Zheng's voyages were long neglected in official Chinese histories but have become well known in China and abroad since the publication of
Liang Qichao's ''Biography of Our Homeland's Great Navigator, Zheng He'' in 1904.
Imperial China , brought from the Somali
Ajuran Empire, and later taken to China in the thirteenth year of Yongle (1415). In the decades after the last voyage, Imperial officials minimized the importance of Zheng He and his expeditions throughout the many regnal and dynastic histories they compiled. The information in the
Yongle and
Xuande Emperors' official annals was incomplete and even erroneous, and other official publications omitted them completely. Even some of his crew members who happened to stay in some port sometimes did so as well, such as "Poontaokong" on
Sulu. The temples of the cult, called after either of his names, Cheng Hoon or Sam Po, are peculiar to overseas Chinese except for a single temple in Hongjian originally constructed by a returned
Filipino Chinese in the Ming dynasty and rebuilt by another Filipino Chinese after the original was destroyed during the
Cultural Revolution. Owing to this supposed lineage, the Peranakan still use special honorifics:
Baba for the men and
Nyonya for the women.
Indonesia commemorating Zheng He's voyages to secure the maritime routes, usher urbanisation and assist in creating a common prosperity throughout continents and cultures. . The
Chinese Indonesian community have established temples dedicated to Zheng He in
Jakarta,
Cirebon,
Surabaya, and
Semarang. The
Brunei Times credits Zheng He with building Chinese Muslim communities in
Palembang and along the shores of
Java, the
Malay Peninsula, and the
Philippines. These Muslims allegedly followed the
Hanafi school in the Chinese language.
West Asia There is a monument to Zheng He in
Salalah, Oman.
Western scholarship In the 1950s, historians such as
John Fairbank and
Joseph Needham popularized the idea that after Zheng He's voyages China turned away from the seas due to the
Haijin edict and was isolated from European technological advancements. Modern historians point out that Chinese maritime commerce did not totally stop after Zheng He, that Chinese ships continued to participate in Southeast Asian commerce until the 19th century, and that active Chinese trading with India and East Africa continued long after the time of Zheng. Moreover,
revisionist historians such as
Jack Goldstone argue that the Zheng He voyages ended for practical reasons that did not reflect the technological level of China. Although the Ming dynasty prohibited shipping with the
Haijin edict, it was a policy of the
Hongwu Emperor that long preceded Zheng He and the ban, so obviously disregarded by the
Yongle Emperor, was eventually lifted entirely. However, the ban on maritime shipping forced countless numbers of people into smuggling and piracy. Neglect of the imperial navy and Nanjing dockyards after Zheng He's voyages left the coast highly vulnerable to Japanese
wokou during the 16th century. Richard von Glahn, a
UCLA professor of Chinese history, commented that most treatments of Zheng He present him wrongly, "offer counterfactual arguments," and "emphasize China's missed opportunity" by focusing on failures, instead of accomplishments. In contrast, Glahn asserts that "Zheng He reshaped Asia" because maritime history in the 15th century was essentially the Zheng He story and the effects of his voyages.
Cultural influence Despite the official neglect, the adventures of the fleet captured the imagination of some Chinese with some writing novelisations of the voyages, such as the
Romance of the Three-Jeweled Eunuch in 1597. On his travels, Zheng He built mosques and also spread the worship of
Mazu. He apparently never found time for a
pilgrimage to
Mecca but sent sailors there on his last voyage. He played an important part in developing relations between China and Islamic countries. Zheng He also visited Muslim shrines of Islamic holy men in the
Fujian. In modern times, interest in Zheng He has revived substantially. In
Vernor Vinge's 1999 science fiction novel
A Deepness in the Sky, an interstellar society of commercial traders in human space are named the Qeng Ho, after the admiral. The expeditions featured prominently in
Heather Terrell's 2005 novel
The Map Thief. For the 600th anniversary of Zheng He's voyages in 2005,
China Central Television produced a special television series,
Zheng He Xia Xiyang, starring
Gallen Lo as Zheng He. He is also mentioned in part of the main storyline of the first-person shooter game
Far Cry 3. The
Star Trek series
Picard further featured an advanced starship named USS
Zheng He. There was even a
US Navy boat that was acquired for picket duty during
World War II that was named
Cheng Ho by its previous owner.
Relics • Zheng He built the Tianfei Palace (), a temple in honour of the goddess
Mazu, in Nanjing after the fleet returned from its first western voyage in 1407. • The "Deed of Foreign Connection and Exchange" () or "Tongfan Deed Stele" is located in the Tianfei Palace in
Liuhe, Taicang, whence the expeditions first departed. The
stele was submerged and lost but has been rebuilt. • To thank the
Tianfei for her blessings, Zheng He and his colleagues rebuilt the Tianfei Palace in Nanshan,
Changle County, Fujian Province as well before they left on their last voyage. At the renovated temple, they raised a stele, "A Record of Tianfei Showing Her Presence and Power" (), discussing their earlier voyages. • The
Galle Trilingual Inscription in Sri Lanka was discovered in the city of
Galle in 1911 and is preserved at the
National Museum of Colombo. The three languages used in the inscription were Chinese,
Tamil, and
Persian. The inscription praises
Buddha and describes the fleet's donations to the famous
Tenavarai Nayanar temple of
Tondeswaram frequented by both
Hindus and
Buddhists. • Zheng He's tomb in Nanjing has been repaired and a small museum built next to it, but his body was buried at sea off the
Malabar Coast near Calicut, in western India. However, his sword and other personal possessions were interred in a Muslim tomb inscribed in
Arabic. The tomb of Zheng He's assistant
Hong Bao was recently unearthed in Nanjing as well. • Seven large sunken ships were found in the sea near
Dongsha Island, which were confirmed to belong to Zheng He's fleet. The types of the seven sunken ships were Shachuan (沙船), Fuchuan (福船), and Zhanzuochuan (戰座船).
Commemoration In the People's Republic of China and the
Republic of China, 11 July is
Maritime Day (,
Zhōngguó Hánghǎi Rì) and is devoted to the memory of Zheng He's first voyage. Initially,
Kunming Changshui International Airport was to be named Zheng He International Airport. In 2015,
Emotion Media Factory dedicated a special multimedia show "Zheng He is coming" for amusement park
Romon U-Park (
Ningbo, China). The show became a finalist of the amusement industry prestigious Brass Rings Awards by
IAAPA. Zheng He is the namesake of the
ROCS Cheng Ho missile frigate in Taiwan. Zheng He is one of the few non-Americans to be the namesake of a US Navy ship called the USS
Cheng Ho which survived the
attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. The
People's Liberation Army Navy ship
Zheng He (AX-81) is a Chinese
training ship named for him. Like her namesake, she serves as a goodwill ambassador for China, becoming the first Chinese Navy ship to visit the United States in 1989 and completing a circumnavigation of the globe in 2012. The
sample-return spacecraft
Tianwen-2 was originally named
ZhengHe. It launched in 2025 with the mission to explore
Near-Earth asteroid 2016 HO3. Named after the explorer, the Zheng He Seamount is an underwater mountain in the Arabian Sea. It is located southwest of Socotra island at . ==Gallery==