What if the greatest naval force the world had ever seen was ordered to destroy itself? In the early 15th century, the Ming Dynasty's Treasure Fleet, commanded by the legendary Admiral Zheng He, dwarfed all others. Its colossal ships and tens of thousands of men had projected Chinese power from Java to Africa. Then, with a stroke of a bureaucrat's brush, it vanished from history. This is the story of the Xuande Emperor's edict of 1433—a single document that didn't just retire a navy, but erased a future. This episode dives into the Forbidden City's corridors of power to uncover the political and ideological coup that grounded the fleet forever. We explore the rise of the Confucian scholar-elite, who saw the voyages as wasteful, un-Chinese adventures that empowered eunuchs and merchants. We’ll trace how the immense cost of the voyages became a weapon in a domestic power struggle, leading to the deliberate burning of nautical charts, shipbuilding records, and the very idea of maritime empire. Listeners will discover how a civilization at the peak of its technological and exploratory prowess chose isolation over expansion. We examine the world-historical consequences: the Indian Ocean trade networks left open for others to dominate, and the radical, inward turn of a superpower. This is a fall not from defeat, but from a conscious, catastrophic choice. The greatest walls are not always made of stone. Sometimes, they are built from paper and policy, locking away an empire's destiny. #MingDynasty #ZhengHe #TreasureFleet #Isolationism #NavalHistory #GreatDivergence #ChineseHistory Hosted by Ibnul Jaif Farabi. Produced by Light Knot Studios (lightknotstudios.com).
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