TheEmpresa de China ("China enterprise") was a long-time projected conquest ofChina by theSpanish Empire. Proposed repeatedly through the16th century as a natural culmination of the conquest of thePhilippines, it involved the invasion and assimilation of theMing dynasty by a coalition that would includeSpaniards,Portuguese,Spanish subjects of Spanish Philippines andJapanese allies from theToyotomi regency, as well as potential masses of ethnicChinese allies.[1][2][3]
Military conquest of China appeared viable by the reports of Christian missionaries and ambassadors, who described the Ming population as demobilized, inefficiently administered and easy to sublevate against their own governors, offering a situation similar to those of theAztec andInca empires where control of the territory could be wrested away. Once conquered, the plan included mass evangelizing activities and the promotion ofmestizaje between Iberians and Chinese, hoping to turn China into a source of strength to extend Hispanic control and Christianity across all ofAsia. In a best case scenario, the Spanish Empire could aspire to form an oriental theater in theOttoman–Habsburg wars.[4]
The enterprise was formulated by several figures of theHispanic Monarchy, but its main driving force would be a sector of theSociety of Jesus led byAlonzo Sánchez, who clashed against other churchmen over theVitorian legitimacy of a new conquest. KingPhilip II allowed in 1588 the founding of an official council, theJunta de la Empresa de China, but the failure of the Spanish Armada the same year caused the project to be abandoned. The invasion of China briefly resurfaced later, with a new project to topple the Toyotomi regency and conquer Japan with the help of its own native uprising, potentially includingTokugawa Ieyasu, after which the Japanese armies would be used against China.
The idea of expanding the Spanish Empire to China was first formulated in 1526 byHernán Cortés, conqueror of theAztec Empire, who sent a letter to KingCharles V suggesting to begin the conquest of theMoluccas and China from their new ports in the Pacific coast ofNew Spain.[5][3] However, due to the failure of the expeditions ofGarcía Jofre de Loaísa andÁlvaro de Saavedra Cerón, the latter being sent by Cortés himself to rescue the survivors of the former, Charles abandoned his plans for the Pacific Ocean and forfeited his rights over Moluccas to thekingdom of Portugal in theTreaty of Zaragoza.[5]
Spanish expansion across the Pacific came finally with the expedition ofMiguel López de Legazpi and the discovery of thetornaviaje (return route from the Philippines to Mexico) by his navigatorAndrés de Urdaneta, which allowed to link the newly conqueredPhilippines to New Spain. Although the main goal was gaining access to the Asianspice trade, many of the expeditioners were fresh from the conquest of America and saw the archipelago as the first step to initiate the conquest of the nearby China.[5] As small contingents of Spaniards had been enough to kickstart the fall of the Aztec and Inca empires with native help, they believed the same scheme could be applied to China by securing the help of local ethnic Chinese, Japanese and Austronesian allies.[6] Legazpi himself choseManila overCebú as the Spanish base of operations due to its closeness to the Chinese trade routes.[5]
An early report was sent to ViceroyMartín Enríquez de Almanza byMartín de Rada, one of the first western ambassadors to mainland China, in 1569. After his visit to the country, Rada stated that, even if China was densely populated, its population was not warlike and depended heavily on their numbers and fortifications for defense, hence it would not be necessary to gather a large Spanish army to subdue them.[5][3] However, Rada advised for a campaign as peaceful as possible, based on persuasion and evangelization.[3]
In 1575, after theBattle of Manila against the Chinese pirateLimahong, the Spanish Empire and the Ming dynasty built diplomatic bridges. Martín de Rada was sent toFujian as part of a delegation with the goal of negotiating a Spanish settlement in Chinese soil like thePortuguese Macau.[5] The project was fruitless, after which the governor of the Philippines,Francisco de Sande, opted to send letters to KingPhilip II proposing to attack China,[7][8] claiming that 4,000-6,000 soldiers would suffice and that the effort would be helped by the tyranny to which the Chinese were subjected.[5][6] However, Philip stated in 1577 that such plan was not convenient at the moment and ordered Sande to cultivate the Ming's friendship.[6] A similar suggestion reached Spain the following year by the hand of Diego García de Palacio,oídor ofGuatemala, who proposed to begin a military route from Spain to the Philippines throughHonduras, hoping to build a garrison strong enough to pacify the archipelago and make possible to take China as well. His plans were ignored.[5] Sande's successorGonzalo Ronquillo de Peñalosa also revisited the enterprise.[9]
TheEmpresa de China received a religious and political push from the Manila Synode, and in particular of the controversialJesuit and diplomatAlonzo Sánchez,[10][6] who visited the country in 1582 to confirm the loyalty of Macau after thedynastic union of Spain and Portugal.[10] Sánchez suffered and witnessed arrests by the Chinese authorities, who were angry at not having been properly informed of the union, and after his return the following year, he was of the belief that only through military force Christianity would thrive in China.[5][10]
Sánchez returned in time to participate in the third council of the synod, in 1583, where he shared the possibility of a conquest with BishopDomingo de Salazar and missionary Antonio Sedeño, helped by a state of the local economy bad enough to encourage the possibility of expansion.[5][10] Salazar brought to the tableFrancisco de Vitoria's thesis aboutjust war, arguing that China had dealt enough abuse to Christians to justify a conflict. He collected reports that Chinese authorities were obstructing preaching activity, and also brought attestations from eight Spanish and Portuguese navigators mistreated in their contact with Chinese.[5][11][2] Salazar gave also strategic suggestions, proposing to draw the help of Japan through their local network of Portuguese Jesuits, as well as confiscating the Chinese merchant ships in Manila to fund the initial war effort. However, by carefully following Vitoria's theories, he considered it was soon to decide whether the conquest was legitimated or not.[12] The conclusions were contained in a document sent to King Philip.[13]
Adding to those plans, the superior of the Jesuit mission in Japan,Francisco Cabral, informed that the domination of China would bring untold benefit of both material and spiritual nature, for which the existent Chinese imperial administration would be invaluable once assimilated.[14] Based on his own experiences in Macau, he stated that the country was badly defended, and its population was prone to revolt against themandarins that oppressed them, making it so that 10.000 Iberian soldiers would be enough for the invasion, joined by 2,000 Japanese soldiers he would recruit thanks to his order's contacts. He also offered himself as a spy to prepare the campaign, including also the services ofMatteo Ricci andMichele Ruggieri.[15] Cabral believed the conquest would finish itself as soon as they captured theWanli Emperor inBeijing.[2] Juan Bautista Román also believed to be able to gather 7,000 Japanese Christian warriors.[16]
As the project advanced, the 1586Memorial General of the Philippines included a document written by Sánchez, titledDe la entrada de China en particular, where he collected an immensely detailed treatment of the conquest of China and the future government of the conquered lands.[5] The plan involved to gather an armada led by the governor of the Philippines, containing 10,000-12,000 Iberian soldiers, 6,000Visayans and 5,000 Japanese recruited inNagasaki, assisted by Jesuits due to their knowledge of the lands, and endowed with a purse of 200.000 pesos to strategically bribe mandarins and pay mercenaries. The assault would be two-pronged, with the Castilians invading China throughFujian and the Portuguese doing the same throughGuangdong.[17][2] Ricci and Ruggieri would be previously recalled to serve as consultants and negotiators with the Chinese authorities,[18] and the submission of the latter would be surveyed under the Vitorian policies of preventing unnecessary violence and abuse of the civilian population.[19][2]
Once the country was subjected to Spanish control, they would proceed to its Christianization, foundingencomiendas and nobiliary properties, and building Christian infrastructure likehospitals,universities and monasteries, helped by a plan of mestizaje that would promoteinterracial marriage between Iberian conquistadors and Chinese women.[19] Success would mean an enormous advance for the Hispanicuniversal monarchy, as a Spanish China would become an invaluable base to extend their control acrossSoutheast Asia and theIndian Ocean, lending forces to subdue and ChristianizeCochinchina,Siam,Kampuchea,India,Borneo,Sumatra, Moluccas and other lands, to the point of making it possible to gather regional allies against theOttoman Empire and opening an eastern front against it.[4]
1587 saw preparations for war in Manila, building fortifications under Sedeño's supervision and cramming weapons and supplies.[4][6] The same year, fortuitously, a Japanese delegation came fromHirado under the command ofKonishi Yukinaga, a Japanese Christian and grand admiral ofToyotomi Hideyoshi, to offer 6,000 vassals and "all the people and soldiers [Spain] asked" to collaborate with any invasion against China, Borneo, Siam or Moluccas.[4][20]
Sánchez' and Salazar's project, however, found opposition in another Jesuitic current headed byAlessandro Valignano and Superior GeneralClaudio Acquaviva, who saw theEmpresa de China as an unjustified violation of the Christian rule of evangelizing peacefully.[10] Portuguese Jesuits also saw it as a danger to their kingdom's economic interests.[2] When Sánchez sailed off to Spain in June 1586 in order to inform about the state of the Philippines, and secretly to address the realization of theEmpresa, Acquaviva assigned him supervision under renowned theologian and historianJosé de Acosta, who was ordered to refute his philosophical bases. Acosta wrote an entire treaty utilizing Francisco de Vitoria's thesis to criticize the invasion of China.[21][5] The protests, added to Sánchez's own actions in New Spain, where he worked to stop a cadre ofDominican missionaries from reaching China in order not to have them obstructing the warring effort, ended up driving a wedge between Salazar and him.[5][22][23]
Sánchez could meet Philip II in December 1587 and, despite Acosta's presence, found the chance to send the king a copy of his document. His aspirations were successful and, as soon as the preparations of theSpanish Armada allowed it, Philip authorized the creation of an officialJunta para la Empresa de China in March 1588.[24][25] The council was composed by theConsejo de Indias chairman Hernando de Vega y Fonseca, General Alonso de Vargas, Admiral Joan de Cardona i Requesens, royal secretaries Juan de Idiáquez y Olazábal andCristóbal de Moura, inquisitor Pedro Moya and four members of the Castilian Council of War.[2] Its development, however, was interrupted by the news of the Armada's failure in August, in midst of new protests by Dominicans and Franciscans that believed the project endangered their own workings. Ultimately, royal interest for theEmpresa waned for good.[26][25][3]
The new governor of the Philippines,Gómez Pérez das Mariñas, was chosen by Sánchez's suggestion, but he received explicit orders to avoid military conflict with China.[2] On the opposite, he became entangled in diplomatic tension against Toyotomi, who seemed to demand vassalage from the Spanish Philippines for hisinvasion of Korea, and whom local spies attributed the idea to invade the Philippines in case of a negative answer.[27] Although this twist never happened, duringJuan Cobo's embassy Das Mariñas was advised to seek an alliance with China against Japan and not vice versa.[28] When Das Mariñas was succeeded by his sonLuis, the conquest of China was briefly revived in an indirect way. The priest Martín de la Ascensión proposed an equally complex plan to invade Japan, where native allies could be easily found too, and whose armies, once pledged to the Hispanic Monarchy, could be used in campaigns against China and other nearby lands. A considered local ally, aside from the usual Japanese Christians, was the lord later known asTokugawa Ieyasu.[29] TheSan Felipe incident and its consequences, however, buried the project.[30]