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In 1405 a Chinese fleet of sixty-three vessels, carrying 'tens of thousands' of men, showed the flag all over the northern Indian Ocean, including the entrances to the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea and the Somali coast. At least six similar expeditions followed in the succeeding twenty-eight years—years in which the first painful and tentative Portuguese exploration of the West African coast began. The Chinese fleets were vastly greater than any commanded by Columbus, Vasco da Gama, or Magellan. 'Probably the most reliable ships in the world, and probably also the biggest were Chinese,' Professor Parry tells us. Chinese sailors were at least the equals of Europeans in technical proficiency. They were using the mariner's compass a century earlier than European navigators. Chinese charts were not inferior to those of Europe in the early fifteenth century, and covered vastly greater areas.
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