복건총병 유자고의 몰락과 해방 외주화의 딜레마The Fall of Yu Zigao and the Dilemma of Outsourced Maritime Defense
- Other Titles
- The Fall of Yu Zigao and the Dilemma of Outsourced Maritime Defense
- Authors
- 채경수
- Issue Date
- Dec-2025
- Publisher
- 동양사학회
- Keywords
- outsourced maritime defense; Yu Zigao; Zheng Zhilong; Xu Xinsu; Dutch East India Company (VOC); 海防外包化; 俞咨皋; 郑芝龙; 许心素; 荷兰东印度公司; 해방 외주화; 유자고; 정지룡; 허심소; 네덜란드동인도회사
- Citation
- 동양사학연구, no.173, pp 255 - 303
- Pages
- 49
- Indexed
- KCI
- Journal Title
- 동양사학연구
- Number
- 173
- Start Page
- 255
- End Page
- 303
- URI
- https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/82006
- ISSN
- 1226-1270
2173-8259
- Abstract
- This study examines the structural problems inherent in the operation of maritime security along the Fujian coast in the late Ming dynasty through the activities and eventual downfall of Yu Zigao (兪咨皐), the Fujian regional commander-in-chief. It conceptualizes these problems as a “dilemma of outsourced maritime defense.” The term “outsourced maritime defense” does not imply that the Ming state deliberately adopted outsourcing as a formal policy. Rather, it serves as an analytical device to capture the historical process through which maritime defense increasingly took on the characteristics of outsourcing as a result of the repeated use of the strategy known as “using pirates to suppress pirates” (yong zei gong zei 用賊攻賊).
From the late sixteenth century onward, the Ming empire persistently relied on the incorporation of pirate forces into its military apparatus in response to growing maritime security threats under conditions of fiscal and military constraint. Contemporary sources referred to this approach as yi zei gong zei (以賊攻賊) or yong zei gong zei. While this strategy often proved effective in the short term, this study argues that it contained an inherent structural dilemma: once control over incorporated pirate forces weakened, the entire maritime defense system was exposed to systemic instability.
After assuming office as Vice Commander of the Southern Fujian Route in 1623 (Tianqi 3), Yu Zigao played a central role in directing the Penghu campaign. Through informal negotiations mediated by the merchant Li Dan (李旦) and the broker Xu Xinsu (許心素), he successfully compelled the Dutch East India Company (VOC) to withdraw from Penghu. Following his promotion to Fujian Commander-in-Chief, Yu continued to rely on unofficial networks involving the VOC and Chinese smugglers and pirate groups to maintain maritime security. The incorporation of the Yang Liu (楊六) group was widely regarded as a major success of this approach.
However, from 1627 onward, large-scale offensives launched by the Zheng Zhilong (鄭芝龍) group led to the rapid collapse of Yu Zigao’s system. This collapse was not merely the result of military failure but rather the manifestation of structural vulnerabilities inherent in a maritime defense regime heavily dependent on collaboration with pirate forces. In moments of crisis, incorporated pirate groups failed to fulfill their expected roles, while informal negotiations and transactional security arrangements exacerbated, rather than mitigated, systemic instability.
The Ming court’s subsequent decision to rely once again on the incorporation of Zheng Zhilong’s forces demonstrates that the dilemma of outsourced maritime defense was not the consequence of an individual commander’s misconduct or incompetence. Instead, it was a repeatedly reproduced outcome arising from the structural constraints faced by the late Ming maritime security system. Through this case, the present study reexamines the structural vulnerabilities of Ming maritime defense and the limitations that emerged from them.
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