How a Chinese pirate defeated European colonialists and won Taiwan during the seventeenth centuryDuring the seventeenth century, Holland created the world's most dynamic colonial empire, outcompeting the British and capturing Spanish and Portuguese colonies. Yet, in the Sino-Dutch War—Europe's first war with China—the Dutch met their match in a colorful Chinese warlord named Koxinga. Part samurai, part pirate, he led his generals to victory over the Dutch and captured one of their largest and richest colonies—Taiwan. How did he do it? Examining the strengths and weaknesses of European and Chinese military techniques during the period, Lost Colony provides a balanced new perspective on long-held assumptions about Western power, Chinese might, and the nature of war.It has traditionally been asserted that Europeans of the era possessed more advanced science, technology, and political structures than their Eastern counterparts, but historians have recently contested this view, arguing that many parts of Asia developed on pace with Europe until 1800. While Lost Colony shows that the Dutch did indeed possess a technological edge thanks to the Renaissance fort and the broadside sailing ship, that edge was neutralized by the formidable Chinese military leadership. Thanks to a rich heritage of ancient war wisdom, Koxinga and his generals outfoxed the Dutch at every turn.Exploring a period when the military balance between Europe and China was closer than at any other point in modern history, Lost Colony reassesses an important chapter in world history and offers valuable and surprising lessons for contemporary times.
Others have described the historical point in China's and the Dutch East India's histories that the book focuses on, so let me focus on the question of style. The scholarship is very good; the author has done a huge amount of research and the notes and sources are excellent for follow-up, clarification, etc. Having heard of Koxinga and his role in Chinese history, I was looking for more facts about him, his drivers, his behaviour, etc. (what makes him obviously intriguing is his colourful personality and the fact that he did defeat the Dutch). The book answered all my questions about him and this particular incident in Chinese history.
However, I only awarded it 3-1/2 stars because I felt the book was 'bigger' than the story. The book's viewpoint is somewhat unique; the story clearly relates a historical 'freeze frame', and my book group (which reads Asian non-fiction) chose it for this reason, but the story was told using fiction-writing techniques--the use of rhetoric, for example, and dramatic build-ups, and turn-arounds--which I just found annoying by their too frequent use. It got to the point where whenever a chapter was ending on a "So here was a good plan" ending, you just knew the next chapter would open with a "But they decided not to follow it" opening. There is also too much repetition of facts that most readers will have remembered from their first appearance.
Am I glad I read Lost Colony? Yes, but I wish a good editor had helped Professor Andrade with the structure and style.
Lost Colony: The Untold Story of China's First Great Victory over the West
This was one of the most entertaining and best-written books I've read in years. History, but reads like a fast-paced action novel. It tells the story of how Taiwan - originally a Dutch colony - was annexed in the 1660s by the Ming loyalist Koxinga ( 鄭成功 ). The story is eerily similar to that of Chiang Kai-shek in the 20th century - having lost the civil war between the existing Ming Dynasty and the invading Qing armies (whom would shortly set up the Qing dynasty - China's last dynasty), Koxinga's real goal was to use Taiwan as a base with which to regroup in order to counter-attack the mainland and restore the Ming dynasty. To do this he needed to first kick the Dutch out, but this was only ever supposed to be a stepping stone along the way to his real goal. However - like Chiang Kai-shek - Koxinga failed to retake the mainland (in fact, he died a year or so after defeating the Dutch, a process which itself took around a year), and roughly 20 years later the Qing dynasty conquered Taiwan, turning it first into a part of Fujian province and then later into a province in its own right (by contrast - it's been just over 70 years since Chiang Kai-shek's Republic of China fled to Taiwan, and they are still holding out against the People's Republic of China on the mainland).
I was already vaguely familiar with this story because I've read about it in "Forbidden Nation: A History of Taiwan", and because I've been to the present-day ruins of Fort Zeelandia (the former Dutch fortress around which most of the story revolves) in present-day Tainan city in Southwest Taiwan. Fort Zeelandia is now called "Anping Old Fort", and contains a museum where you can read the story of Koxinga / 鄭成功 (there is also a gift shop where you can buy - among other things - 鄭成功 beer). However, neither of these sources told the story in anywhere near as much detail or in anywhere near as entertaining a fashion as this book.
Aside from telling this story, this book is also interested in analyzing why it is that the West was able to dominate the world from roughly the 1600s onwards, instead of just after the industrial revolution. The author argues that the Sino-Dutch war described in his book gives us valuable insight into this question, as it is one of the few well-documented examples of a major battle between Eastern and Western armies in the period after 1600 but before the industrial revolution. The author believes that there are essentially two factors. The first is the superiority of European vessels, in particular in terms of their ability to sail into the wind. He argues that this technology developed out of necessity in Europe because wind patterns there are very complex. By contrast, in Asia wind patterns are simple - one direction for half the year, and the opposite from the other half, and hence advanced sail rigging was never developed. He explains how Koxinga's failure to understand the ability of European vessels to sail into the wind nearly cost him to lose the war - he timed his invasion so that when he arrived, winds would already be blowing from the South, which he thought would prevent word of his invasion from making it to the Dutch East Indies in present-day Indonesia. He was wrong about this - a ship managed to make the voyage against the wind - and he was taken totally by surprise when a Dutch war fleet arrived from the East Indies to save the besieged inhabitants of Fort Zeelandia.
The other factor he considers to be of great importance is the superiority of European fortress design - what he calls the "renaissance fortress". My understanding of what this means is just a fortress designed in such a way that the cannons on the walls have fewer blind spots - i.e. areas they can't reach - which in turn is accomplished by having a protrusion on each of the four corners of the Fortress. Koxinga initially expected he would be able to storm Fort Zeelandia in the same way he was used to storming city walls in China - and was shocked when his men were ripped to shreds. Koxinga expected to be able to take the fort in about a week - instead, it took over a year, and in the end, it seems he was only able to succeed because of a German officer who switched sides and explained to him how to penetrate the defences of the fort.
This analysis was interesting, but it wasn't the most attractive aspect of the book to me. Mainly I just found it to be great story, and for that reason, I'd recommend it even to people who have no interest in Chinese/Taiwanese history, or who don't care about why Europeans were able to dominate the world in the period between 1600 and the industrial revolution.
A fun and fast read with a compelling narrative. This book is an intervention in comparative military history. Rather than look at either the Dutch (as Europeans) or the Chinese (as East Asians) in isolation, Andrade compares how they fared in a direct confrontation in mid-17th century Taiwan. The conclusion is the Dutch nearly won because they had Renaissance-Style fort architecture, comprised of cross-firing bastions and thickly walled redoubts, as well as superior ships. They ultimately lost Zeelandia Castle in western Taiwan to the half-Chinese, half-Japanese Koxinga (Zheng Chenggong) because he was an exceptional strategist who drew from multiple traditions when creating, outfitting, and training his versatile armies. In comparison, the Dutch leader Coyet was a poor strategist who missed many opportunities to break the siege of his fort. Weapons technology - cannon and muskets - were much closer across parties than I would have expected. Indeed, one of Andrade's main arguments is that we can't look at Europe as simply breaking away from and superseding Asia in regards to military technology in the late 2nd millennium. There was much more diffusion and cross-learning. That being said, the superiority of the Dutch ships and forts was acknowledged by all sides even then. One lingering question for me was: why the Chinese didn't then start adapting the architectural technology in their coastal forts? That had the ruins of many examples. Is architecture an inherently more conservative technology? Could only a cosmopolitan like Koxinga pick it up? Andrade also makes an argument about global cooling in the 17th century driving warfare and ruining crops. For me this was a bit of a distraction, reading more like an effort to dip into climate change interest than really engage with the problem and its potential consequences. That is, it stimulated many more questions for me than it answered. Also, his climate related citations are all to military historians, and not to environmental historians.
Uitstekend non-fictie werk over de in vergetelheid geraakte geschiedenis van de Nederlandse kolonisatie van Formosa, het vroegere Taiwan, tijdens de zeventiende eeuw. Op zeer leesbare wijze vertelt de Amerikaanse wereldhistoricus Tonio Andrade hoe het komt dat een superieure zeemacht zoals die van de VOC het kon verliezen tegen het leger van de Chinese krijgsheer Koxinga, de zoon van een piraat. Leest bijna als een roman. Aanrader voor iedereen die belangstelling heeft voor de koloniale geschiedenis van Nederland, ook voor een minder glorieuze periode zoals deze, waarin een kolonie verloren is gegaan. Goede Nederlandse vertaling door Tristan Mostert, en voorzien van prachtig historisch beeldmateriaal.
A very detailed story about a chunk of history I was completely ignorant of. The author did a great job of explaining known events and relating them to the time period, without becoming dull or droning. I definitely recommend this read to history buffs, particularly military history buffs.
De afgelopen week leefde ik deels in een andere wereld, namelijk die van het 17e eeuwse Formosa, de parel in de kroon van de VOC, lees; winstgevende handel. Het eiland leverde namelijk een kwart van de inkomsten van de VOC op in de bijna 40 jaar dat het onder het bestuur van Batavia viel. De Heren XVII konden echter niet al te lang in hun handen wrijven en hun dukaten tellen. Chinese ogen lonkten al langer naar dit eiland dat we vandaag de dag als Taiwan kennen.
De VOC had ter verdediging een aantal verdedigingswerken gebouwd, met als belangrijkste Fort Zeelandia dat onder bevel stond van de hooghartige gouverneur Coyet. In 1661 kreeg hij het aan de stok met voormalig piratenkoning en onlangs door de Ming keizer tot Rebellen Beteugelende Grote Generaal benoemde Koxinga, die met 25.000 man op de Taiwanese stranden landde en het fort belegerde.
Wat dit boek echt onderscheidt, is de minutieuze beschrijving van de maandenlange belegering van Fort Zeelandia, dat slechts zo’n 1500 verdedigers had. De auteur slaagt erin om de lezer mee te nemen naar het 17e-eeuwse slagveld, waarbij elk aspect van de belegering zorgvuldig wordt belicht. Van de militaire strategieën en logistieke uitdagingen die leiden tot hongersnood en ziekte aan beide zijden, en volgt met hartverscheurende verhalen van uitgebuite boeren en de wrede behandeling van de oorspronkelijke bewoners,maar ook van bij naam en toenaam genoemde verraders, spionnen, dronken soldaten, slimme kanonniers, wanhopige overlopers en onschuldige gijzelaars.
Het ruim een jaar durende schaakspel tussen de koppige en met iedereen ruziezoekende Coyet en de wrede en langzaam krankzinnig wordende Koxinga is een geschiedenis die ik zelden met zoveel voldoening gelezen heb. Zo moet geschiedenis geschreven worden (ja ja, 5 sterren…)
De overwinning had meerdere malen door beide partijen behaald kunnen worden. De Amerikaanse historicus en auteur Tonio Andrade (die zowel de Chineese als Nederlandse bronnen schijnt te kunnen lezen) geeft overtuigend antwoord op de vraag hoe het toch mogelijk was dat westerse landen van de andere kant van de wereld stand konden houden tegen een overmacht van het keizerrijke Chinese leger. Antwoord: de technologisch superieure schepen en forten. In krijgstactiek en strategie deden ze echter niet voor elkaar onder. Maar gek genoeg zijn het de immer veranderende weersomstandigheden die de echte doorslag hebben gegeven. Hoe dat uiteindelijk afloopt laat zich raden.
In Taiwan geldt Koxinga inmiddels als een nationale held. In Nederland weten de meeste mensen niet eens dat Taiwan ooit een Hollandse kolonie was. Dit jaar (2024) is het precies 400 jaar geleden dat de Hollanders dit eiland voor hun handel opeisten. Hou je van levendig beschreven geschiedenis, laat dit boek dan niet aan je voorbij gaan.
Dit is de manier waarop je vroeger van je geschiedenis leraar les had willen krijgen over de vaderlandse geschiedenis. Tonio Andrade vertelt ons op meeslepende wijze hoe de VOC Formosa verloor aan Koxinga, een avonturenverhaal vol heldhaftigheid, verraad, wreedheden, koppigheid en bij tijden verbijsterende stupiditeit. Ik ging volledig op in de belevenissen van de hardnekkige Hollanders die in Fort Zeelandia met krap 1500 man een maandenlange belegering door een meer dan 10 maal groter leger wisten te weerstaan, door goed gebruik van een innovatie uit de renaissance.
Doordat Andrade geen Nederlander is, blijven we redelijk verschoond van onbewust (of bewust) patriottisme en krijgen we een wat meer objectieve kijk op onze vaderlandse historie. Ook al heeft Andrade een populaire en licht ironische schrijfstijl die het boek zeer leesbaar en genietbaar maakt, hij legt een grondige research en wetenschappelijke verantwoording onder zijn werk. De lichte ver-romantisering die hij hier en daar toepast om zijn werk beeldender te maken voegt mijns inziens vooral een extra laag van identificatie met de hoofdrolspelers toe, waardoor de opgedane kennis beter blijft hangen.
Ik vind dit een boek dat elke in vaderlandse geschiedenis geïnteresseerde Nederlander in zijn boekenkast moet hebben, al was het maar om andere geschriften de maat mee te nemen.
Really enjoyed this book, which is well written without much jargon. The author deserves serious props for not bogging down such a fascinating episode of history. I was looking for a discussion of the fascinating Koxinga, the son of Chinese pirate-turned-admiral and a samurai daughter, who was a Ming loyalist during the Qing invasion of China. Koxinga was pushed out of the mainland, and fought the Dutch VOC in Taiwan, taking it over as a base. The power changes in that area are quite complex and interesting. Koxinga's father got his start likely working for the Dutch VOC and likely originally recommended building their operations in Taiwan. When the Qing were taking over the mainland, Koxinga's father (who at that point was an admiral for the Ming rump state) went where the power seemed to be, but Koxinga decided to stay loyal to the Ming pretender. Despite Qing threats to execute his father, Koxinga never betrayed the Ming pretender, and his father was eventually executed (perhaps an interesting side effect of Koxinga's childhood in Japan, which might have empathized loyalty to a lord instead of the typical chinese stress on familial connections). The author is mostly focused on how Koxinga triumphed over the Dutch. The Dutch had more guns, and better ships (at least in deep waters), but Koxinga's junks were better in shallow waters and made better use of strategy (in particular the strategy of feigning retreats). Particularly interesting was the fact that it appears the historical evidence indicated that both the Ming troops and the Dutch had independently developed the volley. Because of failures to reinforce in Taiwan the Dutch eventually lost, but not before prolonging the siege significantly through the use of renaissance forts that had multiple sides on corners to make it difficult for invaders to win using brute force. In fact, it was not until there was a defector who taught Koxinga how to build the necessary counter forts that Koxinga was able to finally take the fort. Koxinga went on to establish an independent kingdom in the area that lasted until his grandson. Highly recommend for anyone with an interest in Chinese history, early colonialism, or just a good story.
After sitting on my shelf for years this title received only the occasional glance, the time never seeming quite right to make a start. The clamour of recent sabre rattling changed all that as I eagerly decided I should learn more of Taiwan's history.
Lost Colony catalogues a complex period of historical exchange between European and Asian powers, colonialist, pirates, and merchant capitalists. While being a keen student of Asian history I admit to having known nothing of the Sino-Dutch War, Europe's first war with China. The amount of research that has gone into this work is obvious, yet Andrade has done a great job of weaving the many threads into a highly readable book.
With the exception of a sweary Swiss bloke who kept flashing his bum I found not one other character I cared for so this was perhaps a slower read for me than most. Other may of course have an entirely different take on the various personalities involved.
As a final note, I found it a bit of a shame that there wasn't more exploration in the epilogue of how the impact of these events have rippled through history right up to the present day.
Lost Colony is a smooth, entertaining read on how Zheng Chenggong (aka Koxinga) conquered the Dutch colony on Taiwan in 1661. The book places this narrative in the context of broader discussions of European preeminence in military affairs over that of Asian societies. The Sino-Dutch War provides an example of how tenuous this preeminence was. In the case of the battle for Taiwan, the Dutch possessed superiority over Koxinga's forces in ships and fortifications. Andrade asserts that it was good leadership on Koxinga's side, and the weather mattered more in the end.
An intriguing, narrative-driven history of the demise of Dutch Formosa. Andrade often writes in a way that makes you think one thing will happen, typically something negative, only to reveal the complete opposite in one or two sentences at the end of a section. Though uncommon in most histories I am familiar with, this bait-and-switch style of presenting information kept me on my toes throughout.
P.S. I found a typo on page 280: "When Cauw's fleet had arrived, Meij had sent sent a messenger..."
Wereldgeschiedenis weet me steeds beteri als onderwerp te boeien. Dit boek behandelt de wereldgeschiedenis op een redelijk microniveau dan ik gewend ben. De Val van Formosa behandelt een episode in de Europese-Chinese geschiedenis en de Militaire Revolutie. Tonio Andrade heeft vele bronnen geraadpleegd voor dit boek, zowel Chinese als Europese en daarmee weet hij een zeer volledig beeld van de belegering van Fort Zeelandia te geven.
I thought that this book very dramatic war story with broader (and well-analyzed) implications for military history. It had medieval tyranny, it had court politics, it had age of sail naval and musketeer battles, it had dramatic escapes through choppy waters, it had climate change. How could you go wrong?
This is the third book I've read about Koxinga and the Sino-Dutch War (1661-1662) this year. It's impressively researched, and it offers wonderful insights about Koxinga, the Ming loyalist, and Frederic Coyet, the leader of Dutch troops at Fort Zeelandia. The book really excels in Andrade's coverage of military techniques, weaponry, and logistical problems, although stormy weather was often the deciding factor in the war to control the island of Taiwan.
Fun and fast read about the Sino Dutch War of the mid 17th century. The author pulls together sources and tells the story in a colloquial engaging manner. The historical theory that loops in an around the story is also interesting. Highly recommended.
Well written and well illustrated including detailed maps. The tone of this writing is on the lighter side, but it has an extremely critical take on internal Chinese policy during the Sino Dutch war, a good read nevertheless.
This book focused on the Koxinga-Coyet military standoff, but the side stories -- the deserters from each side, the Dutch envoy to enlist the help of the Qing -- were so much more interesting.
Estupendo libro sobre un episodio muy interesante y creo que poco conocido. Se lee muy fácilmente, y el autor es capaz de dar a los eventos el ritmo de una novela.
This book was pretty interesting. I enjoyed the way it was told, just like a story. There were a good amount of typos though... But that's okay. Good book.
A fascinating history of the conquest of the Dutch colony of Taiwan by the mainland Chinese, used to illustrate the relative development of civilizations ("the West and the rest"). It highlights the mutual exchange of technology and the multitude of trade and contacts and makes a case for a common level of development in many respects.