The VOC and the Zheng

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VOC Charter
VOC Charter
Translation

East of the Cape of Good Hope but also in and beyond the straits of Magellan, those of the aforementioned Company shall be allowed to enter into agreements and contracts with princes and potentates in the name of the States-General of the United Netherlands. They may also build fortresses and strongholds, appoint governors, armed forces, officers of justice and officers of other necessary services in order to preserve these places and maintain them in good order.

Citation

Van der Chijs, Geschiedenis der stichting van de Vereenigde O.I. Compagnie, 130.

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This statue of Zheng Chenggong was erected by the Fujian government in 2004.

Statue of Zheng Chenggong
Statue of Zheng Chenggong, erected by the Fujian government in 2004
Citation

Photograph by Xing Hang.

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Zheng Description
Zheng Description
Translation

His strength and power is greatly enlarged and he is dominant along the seacoast. . . . He seeks in all ways to become master over the trade and to create a monopoly. To this end, he sends many trading junks to Japan, Tonkin and other profitable places.

Citation

Coolhaas, Generale Missiven, 3:55.

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The Dutch East India Company (VOC) and the Zheng organization were two formidable maritime enterprises that competed to dominate the sea-lanes of East and Southeast Asia. They co-existed uneasily for decades but after the Zheng invasion of Taiwan in 1661 they came into direct conflict with each other. Although these organizations were very different, they shared similar ambitions which made confrontation inevitable.

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The VOC in Asia

Arriving in the region determined to push its way into rich trading circuits, the VOC used the powers granted in its charter to morph over time from a maritime enterprise with only the most limited presence on land into a territorial power that occupied a place alongside other Asian states in regional networks of war and diplomacy. It did so by seizing territories like Jayakarta (later Batavia), which turned the organization into a territorial power overnight, and by constructing a sprawling network of treaties that bound it tight to a range of rulers and polities. The Company seized a string of possessions. It established an imperial headquarters on the ruins of Jayakarta in 1619, taking possession of the spice-rich Banda Islands in 1621, planting its flag on Taiwan in 1624, wresting control of the crucial entrepot of Melaka (Malacca) from the Portuguese in 1641, defeating the powerful maritime kingdom of Makassar in 1667, and finally overwhelming the port polity of Banten in 1684. It combined such campaigns with a concerted attempt to monopolize key products like precious spices and deerskins.