1/ We've discussed Persia-in-China, but what about China-in-Persia? Before the Mongols, known sources record few Chinese ppl in Iran. However, Chinese products left a distinct mark. The most famous (and imitated) was Chinese blue-and-white porcelain. #iranchina - @IranChinaGuy
2/ Chinese ceramics were an important part of a global trade network that linked China and the Middle East to the world economic system. Many of these objects were transported overland in a series of trade networks, today called the "Silk Road". In addition to land routes...
3/ ...maritime trade flourished. Middle Eastern, African, and Chinese merchants flowed back and forth between important ports along the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf, the coast of India, and the islands in the South China Sea. This has been called the "Maritime Silk Road".
3/ As early as the 9th and 10th centuries, ceramics were being exported in large quantities. Ibn Battuta comments that Chinese ceramics are “carried to India and to other climes so that it even reaches our country in the Maghreb. And it is the most marvelous of kinds of pottery.”
4/ The famous Muslim Chinese explorer Zheng He also documented the widespread appreciation of Chinese ceramics. Ma Huan, his traveling companion, mentions the extremely enthusiastic reception their ceramic goods received in Champa (modern Vietnam), India, Ceylon, and Mecca.
5/ Archaeological evidence in Egypt shows large amounts of Chinese ceramics at Qus, Aswan, Alexandria, Quseir, Aydhab, and Fustat. Notably, at many archaeological sites there was less Islamic pottery than there was Chinese. This suggest widespread consumption by elites.
6/ Iran was no different. Chinese pottery from maritime trade can be found in Gulf sites from the 9th century on, and seemed to play an important role as elite gifts. The ʿAbbasid governor of Khorasan is said to have sent Chinese porcelains as a gift to Hārūn al-Rašīd in 804 CE.
7/ One of the largest collections of Chinese blue-and-white porcelain wares outside China proper is in Iran, collected meticulously by Ottoman sultans and by Shah Abbas I, founder of the Safavid Dynasty in Iran, and donated to the shrine of Sheikh Safi-ad-din Ardabili.
8/ Chinese pottery was so popular in Iran and the Middle East that Yuan and Ming potters seemed to be consciously producing goods for an export market. Goods for the Arab and Persian market had a distinct look often made use of rudimentary Persian and Arabic phrases.
9/ For example, this tripod censer of blue and white porcelain with the Persian inscription in six cartouches reading: an keh ba 'attar / migardad / qarib / u hami yabad / ze bu-ye khod / nasib...'He who gets close to a perfume seller acquires a share of his own scent'.
10/ Or this “Large dish” style Yuan dynasty porcelain, from Ardebil shrine. Barely legible inscription to the left is found on the underside. Has been read various, as “Hosein/harim/Mohammed” for the first word and “haqq/be-juft/marhum/Mohammed” for the second.
11/ This Yuan dish features barely legible Persian. It has been suggested that this might be an attempt to write "Chin" جین (China) in calligraphy. Many of these styles were initially developed for use by Persian or Mongol Muslim elites under the Yuan, and later exported.
12/ And there are countlesss other examples.

By the 17th century, Persian artisans soon began producing copies of Chinese pottery in large quantities, an early example of mass-produced imitations of an elite style. Mashad and Kerman were early centers of ceramic (re)production.
13/ In fact, most "Chinese" pottery found in Iran are not originals. Pottery from across the Middle East, including Iran, was also influenced by the techniques and styles of Chinese ceramics. In addition to copies, originals which fused Persian and Chinese style were popular.
14/ The Chinese also were influenced by their contact with Iran. While not especially influenced by Islamic pottery, Sino-Iranian trade introduced Chinese artisans to cobalt, the very ingredient which made the signature color of the blue-and-white wares possible! In fact...
15/ ...blue-and-white wares may represent a fusion of Chinese and Persian craft techniques. The white porcelain body was a technique developed by the Chinese, which required a special composition and extremely high-temperature kilns to reproduce, and was a closely guarded secret.
16/ The blue, on the other hand, was derived from cobalt ore, which first arrived in China via Persia. John Carswell has speculated that it was likely Persians in China that first combined the two techniques because cobalt had been used to decorate pottery for centuries in Iran.
17/ However, as Iranian kilns fired at lower temperatures, the color that resulted was not quite the same. The famous blue hues only showed up when cobalt was fired at the higher temperatures in Chinese kilns, combining Chinese techniques with Persian resources.
18/ That's all for now! Stay tuned for our next thread in a few hours on Iranian Religions in China!
- B.F

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More from @HistorianofIran

9 Jan
1/ Persian was an important admin. and religious language during the Yuan and Ming, but declined under the Qing (1644-1912).

On the rise (and fall) of Persian language use in China and the decline of traditional Sino-Iranian ties by the 20th century.

#iranchina by @IranChinaGuy ImageImage
2/ During the Yuan, China and Persia were linked by Mongol rule, and Persian was one of the official administrative languages. A few Persians held important status as members of the semuren (色目人), an administrative class made up of non-Mongol, non-Chinese subjects. Image
3/ For example, Sayyid Ajall Shams al-Din Omar al-Bukhari, a Persian Muslim from Bukhara, was appointed by Kublai as governor of Yunnan in 1274, a fact mentioned by Marco Polo. Chinese sources record him as Sàidiǎnchì Zhānsīdīng (赛典赤·赡思丁).

(Img: Tomb in modern Yunnan) ImageImageImageImage
Read 17 tweets
9 Jan
1/ Religion was another important link between #China and #Iran in both ancient and medieval times. This thread will briefly explore the Sino-#Iranian connection in the spread of three religions in China: #Buddhism, #Zoroastrianism, and #Islam.

#iranchina by @IranChinaGuy - B.F ImageImageImage
2/ (Disclaimer: Each of these could be an entire topic, but as I am do this in my limited free time, I simply can't cover all three as well as I'd like. Please forgive anything left out, simplified, or overlooked. Follow me @IranChinaGuy and I will post more on each next week!)
3/ We have already discussed the Parthian origins of Buddhism in China via An Shigao. In general, Buddhism entered China via Central Asian contacts with Parthia, Kushan, and other Indian and Iranian cultures. Many of the early translators came from these areas, although... ImageImage
Read 15 tweets
7 Jan
1/ As I have mentioned, the story of #IranChina relations is not always a story of economic exchange and social integration. The lives of the elite were one thing, but this thread will look at the history of Persian slaves, merchants, and pirates in China. - by @IranChinaGuy
2/ Feng Ruofang is known to historians as a pirate who once made his base at Hainan, an island off the southern tip of China. In 742, a shipwrecked monk attested to his activities. Feng "seized two or three Persian merchant ships every year, taking the cargo for himself and...
3/ ...making the crew his servants. They were kept in an area three days’ journey going from north to south and five days’ journey going from east to west, where villages eventually developed."

Slavery in China, like in much of the ancient world, was not chattel slavery, but...
Read 15 tweets
6 Jan
Between the 5th and 13th century, there were a number of Chinese families of Iranian descent surnamed Li who left their mark on history. Let's begin with two famous siblings: Li Xun and Li Shunxian, a brother and sister who were both accomplished poets, and more. 1/

#iranchina
2/ Li Xun (~855-930 CE) was a Chinese poet of Persian descent, and an accomplished physician. Exact details of his early life are not known, but his surname marked him by his ethnic background. Li (李) was a royal surname associated with the founders of the Tang dynasty...
3/ by adopting this royal surname, Persians found an effective way of integrating into Chinese society. Li's family emigrated from Persia around 880, settling in Chengdu, where Li built up a literary reputation despite being a non-native speaker. This was not to last, however...
Read 14 tweets
5 Jan
There are several important figures in Chinese history from Parthian or Sassanian backgrounds. These figures reflect the cultural and political connections ancient China had with Iran.

Let's begin with An Shigao, the Iranian translator who helped bring Buddhism to China. 1/
2/ An Shigao was of Parthian descent, a fact made evident by his surname An (安). Short for 安息, the Chinese name for the Parthian Arsacid dynasty, this surname was adopted by many Parthians and their descendants at the Han court. His translations date from 148-180 CE.
3/ Although popularly identified as a Parthian noble who gave up his heritage to become a Buddhist monk, this is mostly hagiographic and lacks evidence. Little is known for sure except that he was of an Iranian family and was the first significant translator of Buddhist texts.
Read 16 tweets
4 Jan
1/ Over the next few centuries, diplomatic contact between the two regions continued. The Sassanians, called "Bosi" (波斯), sent dozens of embassies to China ca. 400-500 CE. Sassanian-Tang relations were famously close, especially after the Muslim conquest of Persia.

#iranchina Image
2/ "The largest of these embassies...numbered several hundred persons, while even the smaller parties included over 100 members… In the course of one year anywhere from five to six to over ten parties would be sent out." (Shiji).

img: Persian envoy to China, c. 650 CE Image
3/ Sogdian (later Sassanian) merchants and dancers were common in major Chinese cities, especially Chang'an, the Tang capital from 618 CE. Persian musicians, art, and wine merchants were popular diversions. Large caches of Sassanian coins can be found in China from this period. ImageImageImage
Read 11 tweets

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