Economy and culture During the Hongzhi era, China experienced numerous natural disasters, particularly towards the end of the 1490s. In the 1480s, a severe drought struck the empire, followed by floods in northern China in the early 1490s, with one particularly devastating flood in 1492. As a result, the Emperor granted tax forgiveness on 3.5 million liters of wheat. The floods on the
Yellow River, which had been ongoing since the late 1480s, caused the dam in
Shandong to collapse, resulting in widespread destruction. In 1493, an expert named Liu Daxia was finally given the task of finding a solution to the problem. He enlisted the help of local experts and successfully regulated the river from
Kaifeng, redirecting the main flow southeast to Suzhou in northern
Jiangsu and then through the river bed of the Huai River, effectively preventing future floods in Shandong. The project involved 120,000 men and took two years to complete. Liu's success earned him a place in history and the favor of the Emperor, leading to his promotion to the position of minister of war (1501–1506). He became a trusted confidant of the Emperor during the final years of the Hongzhi Emperor's reign. Despite the challenges of drought, floods, and crop failures, the economy thrived under the Hongzhi Emperor's rule. However, there was a growing concentration of land in the hands of the powerful, particularly in both
metropolitan areas, which began in the mid-15th century. While the Emperor reduced tributary relations with
Southeast Asia, private foreign trade with the region flourished due to the lack of government enforcement. '' by
Shen Zhou (1427–1509), ink on paper. The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art,
Kansas City, Missouri In
Suzhou, wealthy families began to rival the nobility in their patronage of the arts, leading to the flourishing of the
Wu School of painting, which included renowned artists such as
Shen Zhou,
Wen Zhengming,
Tang Yin, and
Qiu Ying. Grand Secretary Li Dongyang held great influence in matters of painting, calligraphy, and poetry, and the Emperor himself was a patron of Shen Du () and other court painters, such as
Lü Ji.
Tea trade Due to conflicts with the
Turpan over
Hami, the army was in need of horses. As a solution, the Emperor agreed to revive the state's practice of exchanging tea for horses, in order to combat the illegal private sale of tea to Tibetan and Mongolian tribes in the northwest. The plan involved licensed traders transporting tea from Sichuan to Gansu border towns, with 40% of the tea (400,000
jin, approximately 240 tons) being handed over to the authorities and the rest being sold by the traders themselves. The government's goal was to obtain 4,000 horses through this exchange, but the merchants would often take the inferior quality tea and keep the higher quality tea for themselves, resulting in the officials receiving subpar horses from the Tibetans in exchange. In 1494, after a famine in Shaanxi, the Emperor offered 2 million
jin (around 1,200 tons) of tea from state reserves to merchants in exchange for rice to be sent to the affected regions. In the following years, the practice of exchanging tea for horses was discontinued and instead, merchants were offered 4 million
jin of tea. In 1501, the Emperor ordered 4–5 million
jin of tea to be sold for silver, which was then used by the authorities to purchase grain for Shaanxi. However, this decision hindered the exchange of tea for horses, leading the Emperor to ban the exchange of tea for grain in 1502. Despite these efforts, the government struggled to obtain high-quality tea to exchange for high-quality horses, and as a result, merchants continued to independently export tea across the border, bypassing the state's control.
Currency Since the closure of the mints in the 1430s, there has been a worsening shortage of coins and coppers over time. In the early 16th century, privately produced coins replaced the state-issued coins from the early Ming and the remaining
Tang and
Song dynasties. By the end of the 15th century, copper coins were mainly in circulation in the north, while silver had replaced them in the south. A revenue record of 1481 mentions that coins were only used in
Beizhili,
Nanzhili,
Henan and Shandong, which are all located along the Grand Canal. Similarly, a record of 1503 states that coins were used in the same areas, but not in
Fujian,
Guangdong (although they were still in use at the time of the record; private and highly valued Song coins were used),
Yunnan,
Guizhou, and other inland regions. In
Jiangxi and
Huguang, rice, grain, silver, and cloth were used as currency, while in the more underdeveloped northwest (in Shaanxi and
Shanxi), skin was used and in the southwest (Yunnan),
cowrie shells were used. Merchants also exported Ming private coins abroad. However, paradoxically, while these coins were accepted as currency and recognized officially abroad, the Ming government stubbornly refused to acknowledge them in China. In the early 16th century, the Ming government discovered that proper state coins had disappeared from the market and resumed minting in 1503. The main purpose of this measure was to push the private coins out of Jiangnan, where they were particularly widespread. The government attempted to support its own coinage by issuing a decree that halved the value of coins from previous dynasties and reiterating the ban on private coinage. Despite these efforts and the significant amount of production, state coins failed to gain dominance in the market. Furthermore, the technical process of producing copper coins was problematic as their casting was expensive and officials did not have access to qualified experts, leading them to even use detained counterfeiters. ==Military and foreign policy==