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The Ningbo incident (Chinese: 寧波之亂; Japanese: 寧波の乱) was a 1523 brawl between trade representatives of two Senguoku Japanese daimyō clans — the Ōuchi and the Hosokawa — in the Ming Chinese southeastern coastal city of Ningbo. The Ōuchi pillaged and harmed local residents, causing massive damage.
He was divorced before the incident. The suspect once showed on social media that his contract was expired in 2019. He had screenshots of the chat with Lily Liu (劉林林), the director of International Exchange College (IEC), Ningbo University of Technology, about the contract renewal In the conversation, Lily Liu insisted to let the suspect ...
Song Suqing (宋素卿; died 1525), also known as Sō Sokei from the Japanese pronunciation of his name, was a Chinese-born diplomat of Muromachi and Sengoku period Japan. He was sold as a child to Japanese envoys in 1496, but came back to Ming China in 1509 and 1523 as an envoy of the Hosokawa clan.
He said the incident “does do damage” to Australia’s relationship with China. ... Australia said the Chinese destroyer CNS Ningbo operated its sonar while Australian naval divers were ...
The earliest mentions of Shuangyu as a smuggling port notes that the chaos on the Zhejiang coast (a reference to the Ningbo incident of 1523) caused an overstocking of commodities at Shuangyu in 1524. [4] At first, Shuangyu only had temporary mat-sheds for the smugglers to house themselves and their goods during the trading season. [5]
Ningbo is one of China's oldest cities, with a history dating back to the Hemudu culture in 4800 BC. Once known as Mingzhou (明州), Ningbo was known as a trade city on the Silk Road at least two thousand years ago, and then as a major port, along with Yangzhou and Guangzhou in the Tang dynasty; thereafter, the major ports for foreign trade in the Song dynasty.
According to data from Vessel Finder, the bulk carrier, owned by Chinese firm Ningbo Yipeng Shipping Co. Ltd, departing from the remote northwest Russian port of Ust-Luga on Nov. 15, with a ...
Ningbo incident: The Hosokawa trade mission attacks the Ouchi trade mission and loots Ningbo, seizes ships, and kills a Ming commander before setting sail; the Chinese tributary system loses maritime trade value [224] The Ming dynasty produces breech-loading swivel guns based on Portuguese designs. [225] 1524: August: The garrison of Datong ...