Chinese
scholars wary of theory that China beat Columbus to America
(January 27,2003 )(China Daily)
His book, "1421: The Year China Discovered America," may
be selling briskly in the United States, but his extraordinary theory that
Chinese explorers reached the New World decades before Christopher Columbus is
proving a tougher sell to academics -- even here in China.
"Nonsense," declares China's Zheng He Association, which celebrates
the exploits of Zheng He, the very explorer Menzies says directed ships around the globe a century
before Ferdinand Magellan.
But Menzies isn't fazed. "I don't
see how any fair-minded person who reads the evidence can come to any other
conclusion other than the Chinese did get to America before Europeans," he said in a telephone interview from New York, where he
was promoting his book.
If only it were that simple.
China in the early 15th century was a great seafaring nation; no dispute
there. Huge Chinese ships bearing silk, porcelain and other treasures made epic
expeditions at the emperor's behest. Commanded by the admiral Zheng He, the ships traveled from China down to Indonesia, west to India, and as far as East Africa.
But this is where Menzies departs from
established history. He says he has found proof that the Chinese ships sailed
on - around the Cape of Good Hope and all the way to the Americas, with some ships even crossing the Pacific back to China.
Menzies, a former submarine
commander in Britain's Royal Navy, insists not only that Chinese beat Columbus but that European explorers who reached the Americas did so with maps copied from the Chinese.
"All of the great European explorers set sail with maps
showing their destinations," Menzies said.
His book, published in the United States this month, entered The New York Times' nonfiction best-seller
list two weeks later at No. 8.
Menzies says he has
received support for his work but concedes that some experts have expressed
strong reservations. His critics argue that China's huge wooden ships couldn't have survived the rough Atlantic
voyage. Some also say Chinese and European cartography at the time was so
different that the maps couldn't have been reconciled.
Others call his book "rubbish from beginning to end," Menzies acknowledges. That includes some in China, even though the book hasn't been published here.
"It's crazy talk," said Wang Xiaofu, a history professor at Peking University. "We absolutely do not accept this theory."
Many Chinese authors have presented similar theories over the
years. Some even argue that Chinese settled the Americas 3,000 years ago, Wang said. But most tales mix fact and legend.
"In ancient times, there were a lot of fairy stories," he
said.
Still, legends of Chinese supremacy underpin the country's fierce nationalism.
Sinophiles like to point out that Chinese invented
everything from fireworks to spaghetti and made significant contributions to
modern mathematics, agriculture and astronomy.
"China discovered America first? I already knew that," said a Beijing store clerk who
gave only her family name, Han. "China has been a country of advanced culture since ancient times."
Others aren't so sure. "I read about this theory in a
newspaper, but I don't believe it," said Li Xuehui,
a 30-year-old office worker. In ancient times, she said, "they didn't have
the concept that the world was round."
At Peking University, archaeologist Lin Meicun says that in
20 years of studying ancient Chinese migration, he has found no convincing
signs of China's early settlement of the Americas. Such talk, he said, "is not science. It's science
fiction."
Menzies, who lives in London, had sailed the
routes of Columbus, Magellan and other European explorers when he was a naval
officer. He writes that his knowledge of maps and using the stars for
navigation led to his theory, and that his research took him to 120 countries
and every major port of the late Middle Ages.
He is hardly the first to challenge the story of discovering America. There is evidence of Viking settlements in North America 500 years before Columbus. And humans
are believed to have walked from Asia across the Bering Strait when it was covered with ice to become American Indians.
Columbus' achievement
was not so much to discover America as to open it to European conquest and competition to settle the New World.
And China, by the middle of the 15th century, had isolated itself. Its
treasure-bearing ships were summoned back, and the emperor forbade overseas
travel. China had halted all exploration, leaving the world to Europe.