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The Magical Kunlun and "Devil Slaves" (2621 hits)


The Magical Kunlun and "Devil Slaves": Chinese Perceptions of Dark-skinned People and Africa before 1500

by Julie Wilensky

Introduction

 

Historians have not yet established the precise date of the first contacts between the Chinese and African peoples Moreover, the available sources make it impossible to calculate exactly how many Chinese people traveled to Africa or how many Africans went to China in premodern times. What Chinese sources do reveal, however, is how Chinese people viewed those with dark skin and how these perceptions changed over time, reflecting first what Chinese people imagined, and later, what they knew about African countries and their inhabitants. Perceptions changed as knowledge and exploration of the countries and peoples of Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, and East Africa increased. This essay examines a combination of nonfiction accounts, fictional literature, geographical sources, and travel diaries from the Tang (618-907) to the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) to analyze the shifts in Chinese perceptions of people with dark skin and Chinese knowledge of Africa and Africans.

 

Beginning in the Tang dynasty, Arab traders brought a number of East African slaves to China. Although historians have studied the African slave trade extensively, particularly the export of West African slaves to the Americas after 1500, a much smaller body of research focuses on the premodern East African slave trade, and fewer sources still mention black slaves in China. From the eighth to the fourteenth centuries; the Arabs controlled this vast slave trade, which stretched not only along the entire coast of East Africa and throughout the Arab world but as far east as China. Black slaves were just one of many commodities in the Arabs' large-scale maritime trade with China, which peaked during the Tang and Song dynasty (960-1275). The Jiu Tang shu 舊唐書 (Former Tang history) mentions that the Arabs sent delegates to the Chinese court in 651, marking the first recorded official contact between the Chinese government and the Arab caliphate. By the ninth century, a sizable community of Arabs lived in Guangzhou, and the local residents could have seen African slaves on trading ships and in Arab homes. Some wealthy Chinese people even owned African slaves, whom they used as doorkeepers.

 

The first chapter of this paper seeks to explain how Chinese people perceived these black slaves by analyzing representations of people with dark skin in fictional and nonfiction sources from the fifth century through the Song dynasty, tracing the evolution of the meanings and connotations of the term kunlun 崑崙.This mysterious and poorly understood word first applied to dark-skinned Chinese and then expanded over time to encompass multiple meanings, all connoting dark skin. This chapter examines the meaning of the term kunlun in nonfiction before and during the Tang; fictional tales about magical, superhuman kunlunslaves from the Tang fiction compendium Taiping guangji 太平廣記 (Extensive Gleanings of the Reign of Great Tranquility); and finally, representations of the kunlun from a nonfiction writer from the Song, Zhu Yu.

 

Although fictional portrayals do not necessarily provide information about what actual African slaves experienced in China, fiction is a valuable source because its popularity reveals widespread cultural perceptions of people with dark skin. Histories and other nonfiction accounts, on the other hand, indicate how some Chinese viewed these people with dark skin, but it can be difficult to determine the readership and popularity of these sources because the information they contain does not seem to have reached a wider audience.

 

Were these Tang and Song images of the kunlun based on direct contact between Chinese and African peoples? When did the Chinese make a conceptual link between the kunlun slaves in China and the countries and peoples of East Africa? The second chapter addresses these questions by examining Chinese histories and geographies from the Tang and Song that describe African countries and their inhabitants. The answer to the first question is straightforward: a few Chinese may have visited Africa during this time, but most, if not all, Chinese knowledge about Africa and Africans came from the Arabs, who brought specific geographic knowledge of the countries along the maritime trade route between East Africa and China. Most of the Chinese descriptions of Africa were compiled by authors who never left China and gleaned their information about foreign countries and peoples from Arab traders living in China. Regardless of whether these accounts indicate direct contact between Chinese and African people in the Tang and Song, however, they reveal Chinese historians and geographers' increasing knowledge of Africa and Africans. This new knowledge allowed the Chinese to make a connection between the kunlun slaves in China and the East African slave trade.

 

Once the Chinese made this connection between the kunlun and the African slave trade, did the meaning of the word kunlun shift again? And how did China's maritime exploration of the East African coast in the early fifteenth century affect Chinese perceptions of African countries and their inhabitants? The third chapter; will examine two travel accounts from the Yuan and Ming dynasties that describe the authors' travels to Africa. We do not know how many Chinese read Song and Yuan accounts of Africa and Africans, but educated Chinese people most likely knew of China's maritime exploration in the early fifteenth century. The voyages of the Muslim admiral Zheng He and his fleet provide the first documented evidence of large groups of Chinese traveling to Africa. Firsthand accounts of these trips were reprinted several times in the fifteenth century, suggesting that they were widely read. Examining these accounts -- and one play written in the late sixteenth century -- will reveal whether Chinese perceptions of Africa and Africans changed significantly once the Chinese began large-scale maritime exploration of the East African coast.

 

Chinese knowledge of African countries and their inhabitants was not always consistent throughout a given time period, however. Information about foreign countries and their inhabitants did not always reach the same audiences at the same time, and Chinese knowledge of Africa did not just increase consistently over time. Contemporary sources sometimes report conflicting information, revealing a complex picture of Chinese perceptions of people with dark skin and Africa before 1500.

 

The Magical Kunlun and “Devil Slaves”: Chinese Perceptions of Dark-skinned People and Africa before 1500

Posted By: Steve Williams
Saturday, January 31st 2015 at 6:51AM
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Another in the FALSE fairyTales of the selfProfessed 'whiteMan' steveAdam racistlyIgnorant LIES to BIA

your FALSE and evilRacism extends now from African Americans to Chinese Americans?

The Kunlun Mountains; Mongolian:

-------are one of the longest mountain chains in Asia, extending more than 3,000 kms, from the Tibetan Plateau south of the Tarim Basin and s outh of the Wei River to end at the North China Plain.

*************or do you mean

Kulun

1. Chinese name of Ulan Bator.

MONGOLIA?

----- like the europeanRacist classification of mongoloid, caucazoid negroid....?

We KNOW by ALL History, Scholarship and Science that of 2000+ years ago and 2015 that throughout the Pacific there are people of various different geographical LOOKS......

We KNOW by ALL History, Scholarship and Science that of 2000+ years ago and 2015 that Muslim Traders traveled From the Atlantic, to Indian to Pacific Oceans from 7th Century europeanDating.........

We KNOW by ALL History, Scholarship and Science that of 2000+ years ago and 2015 that Muslim Traders brought with them Scholars of the words of the Creator of Adaam(as) of AtTawrah and AlQur'aan........

We KNOW by ALL History, Scholarship and Science that of 2000+ years ago and 2015 that Reverts to AlIslaam From the Atlantic, to Indian to Pacific Oceans made Hajj to Mekkah from 7th Century europeanDating....shared Belief of Monotheism and Practiced the growth of the Family of Adaam(as)

shatter you slave of the devils' racistIgnorance...............and magical fairyTALE Lies


Saturday, January 31st 2015 at 8:55AM
robert powell
I gave you the link, read and answer your own question.
Saturday, January 31st 2015 at 9:34AM
Steve Williams
Mo He was one such kunlun slave taken from east Africa in the early 8th century by the Arabs and sold in China. See illustration on page 14.
Saturday, January 31st 2015 at 5:31PM
Steve Williams

so your Mo He was a Buddhist, 200 year old woman Who lived in a GOURD of Hindu lowclass

PLEASE, this kunlunMongolian EastAfrican Arab story is more of your FICTION --Nonsense-- Fairy Tales

BUT thanks for the reference, it is a Delightful Magical Fictional Chinese Tale................

Mo Le¡¯s gravity defying abilities and agelessness suggests the fictional character is a practitioner of esoteric life-prolonging exercises akin to Chinese immortals.

According to a tale attributed to the Taoist adept Ge Hong, some hunters in the Zhongnan Mountains saw a naked man whose body was covered in black hair.

Whenever they tried to capture him he ¡°leapt over gullies and valleys as if in flight, and so could not be overtaken."

After finally ambushing the man, the hunters learned it was in fact a 200 plus year old woman who had learned the arts of immortality from an old man in the forest.

Still, it was popular in folktales for immortals to sell medicine in the city, just like Mo Le does.

The hagiography of the immortal Hu Gong says he sold medicine in the market place during the day and slept in a magic gourd hanging in his stall at night

How the Kunlun Slave Became an Immortal

The late Ming Dynasty bibliographer and playwright Mei Dingzuo (÷¶¦ìñ, 1549-1615) wrote a play entitled "How the Kunlun Slave Became an Immortal" (À¥ÂØÅ«½£ÏÀ³ÉÏÉ).

The play expands upon the story in several ways. For instance, Mo Le explains to Cui that despite his wonderful abilities, he "is a slave because of an obligation from a past life."

During the ten year interval between his escape and when he is spotted selling medicine in the market place, Mo Le cultivates immortality through Taoist practices and befriends many Chinese immortals.

A woodblock print of the play appearing in Assorted Plays from the High Ming (Ê¢Ã÷ës„¡, 1629) portrays Mo Le as a large-framed man with characteristic foreign features such as large eyes, a thick beard, and foreign dress.


Saturday, January 31st 2015 at 6:58PM
robert powell
Mo He, possibly a transliteration of Mohammed.
Saturday, January 31st 2015 at 7:24PM
Steve Williams

Mo He, possibly a transliteration of Mohammed.
Saturday, January 31st 2015 at 6:24PM
Steve Williams

No you LYING trash----Mo of Him or your racistNonsense

There have been Muslims and reciters of AlQur'aan in China-AfricaAsia for 1400+ YEARS............


Sunday, February 1st 2015 at 8:52AM
robert powell
They recited the Quran while trafficking in human beings.
Sunday, February 1st 2015 at 9:54AM
Steve Williams


SUBJECT, The Magical Kunlun and "Devil Slaves"

which YOU point out has something to do with...Magic, Devil Slaves, Buddhists, negrillos that live in GHOURDS, 200 year old folks AND YOUR----"essay examines ....., fictional literature, geographical sources, and travel diaries from the Tang (618-907) to the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) to analyze the shifts in Chinese perceptions of people with dark skin and Chinese knowledge of Africa and Africans; Arab traders brought a number of East African slaves to China."

WERE those Christian or jewish arabs and did they use "Austronesian peoples, Negritos, Phillipeans Negritos, Negrillos (African Pygmies), or Australo-MelanesiansAndamanese"?......

since the Arab jews or Christians could have recited AtTawrah or AzZaboor --- WHY WRITE another LIE?

you Just HATE AlIslaam --- that's ok

--- I know in some neighbourhoods of philly that you tried to buy DOPE, the Muslims sent you to jail or?

-------------------------------------------------------

They recited the Quran while trafficking in human beings.
Sunday, February 1st 2015 at 8:54AM
Steve Williams

----------------------------------

Was that Chinese Reciters of AlQur'aan or Confucism or Arab Traders RECITING the Language of the "Austronesian peoples, Negritos, Phillipeans Negritos, Negrillos (African Pygmies), or Australo-MelanesiansAndamanese"?

Quit LYING, 'whiteTrash'


Sunday, February 1st 2015 at 5:13PM
robert powell
I don't hate Islam.
Sunday, February 1st 2015 at 5:24PM
Steve Williams

since your blag says "arabs"

--around 600-700 --- jewish and Christian Arabs were VERY prominent MORE prominent than Muslim Arabs

yet you than infer that by Tang Dynasty (618+)

"Mo He, possibly a transliteration of Mohammed....They recited the Quran while trafficking in human beings." ------- from east Africa OR "Austronesian peoples, Negritos, Phillipeans Negritos, Negrillos (African Pygmies), or Australo-MelanesiansAndamanese"?

well selfProfessed 'whiteMan;------ racistIgnorance is Hate --- CAUSE one has to LIE to be a Racist

AND that is all you do with this Fictional NONSENSE

............ yes you Hate AlIslaam...... and Love the racistlyIgnorant

good night...............

Sûrat AlMulk

(Dominion, Ruler, Lord) LXVII
In the Name of Allâah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful

1. Blessed be He in Whose Hand is the Dominion of the Heavens and the Earth;
He is able to do ALL.

2. Who has created death and life that He may test you which of you is best in deed.
He is the All-Mighty, the Oft-Forgiving;

3. Who has created the seven heavens, in order;
There is no fault in the Creation of the Most Gracious.
Then look again: "Can you see any faults?"

4. Then look again and again: your sight will return to you worn out.

5. Indeed We have adorned the nearest heaven with beacons of Light,
We have made such beacons of Light, missiles to drive away the AsShayâtîn (devils), and have prepared for them the torment of the blazing Fire.

6. Those who disbelieve in Raabeenah; is the torment of the worst destination, Jahannam.

7. When they are cast in, they will hear the horrific drawing in of its breath as it blazes.

8. It almost bursts up with fury. Every time a group is cast in, its keeper will ask:
"Did no warner come to you?"

9. They will say:
"Yes, a warner did come to us, but we belied and mocked him and said:
‘Allâah never sent down anything of revelation/guidance; oh what a great error.’"

10. They will say: "Had we but listened or used our intelligence, we would not have been among the dwellers of the blazing Fire!"

Sunday, February 1st 2015 at 7:11PM
robert powell
That's right Robert, I said Arabs. You were the one who said Muslims.
Sunday, February 1st 2015 at 7:55PM
Steve Williams
/*
...Steve, take a look at these links...particularly the Japanese Connection. ...Tell me what you think.

'The Eye of Cain'
http://theeyeofcain.blogspot.com/
“DESCENDANT”
http://gboulwaredescendants.blogspot.com/

“The Hebrew-Israelites and Ancient Japan”-“Israelites Came To Ancient Japan“
http://thehebrew-israelitesandjapan.blogsp...
*/

Sunday, February 1st 2015 at 11:39PM
Gregory V. Boulware, Esq.
"It seems to me that Mo-leh is a Chinese abbreviation of Moladah and Mo-ho a similar rendering of Mohammed, names widely current among the Arabs."


THE IMPORTATION OF NEGRO SLAVES TO CHINA UNDER THE TANG DYNASTY (A. D. 618-901)

By Professor Chang Hsing-lang

http://library.uoregon.edu/ec/e-asia/read/...

As far as reciting the Quran, that was your statement, and it is a historical FACT that there were Muslims who were slave traders.

Monday, February 2nd 2015 at 8:49AM
Steve Williams

Mo He, possibly a transliteration of Mohammed.
Saturday, January 31st 2015 at 6:24PM
Steve Williams

They recited the Quran while trafficking in human beings.
Sunday, February 1st 2015 at 8:54AM
Steve Williams

with YOUR 'whiteMan' DNA you take 'whitePrivilidge' to WRITE----'it wasn't me?'

Leave you racist piece of magical kulu

Sunday, February 15th 2015 at 8:52AM
robert powell
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