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'Ancient' Map Proves China Found America First

Published Jan 19, 2006 12:01 AM by The Maritime Executive

A map has been found that may support the theory that a Chinese eunuch admiral discovered America decades before Christopher Columbus. At the very least, it will fuel debate.

Bought by Liu Gang, a Chinese lawyer, in 2001 from a book dealer in Shanghai, the "Map" is dated 1418 and shows with remarkable accuracy the whole world ? each continent with its correct shape, latitude, and longitude. Mr. Liu has carried out extensive research to try to authenticate the map, which he plans to unveil to the public in Beijing.

Gavin Menzies, the British author, contends that the discovery is further proof that Zheng He, a Chinese navigator, and not Columbus, discovered America. Mr. Menzies, a former Royal Navy submarine commander, said: "It's authentic. It supports my book to the hilt."

He published "1421: The Year China Discovered America" in 2002, and the work soon became a bestseller, sparking furious discussion in academic circles in China and beyond. Menzies uses numerous references to maps in his book that relate how the fleet of Admiral Zheng He sailed to Cuba and to Rhode Island in 1421, seven decades before Columbus made landfall in the New World in 1492.

Now he believes that this map, perhaps one that guided the admiral's ships, will provide new evidence that the fleet first reached the Americas on a 1415-1418 voyage. The admiral is recorded as having made seven voyages. Menzies says that he is well aware that if the map were to be proved a forgery that it would have catastrophic consequences to his own reputation. They will have to wait until the end of the month for carbon dating, although experts have said that the map is well over a century old.

It would seem surprising that, among China's huge archives, no records remain to show that the Admiral ? the only Chinese explorer of note ? reached the Americas. However, records of his voyages were burnt by later emperors who disagreed with the expansionist policies of Admiral Zheng He's patron, the Yongle Emperor, who died in 1424.

Zhu Jianqiu, an oceanographer with the Chinese navy and a scholar at the Nanjing Zheng He Institute, said: "In 1421, many maps are mentioned, but none of them has anything to do with Zheng He. Chinese scholars cannot share the opinions of Mr Menzies."