Ningpo massacre explained
Conflict: | The Ningpo Massacre |
Date: | 26 June 1857 |
Place: | Ningbo, Qing dynasty |
Result: | Chinese victory |
Combatant1: | Qing dynasty |
Combatant2: | Portuguese Pirates |
Commander1: | Ah Pak[1] |
Casualties1: | 2 Chinese 1 English dead |
Casualties2: | 40 Portuguese dead |
The Ningpo Massacre was a massacre of Portuguese pirates by Cantonese pirates led by Ah Pak around the city of Ningbo. During the Qing dynasty, in the 19th century, the Ningbo authorities contracted Cantonese pirates to eliminate by extermination Portuguese pirates who raided Cantonese shipping around Ningbo. The campaign was "successful", with 40 Portuguese dead and only two Chinese dead, being dubbed "The Ningpo Massacre" by an English correspondent, who noted that the Portuguese pirates had behaved savagely towards the Chinese, and that the Portuguese authorities at Macau should have reined in the pirates.
Battle and Massacre
Portuguese pirates who raided Cantonese shipping in the early 19th century were eliminated by Cantonese forces around Ningbo.[2]
The people from Ningbo supported the Cantonese massacre of the Portuguese pirates and the attack on the Portuguese consul. The Ningbo authorities had made an agreement with a Cantonese pirate named A'Pak to exterminate the Portuguese pirates. The Portuguese did not even try to fight when the Cantonese pirates sacked their consulate, fleeing and hiding among the tombs. The Cantonese butchered around 40 Portuguese while sacking the consulate. Only two Chinese and one Englishman who sided with the Cantonese died.
Further reading
- Book: China: being "The Times" special correspondence from China in the years 1857–58 . 1858 . George Wingrove Cooke . G. Routledge . reprint . 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134 . 4 November 2011. (the University of California)
- Book: China and lower Bengal: being "The Times" correspondence from China in the years 1857–58. 1861 . George Wingrove Cooke . Routledge, Warne, & Routledge. 5. 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134. 4 November 2011. (the New York Public Library) Also available here
- Book: 14 December 2011 . The Missionary magazine, Volume 49. American Baptist Foreign Mission Society. XLIX. 1869 . Boston. American Baptist Missionary Union. Original from the University of Wisconsin - Madison (eastern china mission - Letter from Mr. Kwolton)
Notes and References
- News: the London Times . 26 November 1858 . The Pirates of the Chinese Seas. . The New York Times .
- Book: Macau History and Society . 2011 . Zhidong Hao . Hong Kong University Press . illustrated . 978-988-8028-54-2 . 67 . There was indeed a group of Portuguese who became pirates, called "Macau ruffians," or policemen who turned bad, along with "Manila-men" from the Philippines and escaped African slaves. Their fleet attacked "the Cantonese ships when they could get them at an advantage, and murdered their crews with circumstances of great atrocity.”55 They were destroyed in Ningbo by a fleet of Chinese pirates with the support of the local Chinese government and other Europeans. . 4 November 2011.