Zheng Jing
Zheng Jing 鄭經 | |||||||||||||
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Prince of Yanping | |||||||||||||
Reign | 29 June 1662 – 17 March 1681 | ||||||||||||
Predecessor | Koxinga | ||||||||||||
Successor | Zheng Kezang (as regent) | ||||||||||||
Born | [1] Fujian, Ming dynasty[2] | 25 October 1642||||||||||||
Died | 17 March 1681[3] Chengtian Prefecture, Kingdom of Tungning | (aged 38)||||||||||||
Burial | |||||||||||||
Spouse | Tang, Princess Wen of Chao | ||||||||||||
Issue | Zheng Kezang, Zheng Keshuang, six other sons and six daughters | ||||||||||||
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House | Koxinga | ||||||||||||
Dynasty | Tungning | ||||||||||||
Father | Koxinga, Prince of Yanping | ||||||||||||
Mother | Dong You, Princess of Yanping |
Zheng Jing | |
Tâi-lô | Hiân-tsi / Guân-tsi |
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Zheng Jing, Prince of Yanping (
's hereditary title of "Prince of Yanping", reigned as a dynastic monarch of the kingdom from 1662 to 1681.Biography
Born on 25 October 1642, he was the eldest son of
With both the vast pirate fleet and the throne of Tungning, he intended to continue his father's plans to invade
The Dutch looted relics and killed monks after attacking a Buddhist complex at Putuoshan on the Zhoushan islands in 1665 during their war against Zheng Chenggong's son Zheng Jing.[4]
Zheng Jing's navy executed thirty four Dutch sailors and drowned eight Dutch sailors after looting, ambushing and sinking the Dutch fluyt ship Cuylenburg in 1672 on northeastern Taiwan. Only twenty one Dutch sailors escaped to Japan. The ship was going from Nagasaki to Batavia on a trade mission.[5]
For the next 19 years, he tried to provide sufficiently for the local inhabitants and reorganizing their military forces in Taiwan. He frequently exchanged ambassadors with the
In 1680, Zheng Jing was forced to abandon
Family
Parents
- Father: Zheng Chenggong, Prince of Yanping
- Mother: Dong You, Queen of Tungning
Consorts and issues
- Princess Wen of Chao, of the Tang clan (潮文王妃唐氏)
- Lady Chen, of the Chen clan (陳氏;1626-1662), personal name Zhaoniang (昭娘)
- Zheng Kezang (鄭克𡒉;1662–1681), Crown Prince of Yanping (延平王世子), first son
- Lady Lin, of the Lin clan (林氏)
- Lady Li, of the Li clan (李氏)
- Lady Lai, of the Lai clan (賴氏)
- Lady Huang, of the Huang clan (黃氏), personal name Heniang (和娘)
- Zheng Keshuang, Prince of Yanping (鄭克塽; 13 August 1670 – 22 September 1707), second son
- Unknown:
- Zhang Kebo (鄭克壆), third son
- 5 sons and 6 daughters
See also
- Kingdom of Tungning
- History of Taiwan
- Zheng Chenggong
- Shi Lang
References
- ^ Hung (1981), p. 139. (See note 1 for the source; a stone epitaph on Zheng's tomb.)
- ^ Hung (1981), p. 139.
- ^ Hung (1981), p. 265.
- ISBN 978-1-316-45384-1.
- ISBN 978-1-316-45384-1.
- ^ The Brilliant Reign of the Kangxi Emperor: China's Qing Dynasty
Bibliography
- Carioti, Patrizia. “The Zhengs' Maritime Power in the International Context of the 17th Century Far East Seas: The Rise of a 'Centralised Piratical Organisation' and Its Gradual Development into an Informal 'State'”. Ming Qing Yanjiu (1996): 29–67.
- Chang Hsiu-jung, Anthony Farrington, Huang Fu-san, Ts'ao Yung-ho, Wu Mi-tsa, Cheng Hsi-fu, and Ang Ka-in. The English Factory in Taiwan, 1670–1685. Taipei: National Taiwan University, 1995.
- Clements, Jonathan. Coxinga and the Fall of the Ming Dynasty. Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 2004. ISBN 9780752473826
- Hung, Chien-chao (1981). Taiwan Under the Cheng Family, 1662–1683: Sinicization After Dutch Rule (Ph.D. dissertation). Georgetown University. OCLC 63232462.
- Keene, Donald Keene. The Battles of Coxinga: Chikamatsu’s Puppet Play, Its Background and Importance. London: Taylor's Foreign Press, 1950.
- Manthorpe, Jonathan. Forbidden Nation: a History of Taiwan, New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2002. ISBN 9780230614246
- Shen Yu. Cheng-shih shih-mo. 1836.
- Wills, Jr., John E. Pepper, Guns and Parleys: The Dutch East India Company and China 1622–1681. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1974. ISBN 9780674661813
- Hummel, Arthur W. Sr., ed. (1943). . Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period. United States Government Printing Office.