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  • 1 day ago
Let's dig into the "myth" or the "reality" of the historical times when it was uncertain whether or not the Europeans and the Chinese actually interacted with each other...and why or why not.
Transcript
00:07Welcome!
00:08Why were the Eastern Asian groups, such as China, ignored by Europe during the Middle Ages and Renaissance?
00:14Let's find out.
00:18This question requires some nuance.
00:21It's more accurate to say that direct contact and knowledge were extremely limited and filtered,
00:26but not due to a lack of interest.
00:27Powerful geographic, political, and technological barriers made sustained interaction nearly impossible.
00:34Here's a breakdown of why direct engagement was so rare.
00:38Physical Distance
00:39The sheer physical distance between Western Europe and China was immense,
00:43filled with some of the world's most formidable natural barriers,
00:46such as the Tibetan Plateau and Himalayan Mountains,
00:49the deserts of Central Asia, such as the Gobi, also known as the Taklamakan,
00:53and the vast steppes of Central Asia.
00:55These were not just empty spaces.
00:58They were controlled by often hostile intermediary empires and nomadic confederations,
01:03making the overland Silk Road perilous, slow, and expensive.
01:08As trade developed, which it always does, the primary method of moving goods between China
01:13and Western Europe was traveling overland on the Silk Road.
01:16There were many branches of this road, but any of them were a notoriously slow, expensive,
01:21and dangerous route, primarily because the regions they passed through were not uninhabited,
01:25but rather controlled by hostile intermediary empires and formidable nomadic groups,
01:30including the Mongols, the Turks, and various Muslim Khanates.
01:34The trade of Chinese goods to Europe, such as silk, porcelain, and later spices,
01:39was an indirect and complex process.
01:42A long chain of intermediaries controlled the exchange.
01:46The goods moved from Chinese merchants through Central Asian and Persian traders,
01:50then Arab traders, and finally to Venetian or Genoese merchants in the Mediterranean,
01:55was lengthy and complex.
01:57This process meant that each middleman drove up the price and filtered information.
02:02As a result, by the time silk reached Europe,
02:05its true origin was mysterious as well as very expensive.
02:09Europeans held only vague, often mythical ideas about Cathay or Ceres, the land of silk.
02:15There was much political instability along the route.
02:19For much of the early and high Middle Ages,
02:22there was no single political entity ensuring safe passage.
02:25The fall of the Roman and Han Chinese dynasties disrupted earlier tenuous connections.
02:30Also, the rise of Islam in the 7th century created a civilizational and religious barrier.
02:36While Muslim caliphates were efficient traders,
02:39they became a political and religious rival to Christian Europe,
02:42further complicating direct travel.
02:44It wasn't until the Mongol Empire, 13th to 14th centuries,
02:48unified much of Eurasia under the Pax Mongolica,
02:51that safe travel from Europe to China became feasible.
02:55For much of the Middle Ages, Europe was preoccupied with internal challenges,
02:59including recovering from the Roman Empire's collapse,
03:02defending against Viking and Magyar invasions,
03:05and managing frequent local warfare.
03:07Also, Europe was significantly less advanced than China.
03:11China held a massive advantage in wealth and key technologies.
03:15For example, paper, printing, gunpowder, and navigation.
03:19Consequently, Europe had little that China desired,
03:22resulting in a severe trade imbalance that was largely funded by European gold and silver.
03:28European military and political energy was concentrated on crusading efforts in the Near East,
03:34not on expansion or trade in the distant Far East.
03:37The Mongol era complicated the development of travel.
03:41The Mongols were a nomadic people from the steppes of Central and East Asia,
03:45known for creating the Mongol Empire,
03:47which became the largest contiguous land empire in history.
03:50The period of the Pax Mongolica is the key exception that highlights the normal barriers.
03:56When the Mongols unified the Silk Road,
03:58which created a brief window where safe travel from Europe to China finally became feasible,
04:03allowing figures like Marco Polo to reach the court of the Mongol ruler of China, Kublai Khan.
04:08When direct contact finally occurred, European missionaries,
04:13such as the Jesuit priest Francis Xavier,
04:15and merchants traveled all the way to the Yuan Dynasty court in China,
04:19where Kublai Khan was the Mongol ruler.
04:22The connection between the two cultures, European and East Asian,
04:26caused knowledge to increase.
04:28Accounts like Marco Polo's travels gave Europeans their first detail
04:32if sometimes exaggerated,
04:34look at the advanced civilization of Cathay.
04:37This window slammed shut when in the 14th century,
04:40the Mongol Empire fractured,
04:41the Black Death disrupted trade,
04:43and the Ming Dynasty overthrew the Yuan Dynasty in 1368
04:47and turned inward, adopting an isolationist foreign policy.
04:50At the same time, the Ottoman Turks arose,
04:54cutting off the overland routes again.
04:56So, to answer the question in the title of this video,
04:59ignored is the wrong word.
05:01The Chinese were not so much ignored as they were inaccessible and obscured.
05:06Europeans craved Chinese goods, for example, silk and porcelain,
05:10but could only get them through long, expensive, indirect routes.
05:13They lacked the geographic knowledge,
05:16naval technology, and political access to establish direct contact.
05:20China, for its part, saw itself as the Middle Kingdom,
05:23largely self-sufficient in viewing distant Europe
05:25as a backward periphery of little interest.
05:29This state of unknowing and indirect trade
05:31is precisely what drove the European Age of Exploration in the 15th century.
05:37Europeans, spurred by Marco Polo's tales
05:39and desperate to bypass the Muslim and Venetian middlemen,
05:42sought a direct sea route to the sources of wealth in the Indies,
05:45a quest that led to the voyages of Vasco da Gama,
05:48Columbus, and ultimately,
05:49the direct European-Chinese contact of the 16th century.
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