Lin Feng's pirates. In November 1574,
Lin Feng retreated to Penghu to gather the remnant of his fleet and
set sail to Philippines. He
laid siege to Spanish colony of Manila and killed Martín de Goiti,
Maestre de Campo of
Manila. Nevertheless, his pirates were met with strong resistance
and eventually driven away. Lin Feng relocated to
Lingayen, subjugating the locals and set up a pirate base/kingdom.
With the help from five thousand Filipino warriors hired by Ming
official Wang Wang Gao (王望高, known as Omoncon in Spanish records)
sent to capture him, Spanish colonists eventually dislodged Lin
Feng from Lingayen after a four month long siege, but he somehow
managed to slip away unscathed.
Lin Feng returned to China and resumed his pirate operation once
again. He was still active as late as 1589, and escaped several
attempts by Ming army to capture or kill him. He
eventually fled to Siam, never to be heard from ever
since.
Li Mao (李茂) (active ? – 1589)
(to be updated)
EXTRA: Chinese piracy during the twilight years of the Ming Dynasty
Regrettably, China's coastal defence atrophied during late Wangli period as Ming Dynasty itself fell into irreversible decline. Smuggling activities and piracy once again flared up as lawlessness returned to China's coasts.
Li Dan (李旦) (active ? – 1625)
Li Dan, also known by his Western/Baptism name Andrea Dittis, was a influential Chinese sea trader and smuggler, as well as a pivotal figure of the late Ming period.
Born in Hui'an County, Quanzhou in around 1560s, much of the early life of Li Dan is unknown, although it is known that Li Dan began his merchant career by trading with Spanish Philippines and became a local leader of the
Sangley Chinese community in Philippines, from which he got his "Captain China" moniker. Unfortunately, he was caught up in the
Sangley massacre of 1603 (it should be note that despite the Wikipedia's claim, there was no Chinese rebellion. The Spaniards simply massacred the Chinese out to paranoia). Though he survived the massacre, Li Dan was probably made a
galley slave by the Spanish governor Pedro Bravo de Acuña, only regaining his freedom in 1605~1606 after Ming court pressured the Spaniards to release the enslaved Chinese.
Once freed, Li Dan went to Japan in 1607 to seek refuge with his sworn younger brother Ou Hua Yu (歐華宇, known as Captain Whaw in European records), who was a prominent sea trader based in Japan. Li Dan settled in Hirado and began to rebuild his business, and together with Ou Hua Yu (who moved to Nagasaki) they built a vast maritime merchant empire that stretched from Japan to Ryukyu, Tonkin (Northern Vietnam), Cochinchina (Southern Vietnam), Taiwan and China, as well as Philippines. Li Dan maintained good relationships with local daimyōs, in particular Matsuura Takanobu (松浦隆信), and even acquired a Shuinjō (朱印状, lit. 'Red seal permit') from Tokugawa Shogunate in 1616, making him an officially sanctioned trader in Japan and one of the handful of foreigners to receive that status. In 1620 Li Dan succeeded Ou Hua Yu as the leader of oversea Chinese community in Japan after the latter's passing, making him the single most powerful sea lord in Asia. Such was his wealth and influence that virtually all influential Chinese pirates of the 17th century including Yan Si Qi (顔思齊), Xu Xin Su (許心素), Zheng Zhi Long (鄭芝龍) and Liu Xiang (劉香) were closely related to him, and even the British East India Company's had to rent a place from Li Dan to set up its trading post in Japan.
Li Dan built Wang Gang into a bustling smuggling hub due to its strategic position close to mainland China some time between 1608 and 1620, and began to seriously develop Wang Gang into a permanent colony around 1621-1624, possibly with the help of his subordinate/collaborator Yan Si Qi. This made Li Dan one of the earliest pioneers of Taiwan, and it was due to this connection that he was invited to become a mediator between Ming Dynasty and Dutch East India Company during the Siege of Penghu in 1624, as well as the facilitator of Dutch relocation to Tayouan (大圓, present-day
Anping, Taiwan) after negotiation broke down. Furthermore, this also formed the legal basis for
Koxinga's claim on Taiwan and expulsion of the Dutch in 1661.
Li Dan passed away due to illness on August 2, 1625, during his return voyage from Taiwan to Japan. After his death, the majority of his merchant empire was taken over by Zheng Zhi Long, much to the chagrin of his direct descendants.
Yan Si Qi (嚴思齊) (active 1603 – 1625)
 |
| Modern wall illustration of Yan Si Qi (centre figure dressed in blue) in the exhibition hall of Kaitai Cultural Park, Xiamen. |
Yan Si Qi was a renowned yet enigmatic pirate whose legend remains shrouded in mystery, as much of his biography was recorded in Tai Wan Wai Ji (《臺灣外記》), a book that, while broadly reliable and offering valuable historical insight, also blends history and novel together and contains significant embellishment.
According to Tai Wan Wai Ji, Yan Si Qi was born in Haicheng County, Fujian and known for his strong physique and martial arts prowess since his youth, but was forced to flee to Japan after he beat a servant of a bullying eunuch to death. Settling down in Hirado, Yan Si Qi worked a dual career as both a tailor and a maritime trader/pirate, slowly gaining influence until he became the leader of the oversea Chinese community in Hirado. In 1624 he gathered a group of loyal followers and plotted a rebellion to overthrow the Japanese government and seize the country for himself. However, the plan was leaked just before it could be enacted, which forced Yan Si Qi and his followers to flee to Taiwan with just thirteen ships. After arriving at Taiwan, Yan Si Qi built a pirate outpost and began to terrorise the coasts of Fujian and Zhejiang, although he died of illness one year later.
Though interesting, the tale of Yan Si Qi's plotting to overthrow Japanese government appears to be imaginary. In fact, for a long time some historians believed that Yan Si Qi himself was either a fictional figure or actually the same person as Li Dan, due to their rather similar life experience such as pioneering Taiwan and died in the same year. Nevertheless, Yan Si Qi was also mentioned in historical records outside of Tai Wan Wai Ji, including some Dutch records (where he was identified as Pedro Chino), lending credence to the view that he and Li Dan are actually two different individuals.
The current mainstream view is that Yan Si Qi was likely a subordinate or at least a collaborator of Li Dan, and may have went to found a settlement in Taiwan as early as 1621, either due to Li Dan's request or simply because he was unable to acquire a Shuinjō and become a legitimate trader in Japan.
Xu Xin Su (許心素) (active ? – 1628)
Zheng Zhi Long (鄭芝龍) (active ? – 1646) (Undergoing revision)
 |
| Eighteenth century European impression of Zheng Zhilong, taken from the cartouche of the map 'Iles aux environs de la Chine où se tenoient autrefois les fameux pirates Yquen et Koxinga, suivant les mémoires d'un fidèle voyageur' by Van Der Aa, Pieter. |
Also known as Nicholas Iquan Gaspard and father of the legendary
Koxinga, Zheng Zhi Long was born in
Nan'an, Fujian. He learnt the trade of merchantmanship from his uncle
Huang Cheng (黃程) at Macau, and later joined the pirate confederation of another Chinese pirate Li Dan (李旦, also known by
his baptismal name Andrea Dittis and nickname "Captain China") and
Yan Si Qi (顏思齊), where he served as a translator and negotiator.
They set up a smuggling port at Taiwan, and
assisted the Dutch to settle atTayouan after they were chased away from Penghu in 1624.
Zheng Zhi Long succeeded Li Dan as the leader in 1625. He went into
conflict with Xu Xin Su (許心素), a former subordinate of Li Dan
that sided with the Ming Dynasty, and killed him. Nevertheless,
Zheng Zhi Long himself surrendered to Ming Dynasty in 1628 and was
appointed an admiral. His surrender made him an enemy of his former
allies and subordinates, but he managed to defeat them all
(including the Dutch during
Battle of Liaoluo Bay) and effectively monopolised China's maritime trade
business with Japan, Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch and Southeast
Asia.
After the fall of Ming Dynasty in 1644, Qing army began to approach
Zheng Zhi Long's base at Anping (安平, present-day
Anhai). He decided to defect to Qing Dynasty on the promise of a great
reward, but was put under house arrest and later executed in 1661.
Liu Xiang (劉香) (active ? – 1635) (Undergoing revision)
Liu Xiang was also known as Liu Xiang Lao (劉香佬). He was a former
ally of Zheng Zhi Long, but disagreed with his decision to surrender
to Ming Dynasty, so they went their separate ways. Since then, he
participated in a series of three-sided conflicts between Ming navy
(under Zheng Zhi Long), Dutch East India Company (under Hans
Putmans) and Chinese pirates.
Liu Xiang sided with Dutch East India Company during the Battle of
Liaoluo Bay, but was defeated by Zheng Zhi Long. The defeat caused
the Dutch to reconsider their foreign policy with China. As the
Dutch distanced themselves from Chinese pirates and tried to
normalise trade relations with Ming Dynasty, Liu Xiang, feeling
betrayed, attacked the Fort Zeelandia in 1634 with six hundred
pirates. He was repelled by the Dutch, but managed to blockade the Dutch
trading port with fifty junks. Unfortunately, Liu Xiang suffered six
consecutive defeats and was killed by Zheng Zhi Long in the next year.
No comments:
Post a Comment