Consulting the Hive Mind: all the Tea in China

Jun 24, 2011 09:46

While discussing Renaissance history and culture for our upcoming Ironclaw campaign, kohai_tiger asked a question that surprised me -- in no small part because I realized I had never really thought to ask it before.

The question:

Europe traded with China, and got silk, tea, spices and all sorts of things.

What did China get from Europe?Of course, my ( Read more... )

big blue room, fantasy, ironclaw, hivejournal

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Comments 8

odiedragon June 24 2011, 16:52:43 UTC
Gold and the strong economy that comes from goods production, I presume. Same as today.

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ab3nd June 24 2011, 17:15:28 UTC
Initially, yes, also silver, at rates that alarmed some people in Europe. They tried trading corn and tobacco (New world products, and so ones that China didn't have a lot of access to), but the real money-maker was opium.

The wikipedia article on the Opium Wars covers an overview of how it went down, but mostly it was that European demand for Chinese stuff was very high, and the Chinese only wanted silver, and so Europe's silver reserves were quickly getting sent to China. Opium kind of creates its own demand, and has broad consumer appeal, so that demand reversed the silver flow.

TL;DR: Hard money, then drugs.

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velvetpage June 24 2011, 20:03:50 UTC
That's the way I learned it, too. The Chinese were very protectionist; they wanted to limit (to the point of non-existence) most people's access to white people and goods entirely, and remain unchanged by the trade, so they didn't want any goods at all from the West. Well, this made the Western businesspeople extremely unhappy, because they recognized a power imbalance when they saw one, so they turned it around by selling opium (which, if I remember correctly, was farmed then as now mostly in India, including Afghanistan.) Of course, the Chinese liked this even less, so it was a black market trade; Chinese black-marketeers bought the opium for silver, then Europeans used that silver to buy Chinese goods.

There were a couple of wars over it, and Macao burned to the ground at least once.

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athelind June 24 2011, 21:24:20 UTC
Thankfully, all that opium awfulness is a couple centuries after the era that concerns me.

Silver it is, then, unless the Calabrese have other desirable commodities that their European counterparts didn't share.

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iridium_wolf June 24 2011, 23:08:50 UTC
This may be from before the time you're looking at, but Triskellian is Rome in all but name pretty much.

"High-quality glass from Roman manufactures in Alexandria and Syria were exported to many parts of Asia, including Han China. Further Roman luxury items which were greatly esteemed by the Chinese were gold-embroidered rugs and gold-coloured cloth, asbestos cloth and sea silk, a cloth made from the silk-like hairs of certain Mediterranean shell-fish, the Pinna nobilis." (from Wikipedia)

It's more difficult finding information on later trade.

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athelind June 24 2011, 23:34:17 UTC
Ooh, this is good. Thank you! I hadn't realized that Rome had active trade with China.

(Triskellian is really more Venice in all but name, but that just makes it work better when you consider Venetian glass!)

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snobahr June 26 2011, 01:33:57 UTC
Yeah, I was just about to mention Venetian glass... :D

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