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  • ...jiang province]]. With the help of Yang Ying<!--楊英-->, a key retainer to [[Zheng Chenggong]], Geng was able to secure shipments of sulfur from the Japanese.
    8 KB (1,251 words) - 19:28, 27 April 2015
  • ...nty ships a year, nearly all of them from areas under the control of the [[Zheng Chenggong]] or other [[Ming loyalists]], the [[Revolt of the Three Feudator
    10 KB (1,577 words) - 13:59, 4 March 2018
  • ...rom a local Chinese diaspora merchant family. The kingdom was visited by [[Zheng He]] twice, in [[1408]] and [[1421]]. Its chief products were rice, raw cot ...f> A new dynasty was then founded by Taksin, the son of Guangdong merchant Zheng Yung & a Siamese mother; his dynasty was quite short-lived, however, as his
    22 KB (3,492 words) - 23:37, 24 November 2019
  • ...n exchange for Japanese silver, but also competed against them. His son, [[Zheng Chenggong]] (aka Coxinga), later drove the Dutch out of Taiwan entirely, se
    26 KB (4,119 words) - 05:09, 10 August 2021
  • However, the immediate successors of [[Zheng Chenggong]] may have been the first to establish a Confucian temple on the
    14 KB (2,210 words) - 05:37, 10 April 2020
  • ...n for numerous prominent cultural developments, including the voyages of [[Zheng He]], the development of ''[[kunqu]]'' drama, the rise of [[literati painti ...famous voyages of [[Zheng He]] were undertaken in the early Ming, as well. Zheng journeyed across the Indian Ocean on a series of trips from [[1405]]-[[1433
    44 KB (6,979 words) - 13:28, 31 March 2018
  • ...ission to Beijing in [[1882]].<ref>Anthony Reid, "Introduction," in Reid & Zheng Yangwen (eds.), ''Negotiating Asymmetry: China's Place in Asia'' (NUS Press
    20 KB (2,985 words) - 00:49, 10 July 2019
  • ...that island for nearly forty years. Led by [[Zheng Zhilong]] and his son [[Zheng Chenggong]] (aka Coxinga), they harassed Chinese shipping and coastal commu
    39 KB (5,974 words) - 15:43, 25 April 2018
  • ...[[1875]], and Vietnam in [[1882]]. Anthony Reid, "Introduction," in Reid & Zheng Yangwen (eds.), ''Negotiating Asymmetry: China's Place in Asia'' (NUS Press
    27 KB (4,146 words) - 02:09, 18 August 2020
  • ...c Asia: Japan and Korea in the Late Nineteenth Century," in Anthony Reid & Zheng Yangwen (eds.), Negotiating Asymmetry: China's Place in Asia (NUS Press, 20
    23 KB (3,412 words) - 08:18, 21 August 2020
  • For six months in [[1556]], Zheng Shungong, an envoy sent by [[Yang Yi]], the Chinese official in charge of d
    30 KB (4,952 words) - 09:46, 1 February 2020
  • ...olong, but was unable to proceed to Ryûkyû, blocked by the naval forces of Zheng Chenggong ([[Coxinga]]), leader of the Ming loyalists on Taiwan.
    39 KB (6,086 words) - 07:46, 3 May 2020

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