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Quanzhou
"It is a City of Light. When night falls, countless lamps and torches light
up all the streets and lanes, and the whole city, viewed from afar, turns into a
sea of lights," described Jacob d'Ancona, a scholarly Jewish merchant, in a
manuscript.
In 1270 Jacob d'Ancona set out on a voyage from Italy. A year later, he
arrived in China at the coastal metropolis of Zaitun -- the "City of Light" four
years before Marco
Polo arrived at Xanadu in 1275.
Nothing was known of this epochal journey until 1990 when a remarkable
manuscript of d'Ancona's account of this travel, after being hidden from public
for more than seven centuries, was shown, bringing us back to Jacob's encounter
with one of the world's great civilizations -- the City of Light, now known as
Quanzhou
.
Tracking the Maritime Silk
Road
Quanzhou, situated on the southeastern coast of East
China's Fujian
Province , was an important harbor and the starting point on the Maritime
Silk Road. In ancient times, citong, or the paulownia trees that bear fiery red
flowers every spring, were cultivated widely in the region to a circumference of
ten kilometers, hence the nickname "Citong City." Visitors from the Middle East
mistook it for the olive tree as zaitun in Arabic.
During the Maritime Silk Road ear, the name of no city was more resonant than
Zaitun, where hundreds of huge ships docked in the bay. Boats loaded with goods
would shuttle back and forth between the ships and the wharves, the latter
already piled high with goods. After unloading items such as spices, ivory,
pearls, hawksbill turtles, and rhinoceros horns, the ships would then take on
silk, porcelain, tea, and Chinese arts and crafts before sailing back home.
The earliest records of trading between Quanzhou and foreign countries dated
back to the 6th century. By the Tang
Dynasty (618-907), Quanzhou had already become one of China's four greatest
ports. Its foreign trade reached the peak of prosperity in the Yuan
Dynasty (1271-1368). The four great travelers of
the medieval West -- Marco Polo, Ibn Battuta, Giovanni Marignolli, and Odoric --
all wrote of the openness and prosperity of Quanzhou. The North African traveler
Ibn Battuta compared it to the Egyptian port of Alexandria, and Marco Polo
described it as "one of the largest ports in the world."
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