Placeholder Image

字幕表 動画を再生する

  • In the western world, pirates have always  loomed large in the collective imagination,  

  • with the likes of Henry MorganJack Rackam, and Edward Teach  

  • achieving larger-than-life status. Despite  this, the impact of European piracy in its  

  • most famous Caribbean theatre pales in  comparison to its Asian counterpart.  

  • Throughout the medieval and early-modern  eras, from the shores of Honshu to Malacca,  

  • great pirate bands dominated the oceans, where  they mastered both commerce and carnage, brought  

  • ancient Empires to their knees, and connected  countless cultures from China to Portugal  

  • through barter and blood. Welcome to our video on  the Wokou, the seminal pirate lords of the East.

  • The end of the tale is ultimately that they  aren't there anymore, so you can buy goods  

  • from asia pretty easily, and we've gotrecommendation to take advantage of this  

  • from our sponsor Tokyo Treat and SakuraCoIt's a monthly snackbox subscription service  

  • that provides a curated selection of snacks that  are only available in Japan, such as Sakura Pepsi  

  • or Sake KitKats, sending them right to your doorIt comes in two varieties: First is Tokyo Treat,  

  • a box that brings the latest products in the  current season, including items only available  

  • for limited times in Japan, and in the biggest  quantities. This month's theme is Sugoi Summer,  

  • featuring Japanese summer holiday classics  like Chupa Chups Strawberry Cream Soda and  

  • Watermelon Seed Ramune candy. Second is Sakuracowhich focuses on traditional Japanese snacks  

  • made in partnership with long-running  snackmakers preserving these cultural traditions.  

  • This month's theme is Okinawa Retreat, bringing  you snacks from the place with the highest life  

  • expectancy in the world, so maybe they're  good for you? Try their Shikuwasa Manju,  

  • Okinawa Cinnamon Cookies, and more to find  out, and pair them with teas to get the real  

  • experience. You even get a piece of Japanese  tableware to boost the authenticity further.  

  • Everything in both boxes was delicious, and came  with booklets detailing all the items inside and  

  • explaining the Japanese culture around them. Check  out either box via our links in the description,  

  • and use our code KINGS to get five  dollars off your first order.  

  • The name 'wokou' translates roughly to 'Japanese  pirate', with 'Wo' (倭), meaning 'dwarf',  

  • being a long-standing derogatory term by  which the Chinese referred to the Japanese.  

  • However, as we will see later in this videothe wokou were neither entirely Japanese,  

  • nor even entirely pirates. But before we get into  that, let us discuss the earliest origins of our  

  • eponymous sea lords. Although the first use of the  term wokou dates back as early as the 4th century,  

  • our story begins in the 13th century. Like most  stories set during this particular century,  

  • this one begins with the Mongols. As Chingis  Khan and his successors put increasing pressure  

  • upon Korea from 1218, the ailing Kingdom  of Goryeo found its military manpower  

  • stretched thin, leaving its southern coasts  largely undefended. This coincided with a wave  

  • of drought and starvation in Japan's KyushuIki, and Tsushima isles, which compelled its  

  • denizens to abandon their farms and estates  and plunder foreign shores to survive

  • From 1223 onwards, Japanese pirate vessels from  these islands, manned by rogue peasants and  

  • masterless Samurai alike, raided the southern  coast of Korea with consistent regularity.  

  • By 1259, the Chingisids had achieved  the submission of the Goryeo dynasty,  

  • and in the following decades, would assume control  of the whole peninsula. Afterwards, it is very  

  • likely that Korean testimonies of sea-raiders  from the land of Wa were what first put Japan  

  • as a whole on the Mongol Empires' radarwhich eventually led to the two failed Mongol  

  • invasion attempts of the land in 1274 and 1281. In the immediate decades after the divine winds  

  • shredded Kublai Khan's invasion fleet, wokou raids  declined. The reasons for this were manyfold:  

  • Korea was now under the suzerainty  of the world's biggest Empire,  

  • while Tsushima and Iki had suffered widespread  destruction during the Mongol invasions. Moreover,  

  • the bakufu of the Kamakura Shogunate had undergone  great centralization reforms across Japan, which  

  • included clamping down on the extrajudicial pirate  gangs operating off of their shores. However,  

  • by the mid 14th century, the authority of the  Mongol-led Yuan Dynasty was crumbling. Meanwhile,  

  • Japan's central authority was facing challenges  of its own, with the new Ashikaga shogunate being  

  • embroiled in the rivalry between two schismatic  Imperial courts competing for each others' throne.  

  • This, compounded with a series of natural  disasters that rocked Japan between 1346 and 1349,  

  • created another perfect storm upon which  wokou activity could flare up once more

  • From 1350 onwards, wokou bands of as many as 3,000  men, operating mainly out of Tsushima and Iki,  

  • began plundering the coastline of KoreaMeanwhile, thesamurai clan, vassals  

  • to the Ashikaga Shogun and legitimate authority  on Tsushima, seemed content to turn a blind eye  

  • to the pirate activity in their domain. The wokou  principally targeted Korean vessels carrying rice,  

  • the main form of currency of the age. When the  Korean authorities began moving their tax rice  

  • overland, the wokou responded by penetrating  inland, raiding grain storehouses as far away  

  • from the coast as the environs of Pyongyangtaking many slaves in the process. It was very  

  • unfortunate timing for the Goryeo dynasty, whose  beleaguered King Gongmin had just thrown off the  

  • Mongol yoke, only to now be dealing with a massive  surge of well-organized marauders from the sea.  

  • Indeed, the deeply traumatic impact the wokou  had on the social and economic landscape of Korea  

  • contributed heavily to the eventual collapse of  the nearly 500-year-old Goryeo Dynasty in 1392. 

  • Northern China also suffered endemic Wokou  attacks. From 1358 onwards, coastal areas  

  • like the Shandong peninsula and Jiangsu province  were the victim of large, well-organized raids,  

  • with the once mighty, yet now enfeebled Mongolian  Emperors of the Yuan Dynasty able to do little  

  • about it. The Koreans, however, did not sit idly  by in the face of pirate violence. Under generals  

  • like Choi Yeong and Yi Seonggye, they lashed  back against the wokou, destroying over 300  

  • ships in a raid on Tsushima in 1389. Yi Seonggyeincidentally, would later usurp the declining  

  • Goryeo, becoming Taejo, the first King of JoseonHis descendant, King Sejong the Great of Joseon,  

  • would oversee the fatal death-blow which would  end this most recent phase of wokou activity

  • In the summer of 1419, a large fleet of Joseon  ships carrying 17,000 men sailed for Tsushima,  

  • launching raids across the entire isles. Thisttack was known as the Oei invasion, and finally  

  • prompted theclan of Tsushima to actually do  something about the pirates in their backyard.  

  • Moreover, the Ashikaga Shogunate had resolved  the rift in the Imperial court back in 1392  

  • and was able to restore order  across the land once more.  

  • Meanwhile in China, a new dynasty, the  Ming, had since overthrown the Mongol yoke,  

  • and the Ashikaga Shogun had entered into  tributary supplication with the Ming Emperor  

  • in order to secure a legal trading relationship  with the richest country in the world.  

  • This meant the Shogunate had a vested interest  in clamping down on pirates who might jeopardize  

  • that relationship. All of this brought an end  to this second major wave of wokou activity

  • However, the ocean is ever a lawless placewhere desperate and ambitious people can go  

  • to seek their fortunes beyond the reach  of feudal laws. In the 16th century,  

  • the geopolitical situation had shifted to favour  paralegal maritime entrepreneurialism once more.  

  • After the Ōnin War of 1467, the authority of the  Ashikaga Shogunate had collapsed, causing social  

  • order in Japan to fail as the islands were torn  up into dozens of independent warring fiefdoms,  

  • most of which were unable to contain wokou  activity. Moreover, by the 16th century,  

  • Ming China had begun imposing extremely  strict regulations on foreign maritime trade.  

  • Ningbo was the only port city where the Japanese  were permitted entry to participate in the highly  

  • ritualized, tributary gift exchange proscribed  by Chinese court protocol. However, after a brawl  

  • between two rival Samurai clans, the Hosokawa and  the Ōuchi, caused widespread chaos in Ningbo and  

  • its environs in 1523, China seriously curtailed  commercial relations with Japan. Following this,  

  • black market smugglers and pirates surged into  a niche once occupied by legitimate authorities

  • The Wokou of the 16th century would prove  to be much different than their previous  

  • iterations. While the early Wokou were most  likely of predominantly Japanese stock,  

  • the wokou of the early modern era werefar more international affair, with tens of  

  • thousands of Southern Chinese joining up, their  ocean going livelihoods having been dispossessed  

  • by draconian Ming Dynasty trade bans. According to  Ming Dynasty records, by the mid 16th century, as  

  • many as 70% of wokou were Chinese, mainly from the  southern province of Fujian. Malays, Filipinos,  

  • and even a smattering of Portuguese Catholics  would also colour wokou ranks. While previous  

  • iterations of the Wokou localized their raids to  Korea and Northern China, the 16th century Wokou  

  • had a far wider reach, maintaining a dominating  presence from Hirado to the Philippines

  • Although an undoubtedly cruel and brutal bunchthe Wokou were never ones to seize through  

  • violence what they could obtain through businessNowhere was this more evident than at Shuangyu,  

  • China's seedy black market entrepot. This hub  of illegal trade was founded as a result of the  

  • entry of the Portuguese into the south  China sea in 1511. Having established  

  • colonial ports dotting Africa and the Indian  Ocean and conquered the Sultanate of Malacca,  

  • the Catholics were now seeking to  breach the closed markets of China.  

  • Having failed to do so by force, they instead  collaborated with Japanese sailors and Chinese  

  • smugglers from Fujian to create an illegal  offshore emporium on the tiny island of Liuheng,  

  • where clandestine trade could be conducted  in defiance of Ming maritime prohibitions

  • By the early 1540s, Shuangyuknown as Liampo by the Portuguese,  

  • had come under the rulership of a Wokou syndicatethe Xu, whose vast maritime commercial networks  

  • spread from Malacca to Kagoshima prefecture. The  Xu's chief lieutenant, the wokou lord Wang Zhi,  

  • is credited for helping lead the Portuguese to  Japan in 1543, thereby facilitating the first  

  • steps any Europeans had taken on the land of the  rising sun, while also popularizing the use of  

  • European-style firearms in not just Japan, but  China as well. Ultimately, the story of Shuangyu  

  • is indicative of the fact that the Wokou were not  just disruptive agents of chaos, but more often  

  • than not were crucial economic actors who greased  the cogs of a massive, pan-east-Asian economy

  • Of course, setting up an unsanctioned port city  inhabited by illegal smugglers on Chinese soil  

  • was not going to sit well  with Ming Dynasty authorities.  

  • In 1547, the Imperial court bestowed one Zhu Wan  with the crisp title ofGrand Coordinator of  

  • Zhejiang and Concurrent Superintendent of Military  Affairs for Zhejiang and Fujian Coastal Defense”,  

  • a role specifically created to combat  Wokou piracy. Zhu Wan embraced his new  

  • purpose with relish, and in 1548, assembledmassive Imperial fleet and stormed Shuangyu,  

  • burning it to the ground and forcing its smugglers  to disperse among the southern Chinese coastline.  

  • Unfortunately for Zhu Wan, the Wokou had deep  connections with some of the most powerful  

  • families in Fujian, who utilized his unlawful  execution of prisoners to have him politically  

  • disgraced by the Emperor, forcing him to commit  suicide in 1550. For the pirates, an eloquent  

  • pen was often as effective a weapon to brandish  against their enemies as a well-tempered sword

  • That is not to say that swords would  not have their day, for the burning  

  • of Shuangyu would ultimately kickstart the  single most violent decade in Wokou history.  

  • With Shuangyu incinerated, the Wokou had lost  their means to smuggle goods in and out of China  

  • in an orderly, if still illegal way. Concurrentlywith Zhu Wan dead and his fleet dispersed,  

  • a massive power vacuum had opened up  in the Southern Chinese coastline,  

  • allowing the pirates to recuperate  their losses in the old fashioned way.  

  • Thus began the Jiajing raids, thusly named for the  Jiajing Emperor, during whose reign they occured.  

  • Between 1551 and 1560, Chinese archives  report no less than 467 separate Wokou raids,  

  • an average of over fifty per year. Most of these  were spearheaded by the aforementioned Wang Zhi,  

  • who had become the most powerful voice among the  Wokou clans, and was now operating off the Gotō  

  • Islands, where he had established solid  relations with the local Kyushu Daimyos,  

  • and had begun styling himself as theKing  of Hui.” Other notable pirate lords in this  

  • period included Xu Hai of the aforementioned Xu  syndicate, and admirals like Chen Dong and Ye Ma

  • During these excursions, Wokou ranks were  often swelled by the very people they raided,  

  • as peasants on the Chinese coast decided they  would rather throw their lot in with the pirates  

  • rather than deal with poverty, taxation, and the  abusive presence of the Imperial troops stationed  

  • quartered in their villages, who were often just  as exploitative as the pirates they were supposed  

  • to be protecting the peasants from. Despite the  fact that most of the chaos rended upon Chinese  

  • shores was caused by the Chinese themselves, Ming  officials tended to emphasize the Japaneseness of  

  • the raiders. That way, they could blame the  destruction on the of trespasses of barbaric  

  • foreigners, rather than as their failure to  control their own subjects. That is not to  

  • say that there were not still ethnic Japanese  who played a major role in the Jiajing raids,  

  • as according to sources of the time, plenty of  poor Japanese, particularly from Satsuma, Higo  

  • and Nagato, saw the potential to obtain Chinese  plunder a very attractive opportunity indeed

  • Eventually, over the course of several years, Ming  authorities were able to contain the Wokou tide  

  • through a policy of divide and conquer. By 1556,  a new Grand Coordinator of anti-piracy activity,  

  • Hu Zongxian, had been appointed by the Ming  government. Rather than trying to brute force the  

  • issue as Zhu Wan had, Zongxian cleverly exploited  the rivalries between the most powerful of Wokou  

  • lords. He appeased the pirate lord Xu Hai with  promises of lavish gifts and an official pardon in  

  • return for his help in betraying Chen Dong and Ye  Ma, who Xu Hai was on bad terms with after a feud  

  • over the rights to a captured slave girl. Chen  Dong and Ye Ma were subsequently betrayed and  

  • captured by the Ming authorities, and with Xu Hai  now subsequently isolated, Hu Zongxian went back  

  • on his promise and had him destroyed as well. In  1557, Zongxian turned his attention onto Wang Zhi,  

  • who he lured out of his Japanese island stronghold  and back to China by promising him a full pardon  

  • and offering to negotiate a relaxation of maritime  prohibitions so Wang could trade legitimately  

  • with the Ming state. This, of course, wastrap, and Wang Zhi was subsequently captured,  

  • imprisoned, and beheaded two years later. After the elimination of all their most prominent  

  • captains, Wokou raids on Chinese shores were  seriously curtailed, and had more or less fully  

  • stopped by 1567, when the Ming government finally  lifted their prohibitions on international trade,  

  • eliminating the need for smugglers and pirates  to fill that niche. It should be noted that  

  • the Portuguese came off especially well in the  aftermath of the Jiajing raids. Despite having  

  • once worked alongside the Wokou, they had since  entered into an agreement with the Ming Emperor,  

  • whereby in return for eliminating the pirate  fleets off Guangzhou, they were allowed to lease  

  • out a port, Macau, which became a foothold into  the markets of China which the Portuguese would  

  • hold for the next 400 years. Moreover, the Ming  government still blamed the Japanese for the Wokou  

  • raids, and thus prohibited Japanese from stepping  foot on their shores. This allowed the Portuguese  

  • to establish a firm foothold in Japan as the  primary supplier of Chinese silk in the nation,  

  • the social and religious consequences of  which we have covered in our previous videos  

  • on the Shimabara Rebellion, and William  Adams, the English pilot-turned-Samurai

  • Despite being largely repulsed from Chinese  shores, Wokou activity continued for a time,  

  • now shifting southwards to the Philippines, where  the local gold, ginger, sandalwood, and spices  

  • offered plenty of opportunity for enrichmentInitially, Wokou bands found great success in  

  • these tropical isles, even establishing an  independent pirate city-state, Aparri, in northern  

  • Luzon. However, before long, the Wokou found  themselves in conflict with another Iberian power,  

  • the Spanish, who were currently in the process  of colonizing the Philippines for themselves.  

  • In 1574, the Chinese Wokou lord Limahong  tried to invade the Spanish city of Manila,  

  • but was repelled. Then in 1582, the Spaniards  defeated the Wokou in the Cagayan battles, where  

  • Spanish conquistadors and rogue Japanese Samurai  came to blows in one of the strangest military  

  • clashes in early modern history- we recommend  you check out our dedicated video on this event.  

  • Eventually, the Spanish seized  Aparri, and the activity of  

  • Japanese and Chinese piratical activity  in the Philippines was greatly diminished

  • Indeed, at the turn of the 17th century, the  Wokou had entered into their final twilight years.  

  • Back in Japan, where it had all started, a series  of invincible warlords had begun uniting the once  

  • shattered land, which by 1602 had culminated  in the emergent Tokugawa Shogunate.  

  • In the ensuing decades, the Tokugawa Shoguns would  enact policies that nearly completely isolated  

  • Japan from the outside world. Almost all outsiders  were forbidden entry, and more importantly,  

  • no Japanese were permitted to leave, on  pain of death. Thus, all pirates operating  

  • on Japanese shores were either snuffed out by  the newly re-established central authority,  

  • or incorporated into the state as naval  bands which served the national hegemony

  • It is here that our history of the Wokou pirates  will end. It is, admittedly, an arbitrary ending,  

  • for piracy and smuggling in the south China  sea would continue going strong for centuries,  

  • with massively powerful sea lords like the  Pirate Queen Ching Shih coming to mind. However,  

  • these were figures who largely had no ties to  Japan, from where the Wokou, despite spending  

  • their heyday as a highly international band of  sailors, had originated. In that sense, it can  

  • be said that while the Wokou themselves were  eventually snuffed out, the legacy they left on  

  • the seas they once ruled endured for far longer. More videos on the history of Japan and criminal  

  • enterprises is on the way, so make sure you are  subscribed and have pressed the bell button to  

  • see them. Please, consider liking, commenting, and  sharing - it helps immensely. Our videos would be  

  • impossible without our kind patrons and youtube  channel members, whose ranks you can join via the  

  • links in the description to know our schedule, get  early access to our videos, access our discord,  

  • and much more. This is the Kings and Generals  channel, and we will catch you on the next one.

In the western world, pirates have always  loomed large in the collective imagination,  

字幕と単語

ワンタップで英和辞典検索 単語をクリックすると、意味が表示されます

B2 中上級

Wakō - History of Piracy in Japan and China - Naval History DOCUMENTARY

  • 10 1
    香蕉先生 に公開 2022 年 07 月 23 日
動画の中の単語