The Blacks of Premodern China. Don J. Wyatt
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Название: The Blacks of Premodern China

Автор: Don J. Wyatt

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Историческая литература

Серия: Encounters with Asia

isbn: 9780812203585

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СКАЧАТЬ and the succession of peoples they collectively called kunlun. Sometimes merely undercurrent and other times overt, dread of the kunlun in fact constitutes a kind of thematic thread coursing throughout most reports. Fear on the part of the Chinese, even if latent, often beset their interactions with the kunlun, and extant documentary records confirm this fact with enough frequency to make it difficult to ignore. From these sources we learn that the quality of Chinese-kunlun relations ranged across the entire spectrum of interactive possibilities, from the cooperative to the merely fractious to the foreboding. Our earliest information regarding the last category of engagement comes from a striking entry, already cited in the introduction, first officially preserved in the Old Tang History and dated as having occurred in 684 C.E.52 It involves the previously described death in that year of the Guangzhou governor Lu Yuanrui, who evidently was a man so lightly regarded both in his time and later that even his death is prosaically first recorded not independently but instead in the biography of the successor to his post.53 From this terse and unadorned entry we learn that “The territories of Guangzhou border the Southern Sea. Every year, the kunlun merchants arrive in [their] ships, laden with valuable goods to trade with the Chinese. The previous governor tried to cheat them out of their goods, so a kunlun had come forth with a concealed knife and killed him.”54

      The blandness of description in this rendition of the occurrence notwithstanding, in short order Lu Yuanrui’s murder became highly sensationalized. In addition, despite the passage of several centuries, his ignominious end still remained conspicuous enough to be recorded again in the celebrated Zizhi tongjian (Comprehensive Mirror Aiding Government) of Sima Guang (1019–86), which was surely the preeminent historical work produced during the Song Dynasty.55 Sima’s preservation of this same episode in one of the most renowned of China’s privately written histories some four hundred years after it had transpired attests to its lingering resonance as a source of morbidly salacious fascination. His more embellished rendering of the event also clues us to its symbolic significance. Most of all, we are meant to remember Lu Yuanrui for the manner of his death—that is, at whose hands it occurred—as well as for the irresolution of its disposition:

      In the autumn, on wuwu (mouwu) of the seventh month [Western date: 8 September], the governor of Guangzhou, Lu Yuanrui, was killed by a kunlun. Yuanrui was stupid and cowardly, and his subordinates were unrestrained and devious. Whenever merchant ships would arrive, his subordinates would ceaselessly seek through extortion to divert profits for themselves, causing the merchant barbarians to complain to Yuanrui. Yuanrui [finally] sought to address the situation by calling for cangues, wishing to have [one group of foreign merchants] bound as punishment for their complaints.

      [Lu Yuanrui’s actions] enraged this group of barbarians, such that there was a kunlun among them who entered directly into Yuanrui’s offices, bearing a sword that he concealed in his sleeves. He then killed Yuanrui as well as more than ten of the people surrounding him and fled. No one [at the scene] dared to approach the kunlun [to prevent his escape]. The murderer boarded a ship and set to sea; the ship was pursued but could not be overtaken.56

      The murder of Lu Yuanrui proves in many respects to be a watershed. From the two foregoing accounts in succession of the death of the ill-fated extortionist Guangzhou governor, we can extract a wealth of information about the nature and tenor of Chinese-kunlun intercourse during the fatefully momentous transition from Tang to Song times. Some of this information we glean is factual, but a good deal of it is also dispositional. Drawing from among the factual elements, we learn that in their earliest designation the kunlun were probably of Malay ethnicity, or to frame the matter conversely, that they were almost assuredly not Africans. Confirmation comes from the fact that the Chinese had since at least the beginning of the seventh century C.E. engaged in regular and thriving maritime trade along the South China Sea coast with the people they called kunlun. The expansion of trade precipitated by the removal of such rapacious officials as Lu Yuanrui indeed emboldened the kunlun and their Javanese neighbors to such an extent that they undertook raids of aggrandizement in 767 as far afield as the northern coastline of Vietnam, all for the purpose of, as the modern scholar of the Chinese Southern Sea (Nanyang) diaspora Wang Gungwu observes, establishing their “commercial supremacy” over the region.57

      Additional corroboration of the highly probable Malay identity of the original kunlun and the location of their domain within greater Malaysia comes from the fact that a commentarial note dating from the Yuan Dynasty (1279–1368), appended to the account in the Comprehensive Mirror Aiding Government by its editor Hu Sanxing (1230–1302), definitively informs us of the location of Kunlunguo, the fabled “kingdom of Kunlun,” or perhaps better put, it supplies us with some highly impressionistic directions for how to get there. We are informed: “The kingdom of Kunlun is located to the south of Linyi (Champa); [to travel there] one goes beyond Jiaozhi (Tonkin, present-day Hanoi) by sea for more than three hundred days. Customarily, in writing, Kunlun is the same [place] as Poluomen [Brahman?] (formerly constituting the entirety of the west coast of India, from Kulam in the south to the mouth of the Indus River in the north).”58 A Song History entry of approximately the same vintage rather generically replicates at least Hu Sanxing’s approach to, if not altogether his specific landmarks for, finding the land called Kunlun by utilizing instead the kingdom of Shepoguo (Java) as the primary reference point: “Java is located in the Southern Sea. One arrives in this country from the east by means of a month at sea. Then, with a half-month’s rowing, one arrives at Kunlunguo.”59

      Clearly there seems to be no premium placed on the accuracy of these “directions,” even if we are inclined to consider them as such, and it is difficult to discern which one of the two sets is more suspect. Were one to follow, for instance, strictly the latter set, then—quite implausibly—as the scholar Zhang Xinglang (also Chang Hsing-lang) (1888–1951)—who will loom as a large presence in our subsequent deliberations—observed, Kunlunguo “must be none other than Thailand (Xianluoguo).”60 Such improbabilities notwithstanding, from such “directions” as these provided in the Yuan sources we can at the very least discern that the Chinese of the Tang and Song eras had regarded the inhabitants of Kunlun with whom they periodically interacted and interchanged through mercantile activity as hailing from some generalized region far to the south but also to the west—that is, from some vaguely defined place remote from China and not altogether lacking in proximity to points much further west, including, incidentally, the eastern coast of Africa.

      The historian Feng Chengjun (1885–1946), writing nearly seven centuries later in his milestone Zhongguo Nanyang jiaotong shi (History of Chinese Southern Sea Transit), offers us only slightly more specific parameters than does Hu Sanxing, stating: “Since ancient days, the kingdom of Kunlun has been imprecisely designated as a single zone, defined by the various countries extending to Annam (Zhancheng) in the north, to Java (Zhuawa) in the south, to Malaysia (Malaibandao) in the west, to Borneo (Poluozhou) in the east. At its severe extreme, it extends even to the east coast of Africa. We can think of all of this area as incorporating the territory of Kunlun.”61 On the basis of its sweepingly immense area, Feng Chengjun’s “Kunlun” is defined only loosely, to be sure. However, the expansive boundaries that Feng offers adumbrate the point earlier made that we should always be prepared to think of kunlun as geographically denoting a potential panoply of locations, ranging from its namesake range of mountains in Tibet to a substantial portion of an entire oceanic zone (see Map 1).62 Moreover, we can also intuit from Feng’s description that there may well have been, over the course of history, numerous “kingdoms” of Kunlun, with the precise location having been largely dependent on the time period of the reference. Such an understanding provides us with ample justification for believing that although the kingdom of Kunlun specifically referred to by commentators on the Comprehensive Mirror Aiding Government such as Hu Sanxing was no longer so near at hand as the landlocked mountains of Tibet, neither was it so distant from China proper as is the East African coast. This reasoning all the more reinforces rather soundly the view that the СКАЧАТЬ