Wang Dayuan

Wang Dayuan (Chinese: 汪大渊; pinyin: Wāng Dà Yuān, fl. 1311–1350), courtesy name Huanzhang Chinese: 焕章; pinyin: Huàn Zhāng was a traveller from Quanzhou, China during the Yuan dynasty in the 14th century. He is known for his two major ship voyages.

During 1328–1333, he sailed along the South China Sea, and visited many places in Southeast Asia. He reached as far as South Asia and Australia, and landed in modern-day Bengal, Sri Lanka, and India, as well as areas close to modern-day Darwin, Australia. In 1334–1339 he visited North Africa and East Africa.[1]

Around 1330, Wang visited the island of Singapore, where he wrote about a small settlement called Danmaxi (Chinese: 淡马锡; pinyin: Dànmǎxī, Malay: Temasek) that had both Malay and Chinese residents, and already had an established Chinatown. His 1349 account of his travel, Dao Yi Zhi Lue (simplified Chinese: 岛夷志略; traditional Chinese: 島夷誌略; pinyin: Dǎo Yí Zhì Lüè; A Brief Account of Island Barbarians), is one of the few records documenting the early history of Singapore.[2]

References

  1. W.W. Rockhill tr.Description of the Barbarians of the Isles T’oung Pao 1913
  2. The Ethnic Chinese in the Asian States


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