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Chinese Piracy
A été creé
Johnathan Carson
⟶ mise à jour avec succès 26 oct. 2019 ⟶
List of edits
Les lignes de temps de
Johnathan Carson
:
20 nov. 2019
0
0
308
Naked Rambler timeline
25 oct. 2019
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265
western pirates
22 nov. 2019
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261
Lawlessness overview
20 nov. 2019
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234
Land based lawlessness
22 nov. 2019
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0
232
Somali Pirates
27 oct. 2019
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226
Chinese opium smuggling
5 nov. 2019
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211
British Prostitution
5 nov. 2019
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199
Body Snatching
Commentaires
Les événements
Death by slicing is used as capital punishment (1800)
Extortion, Attacking Ships, Raiding coastal villages, exploiting captives is common activity among pirates. (1780)
Pirating crests as a result of the Ming Navy being in decline (1550)
Emperor begins to enforce sea bans (1520)
Beginning of the reign of the Jiajing Emperor (1522)
Jiajing Emperor dies (1567)
China's economy begins to stabilize (1570)
The Portuguese established a foothold in Macao leading them to be captured and tried as pirates in the Fujian Province (1554)
The imperial court band foreign trade (1626)
The Zhen family builds a large piratical empire (1620)
Zheng Zhilong surrenders to the Ming government in exchange for admirals commission. (1628)
Beginning of the Qing Dynasty (1644)
People on the coast are forced to relocate due to the government's scorched earth policy (1661)
The Kangxi Emperor rescinds all sea bans (1684)
Tayson rebels begin to decrease (1801)
Cai Qian dies in a naval battle (1809)
Périodes
First Wave of Chinese Piracy (Merchant Pirates)
Second Wave of Chinese Piracy (Sea Rebel Pirates)
Third Wave of Chinese Piracy Commoner Pirates)
Pirate activity peaks (1640-1660)