The Song Dynasty: Innovation Before the Modern World — Fexingo History

Song Dynasty's Lost Navigator: The Maritime Trade Revolution

4 min · 30. juni 2026
episode Song Dynasty's Lost Navigator: The Maritime Trade Revolution cover

Description

The Song Dynasty wasn't just an age of paper money and gunpowder—it was also a maritime superpower. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how Song China transformed into the world's greatest seafaring economy, decades before the Ming treasure fleets. We follow the rise of Quanzhou, the bustling port city that rivaled Alexandria, and meet the shadowy merchants and shipbuilders who braved the South China Sea. Discover the Song invention of the magnetic compass for navigation, the construction of massive seagoing junks with watertight compartments, and the state-backed trade networks that reached as far as East Africa. We also uncover the dramatic 1277 Battle of the Sea—a desperate last stand against the Mongols—and the forgotten admiral Zhang Shijie, who tried to save the dynasty with a fleet of over a thousand ships. This is the story of a lost maritime revolution that reshaped the world. #SongDynasty #MaritimeTrade #Quanzhou #ZhangShijie #Compass #Trade #IndianOcean #ChineseHistory #MedievalTrade #Shipbuilding #Junks #BattleOfTheSea #1277 #Mongols #MaritimeSilkRoad #Navigation #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the The Song Dynasty: Innovation Before the Modern World — Fexingo History community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

131 episodes

episode Song Dynasty's Lost Navigator: The Maritime Trade Revolution artwork

Song Dynasty's Lost Navigator: The Maritime Trade Revolution

The Song Dynasty wasn't just an age of paper money and gunpowder—it was also a maritime superpower. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how Song China transformed into the world's greatest seafaring economy, decades before the Ming treasure fleets. We follow the rise of Quanzhou, the bustling port city that rivaled Alexandria, and meet the shadowy merchants and shipbuilders who braved the South China Sea. Discover the Song invention of the magnetic compass for navigation, the construction of massive seagoing junks with watertight compartments, and the state-backed trade networks that reached as far as East Africa. We also uncover the dramatic 1277 Battle of the Sea—a desperate last stand against the Mongols—and the forgotten admiral Zhang Shijie, who tried to save the dynasty with a fleet of over a thousand ships. This is the story of a lost maritime revolution that reshaped the world. #SongDynasty #MaritimeTrade #Quanzhou #ZhangShijie #Compass #Trade #IndianOcean #ChineseHistory #MedievalTrade #Shipbuilding #Junks #BattleOfTheSea #1277 #Mongols #MaritimeSilkRoad #Navigation #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

30. juni 20264 min
episode Zhu Xi and the Making of Neo-Confucian Orthodoxy artwork

Zhu Xi and the Making of Neo-Confucian Orthodoxy

Lucas and Luna explore the life and legacy of Zhu Xi, the 12th-century philosopher who synthesized Confucian thought into a comprehensive system that would dominate East Asian intellectual life for centuries. They discuss his development of the 'investigation of things' (gewu) as a spiritual practice, his compilation of the Four Books as the core curriculum for civil service exams, and his controversial role in shaping orthodoxy. The episode touches on his exile under political persecution, his influence on later thinkers like Wang Yangming, and the paradox of a man who championed rigorous inquiry while his teachings were used to enforce conformity. Specifics include the White Deer Grotto Academy, the concept of li (principle) and qi (material force), and Zhu Xi's commentaries on the Great Learning. The conversation also considers critiques of Neo-Confucianism from modern scholars and its enduring impact on education and governance in China, Korea, Japan, and Vietnam. #ZhuXi #NeoConfucianism #SouthernSong #WhiteDeerGrotto #FourBooks #Gewu #LiandQi #Daoxue #SongDynasty #CivilServiceExams #WangYangming #ChinesePhilosophy #EastAsianHistory #FexingoHistory #History #Philosophy #Education #IntellectualHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday5 min
episode Ma Yuan: The Corner Painter Who Defined Song Landscape Art artwork

Ma Yuan: The Corner Painter Who Defined Song Landscape Art

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the life and work of Ma Yuan, the Southern Song painter whose 'one-corner' compositions revolutionized Chinese landscape art. They discuss his role as a painter-in-waiting at the imperial court in Hangzhou, his signature style of leaving vast empty spaces, and his collaboration with the equally famous Xia Gui. The episode delves into the cultural context of the Southern Song period — how the loss of the north and the court's relocation to Lin'an shaped artistic sensibilities. They also examine Ma Yuan's famous works like 'Walking on a Mountain Path in Spring' and 'A Scholar Contemplating a Waterfall', and his influence on later Japanese ink painting, particularly the work of Sesshū and the Muromachi shogunate. The conversation touches on the balance between realism and suggestion in Song painting, the role of the Academy of Painting under Emperor Ningzong, and how Ma Yuan's style reflected the introspective mood of a dynasty mourning its lost heartland. #MaYuan #SouthernSong #ChinesePainting #SongDynastyArt #InkPainting #Hangzhou #Lin'an #AcademyOfPainting #XiaGui #EmperorNingzong #Sesshu #Muromachi #LandscapePainting #OneCornerComposition #ImperialCourt #ChineseHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday7 min
episode Song Dynasty's Lost Artist: Li Gonglin and the White Lotus artwork

Song Dynasty's Lost Artist: Li Gonglin and the White Lotus

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the life and work of Li Gonglin, the Song Dynasty's greatest painter of horses and Buddhist figures. Best known for his ink-wash 'The White Lotus Society,' Li Gonglin lived during the turbulent late 11th century, a time of political strife between reformists and conservatives. A friend of Su Shi and Huang Tingjian, Li was a member of the 'Garden of Ink' literati circle. His revolutionary 'baimiao' technique—pure line drawing without color or wash—set a new standard for Chinese figure painting. The episode delves into how Li Gonglin's art reflected Buddhist ideals of detachment amid the chaos of the Yuanyou Party purges. Listeners will learn about his famous scrolls, the influence of Gu Kaizhi, and how Li's work was later collected and revered by emperors. This episode brings to light a master who bridged painting, poetry, and philosophy in an era of unparalleled cultural achievement. #LiGonglin #SongDynasty #WhiteLotusSociety #Baimiao #ChinesePainting #BuddhistArt #SuShi #InkWash #LiteratiPainting #YuanyouParty #HuangTingjian #GardenofInk #Kaifeng #GuKaizhi #History #ArtHistory #FexingoHistory #SongArt Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

28. juni 20268 min
episode Song Dynasty's Lost Women: The Legal Rights of Wives in Imperial China artwork

Song Dynasty's Lost Women: The Legal Rights of Wives in Imperial China

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the surprisingly robust legal and economic rights of women during the Song Dynasty — a period often overshadowed by narratives of Confucian patriarchy. Drawing on the Song legal code, the Song Xingtong, and records of dowry disputes from Fujian and Kaifeng, they discuss how married women retained control over their own property, could initiate divorce under certain conditions, and even appear in court. They examine the tension between Neo-Confucian ideals, which grew more restrictive over time, and the practical realities of a commercial society where women managed businesses and estates. The conversation touches on the lives of women like the poet Li Qingzhao, who fought in court to recover her dowry, and the widows who ran printing houses in the capitol. Lucas explains how the Song state's need for tax revenue from female-run enterprises created a surprising legal buffer against full patriarchal control. The episode reveals a nuanced picture: women in Song China had more agency than in many later dynasties, but their rights were fragile and eroded as Neo-Confucianism became orthodoxy. A fresh angle on Song social history that challenges common assumptions about women in pre-modern China. #SongDynasty #WomenInHistory #LiQingzhao #SongXingtong #Dowry #ChineseLaw #NeoConfucianism #Fujian #Kaifeng #Divorce #PropertyRights #GenderHistory #ImperialChina #LegalHistory #SocialHistory #EastAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

28. juni 20268 min