- cross-posted to:
- piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
- cross-posted to:
- piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
If I were to ask you who the most successful pirate in history was, I’m guessing you’d come up with names like Captain Kidd or Blackbeard or any number of others of that crowd in the Caribbean. But what if I told you that history’s most successful pirate was in China, and was a woman? Would that surprise you? Intrigue you?
Prepare to be intrigued as I introduce you then, today, to one of the single most feared pirates in all of history: Zheng Yi Sao (this is the name I will be using here; she went by others), the pirate queen who was hunted by not one, not two, but three imperial powers, yet who retired peacefully and died not of violence, but of old age.
Humble Beginnings
Zheng Yi Sao—born 石阳 (Shí Yáng) in approximately 1775 somewhere around Xinhui, Guangdong—was a Tanka who worked as a prostitute-later-procurer on a floating Tanka brothel in Guangdong (or so the story goes).
Marriage
Details of her early life are not well-documented, but what is know is that around 1801 she married the pirate privateer Zheng Yi. (Her name literally means “Zheng Yi’s wife”. Welcome to patriarchy.) A year after their marriage, Zheng Yi took over a pirate fleet from a captured and executed cousin and became, after some heavy infighting among the pirates off the coast of Guangdong, and with the natural organizational skills of Zheng Yi Sao, the commander of a unified fleet of pirates. By 1805 Zheng Yi and Zheng Yi Sao had wrangled together a confederation of pirates with colour-coded fleets of red, black, blue, white, yellow, and purple. Commanding the massive Red Fleet of … You know what? This is too much about her husband and not enough about who we really want to talk about. Let’s move on.
Inherited Command
Short version: Zheng Yi, by now the head of the confederation, with his adoptive son Zhang Bao now commanding the Red Fleet, was blown overboard in a gale in 1807 and died. Zheng Yi Sao effectively inherited the loose control her husband had had over the confederation, and Zhang Bao took formal command over the Red Fleet. After entering into a sexual relation with Zhang Bao she cemented control over the pirate confederacy and became the queen of the pirates she would later be famous for.
Queen
Year after year Zheng Yi Sao got more and more ambitious and ruthless. She incorporated cast-iron discipline among the pirates with harsh penalties for everything from theft of booty to rape of female captives. Despite a major setback in 1809 with the absolute destruction of the White Fleet, she became such a terror to the Chinese authorities (and the East India Tea Company), destroying fleet after fleet sent to engage her confederacy, that the Chinese empire looked to “barbarian” empires to help.
The Portuguese agreed to help and managed to blockade the Red Fleet in 1809 … only for the two imperial powers to be fought to a standstill and stalemate as unfavourable winds kept the pirates from breaking free. Finally the winds changed and the fleet broke free, humiliating two imperial powers in their wake.
The Winds of Change
In 1810, seemingly at the height of its power, the confederacy surrendered to the Great Qing. The motives for this surrender are unclear, but it is speculated that the confederacy was in such a powerful state that it could dictate the terms of its surrender and the Qing would gladly agree to them just to finally be rid of the scourge that was harrying their coastlines and rivers. Other theories suggest that upon the British entering the fray Zheng Yi Sao saw the writing on the wall and knew it was time to quit while she was ahead.
Surrender
On April 20, 1810, Zheng Yi Sao and her adoptive stepson Zhang Bao officially surrendered with 17,318 pirates, 226 ships, 1,315 cannons, and 2,798 assorted weapons. (24 of those ships and 1,433 of the pirates were under her personal command.) Zhang Bao was awarded the rank of lieutenant, and was allowed to retain a private fleet of up to 30 ships. The pair were also given permission to officially marry. (Don’t think too hard on this.) Pardons were issued to all of the surrendering pirates, and the regular seamen were given pork, wine, and money along with a general amnesty.
Along with that amnesty, Zheng Yi Sao was also given land in Guangdong where she operated a successful gambling house.
Post-surrender Life
Not a lot is known in detail about Zheng Yi Sao’s post-surrender life. It is known that she gave birth to a son in 1813. It is also known that she gave birth to a daughter, but little else is known about her. (Welcome to patriarchy.) Aside from a legal case (which was dismissed by the emperor) over some money, she led a pretty unremarkable life, dying in 1844 at the age of 68-69, having run a successful (and infamous) gambling hall on Hainan in the intervening time.
Influence
For a woman almost completely unknown in the west, Zheng Yi Sao has had an enduring fascination and appeal here in the east. She appears as a character in films, in television, in literature, in graphic novels, and in video games. Scholarly works have been written about here from shortly after her death onward. Places have been named (both officially and unofficially) after her. She has cemented her place in history … and justly so.
Oh, and that thumbnail image for this essay? That’s the only known photograph of the great pirate queen herself.
Wikipedia article for the curious: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zheng_Yi_Sao
EDIT: I know way too little about Chinese history, this is excellent. Thank you!! 💕
Ive always found chinese history extremely fascinating, also female leaders throughout history
Love love LOVE this post! I’d never heard of her, and that goes to show how women are ignored in history (especially non white western women). To have THREE imperial powers after you is huge, running a bank of 17 THOUSAND pirates is immense and she did that in a time when women were literally named as their husbands property. I’m wondering if the marrying her stepson was to protect each other, they both were legally stronger mutual guards as husband and wife.
Do you know was she really a sex worker? Or was that just said to discredit her and damage her name?
Extra History did a good video on her.
Bloody well done, that woman.
is this the video? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-p2lhxUqMMQ
A few years back, my good friend from China asked if I could babysit her apt whilst some ‘plumber-dude’ fixed a leak, or whatever it was. All seemed well, until that idiot wound up turning ON an unattached gas-source, which would have blown up her apt, either now or then.
Good god, I don’t know nothing about natural gas, but I assume it’s nawt good to be blowing around and filling up places…?
Funnily-enough, same day I was house-sitting, I wound up checking her local literature and reading about 郑一嫂 (Zhèng Yī Sǎo?). I felt like I got an -amazing view- of that legendary pirate queen, but then my friend told me a different story, and unfortunately, we argued ourselves right out of friendship, that same day and night.
I guess it was just the tension of the day, and all that. Pretty wild, tho, really-- that was my second local situation in which I’d prevented a massive explosion via huge natural gas leak. Ooofffff…
She was also a protagonist in the Jodie Whitaker Doctor Who episode Legend of the Sea Devils, but Chibnall sucks at writing.