Guardian:
Could a Ming dynasty Buddha found near an Australian beach rewrite history?
The origins of the 15cm statue, verified as authentic on the BBC’s Antiques Roadshow, remain a mystery. Could it have been left there by 15th-century Chinese explorers?
In 2018, a pair of Australian film-makers were doing runs with metal detectors in remote Western Australia as they prepared to shoot a documentary about the French exploration of Australia. The film was supposed to feature a hunt for scientific equipment believed to have been left in the area by the Baudin expedition of 1800-1803.
There was no trace of Napoleonic-era exploration, but what they did find was something perhaps even more unusual.
It was 15cm-tall bronze Buddha figure, weighing just over 1kg and – according to experts – likely made in China hundreds of years ago.
In the years since their 2018 find, the film-makers, Leon Deschamps and Shayne Thomson, have been working to uncover the mystery of how the figurine ended up on a roadside in Shark Bay. They believe the Buddha might be a clue that could rewrite history, potentially suggesting that Ming dynasty explorers visited Australia hundreds of years ago.
Shayne Thomson and Leon Deschamps say they have spent $50,000 trying to work out the statue’s origins since finding it in 2018. Photograph: FINN films
‘World treasure’
Hoping to find out more about the object, the pair sought out expert advice on the British TV show, Antiques Roadshow.
In an episode that screened in the UK on Sunday, the show’s Asian art expert, Lee Young, the managing director of Dore and Rees auctioneers in Somerset, confirmed the figurine was made during China’s Ming dynasty and declared it a “world treasure”.
“Let’s clear it up straight away. Yes, it is Ming,” Young said. “And yes it is the infant Buddha. He was brought out in ceremonies to celebrate Buddha’s birthday, which is why it’s portrayed as the infant Buddha.”
According to Young, the figurine would have belonged to “someone of some standing”.
The Infant Buddha ‘must be the oldest [Chinese] object that has been discovered in Australia’, Prof Jocelyn Chey said. Photograph: FINN films via Facebook
Young said the Ming dynasty piece would carry a presale estimate of £3,000 to £5,000 (A$5,000 to A$9,000). But the location it was found made it “historically incredibly important” and he would not be surprised if the hammer fell at £100,000 at an open market auction “because there is only one of these with that story”.
Ian MacLeod, a fellow of the WA Museum who has examined over 35,000 bronze objects for museums, confirmed through microscopic analysis the Buddha was “unequivocally not a forgery”.
MacLeod found that the Buddha had been buried at the spot where it was discovered between 100 and 150 years prior, and that it had been used for a considerable period of time before the burial – consistent with it dating back to the Ming period.
Deschamps said the Buddha could have been left behind by the Ming dynasty treasure fleet of 1421, which was sent out by the third Ming emperor in a display of Chinese might. Seven expeditions made up of hundreds of ships travelled through south-east Asia – even reaching the coast of Africa – but there is no documented evidence of them reaching Australia.
Most historians say it is unlikely that Chinese ships visited Australia during the Ming dynasty – which would be hundreds of years before the first European explorers in the 1600s – but the prospect has nevertheless been a source of enduring fascination.
Oldest Chinese object in Australia?
Jocelyn Chey, a visiting professor in the department of Chinese studies at the University of Sydney, said it was unlikely that the Chinese treasure fleet visited the Gascoyne area of Western Australia, if it visited Australia at all.
“It doesn’t mean because it’s 500 years old, that it came here 500 years ago,” Chey said.
“Regardless of when it came here, it must be the oldest [Chinese] object that has been discovered in Australia. That is assuming that its authenticity is confirmed.”
Paul Macgregor, a historian and curator with Our Chinese Past Inc, said he believed the two most likely scenarios were that the object arrived with the Chinese pearlers or fishermen in the 1870s or that it was deposited by someone as a hoax. Macgregor said there was no firm evidence of any Ming dynasty treasure fleet arriving in Australia.
He said that any evidence of the Buddha’s origins needs to be published so that it can be tested by other experts.
Deschamps still hasn’t found a home for the Buddha. The WA Maritime Museum didn’t want to display it when the film-makers offered it to them and their local Shark Bay Discovery Centre museum was not a suitable location due to the lack of funds to properly insure and protect the Buddha.
“Sacred objects belong with the communities they are sacred to,” Deschamps wrote in a statement on behalf of him and Thomson. “We do not consider ourselves owners of the Infant Buddha but rather custodians and we have done our utmost to show this sacred object the respect it deserves.”
Deschamps said that the pair’s film company has spent at least $50,000 on travel, laboratory research and interviews with scientists and academics trying to get to the bottom of the object’s origin.
“It is our hope the Australian government will work with the Chinese community and local Indigenous custodians to co-fund an archaeological dig at the site to help further investigate the origins of the Buddha,” Deschamps wrote.
He said they have made ongoing efforts to consult with police, local and state government, the WA Maritime Museum, various Chinese organisations, Australian archaeologists and local Indigenous elders.
Young said the Ming dynasty piece would carry a presale estimate of £3,000 to £5,000 (A$5,000 to A$9,000). But the location it was found made it “historically incredibly important” and he would not be surprised if the hammer fell at £100,000 at an open market auction “because there is only one of these with that story”.
Ian MacLeod, a fellow of the WA Museum who has examined over 35,000 bronze objects for museums, confirmed through microscopic analysis the Buddha was “unequivocally not a forgery”.
MacLeod found that the Buddha had been buried at the spot where it was discovered between 100 and 150 years prior, and that it had been used for a considerable period of time before the burial – consistent with it dating back to the Ming period.
Deschamps said the Buddha could have been left behind by the Ming dynasty treasure fleet of 1421, which was sent out by the third Ming emperor in a display of Chinese might. Seven expeditions made up of hundreds of ships travelled through south-east Asia – even reaching the coast of Africa – but there is no documented evidence of them reaching Australia.
Most historians say it is unlikely that Chinese ships visited Australia during the Ming dynasty – which would be hundreds of years before the first European explorers in the 1600s – but the prospect has nevertheless been a source of enduring fascination.
Oldest Chinese object in Australia?
Jocelyn Chey, a visiting professor in the department of Chinese studies at the University of Sydney, said it was unlikely that the Chinese treasure fleet visited the Gascoyne area of Western Australia, if it visited Australia at all.
“It doesn’t mean because it’s 500 years old, that it came here 500 years ago,” Chey said.
“Regardless of when it came here, it must be the oldest [Chinese] object that has been discovered in Australia. That is assuming that its authenticity is confirmed.”
Paul Macgregor, a historian and curator with Our Chinese Past Inc, said he believed the two most likely scenarios were that the object arrived with the Chinese pearlers or fishermen in the 1870s or that it was deposited by someone as a hoax. Macgregor said there was no firm evidence of any Ming dynasty treasure fleet arriving in Australia.
He said that any evidence of the Buddha’s origins needs to be published so that it can be tested by other experts.
Deschamps still hasn’t found a home for the Buddha. The WA Maritime Museum didn’t want to display it when the film-makers offered it to them and their local Shark Bay Discovery Centre museum was not a suitable location due to the lack of funds to properly insure and protect the Buddha.
“Sacred objects belong with the communities they are sacred to,” Deschamps wrote in a statement on behalf of him and Thomson. “We do not consider ourselves owners of the Infant Buddha but rather custodians and we have done our utmost to show this sacred object the respect it deserves.”
Deschamps said that the pair’s film company has spent at least $50,000 on travel, laboratory research and interviews with scientists and academics trying to get to the bottom of the object’s origin.
“It is our hope the Australian government will work with the Chinese community and local Indigenous custodians to co-fund an archaeological dig at the site to help further investigate the origins of the Buddha,” Deschamps wrote.
He said they have made ongoing efforts to consult with police, local and state government, the WA Maritime Museum, various Chinese organisations, Australian archaeologists and local Indigenous elders.
Australians should be Afraid, be Very Very Afraid, as China uses such so-called historical evidence as basis for "rightful" territorial claims, just as with the islands and bird-inhabited rocks in the South China Sea.
ReplyDeleteEspecially with Australia's puny defence capacity.
Mfer, u have intentionally left out all those ancient written maritime records of those islands & bird-inhabited rocks in the South China Sea. Many of them had inhabitants besides serving as haven during bad weather for fishing boats.
DeleteThose ancient records ain't found only in China royal household records but also in Japanese/Korean/Okinawa texts.
Ooop…. Don't u mferingly forgetting that China's developments r not pursued through war, colonization or plundering of other outside territories!
ReplyDeleteNot since CPC foundation yr!
Neither ever in her eon of dynastic settings since her recorded historical time!
The Chinese plundered Tibet, Xinjiang, Mongolia and several other territories with legitimate rulers and non-Chinese population, yet you keep on denying their hegemonic tradition. Are you on something, don't depend too much on traditional medicine. Your recent ancestors used to be high on opium etc 24/7...
DeleteFirst, when were those incidences u farted about happened?
DeleteIn recent time or the ancient tribal settings when Tibet/ Xinjiang/Mongolia & several other territories (??) had only feudalistic infighting tribal groups?
When those waring tribes invading China (to be exact, there were NO clear national boundaries as we know now) to plunder & rob those agrarian settlements, what could the central emperor do?
Removed those pests ONCE for ALL & setting up a proper governing system to rule these nomadic tribes!
& a mfering know nothing dickhead called that hegemonic tradition!
Mfer, if u truly want to know about hegemonic tradition, LOOK no further than how those 9 melayu cikumai tribes figured to form the feudalistic sultanates u so love!
Ooop… don't used my time period argument to substantiate yr fart! Bcoz, yr be-loathed feudal states have no mentionable historical time frame & proper governance to justified any empire building.
Ooop… forgetting too about those Hindu hegemonic empires that u, as a zombieic faithful, won't recognize!
So who r the one high on yr f*cked jambu/tuak? Or any substances u could hands-on for abuse?
Use your brain and open your mind, do study your history with your limited intelligence! In the ancient time, Xinjiang, Tibet and Mongolia had always been happy to be a part of China by their annual tributes to the emperors of China. The Mongolians had even conquered China to make Mongolia a part of China. As of now all the people of 3 states are proud to be a part of China who is on the way to become the world number one power. The people of the 3 states are all being justly treated and looked upon as equal by the rest of the people in China unlike the treatment of the NB in Malaysia by the pirates who came and usurp the land from the orang asli.
DeleteIn case if you are stupid and don't know, the Chinese Mongolians are doing so well and feeling proud and happy while their cousin Mongolians of the Mongolia (outer) independent nation are so backward and poor and can only envy their cousin Mongolians of China.
BTW, China has 56 groups of people from multiple races/tribes.
DeleteMongolian/Tibetan/Uyghur/Kazak etc etc, residing within the China proper, r all Chinese nationals!
Unlike yr mfering melayu definition, as coined by the pommie & supported univocally by the ketuanan f*cks, no religion/custom rituals/linguistics r the KEY determinants besides true bloodlines & genes!
Just go back to your ancestral lands and this region will be heavenly like in the old days. What a syiok sendiri presumption that all those countries subjugated by the communist China are grateful to their hegemonic masters. How typical evangelical Christian kumbaya outlook. No sense of shame at all.
DeleteFollow your own advice, go back, truly pirates have no sense of shame, mind always only full of women legs and knees and live as if the world owe you a living!
DeleteChina is an atheistic communist state with NO official religion!
DeleteWakakakaka…
"this region will be heavenly like in the old days"
U know that old days? How about yr blueblooded elites had to ask for China helps to stop the Siamese aggressions?
Been the only major power then China had had ZILCH colonies in territories outsiders her border. Is this the behaviour of a hegemonic master?
No doubt, u have been reading shits in&out with no mind of yr own!
So what's yr fart of "typical evangelical Christian kumbaya outlook"?
Ooop… kumbaya is yr reading of theme of the day. No wonder!
What a syiok sendiri presumption, indeed.
Another Chinese sleight of hand. On second thought the communist party should move all the ethnic Chinese immigrants from Sinxiang and Tibet to Australia.
ReplyDeleteChinese sleight of hand?
DeleteBrainless mfer, read my above take AGAIN & AGAIN!
Unlike those old ketuanan farts, royal household included, enslaved & selling the orang asal to the orang putih just to earn a few silver of farts!