Draft:Choi Afock

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Choi Afock
Choi Afock painted by Swedish artist Elias Martin alongside Aurora Taube and Olof Lindahl, 1787
Born1763
Occupation(s)Merchant, interpreter
Known forEarliest recorded Chinese person to visit Sweden

Choi Afock[a][1] also known as Choy Chun Ng[2] was a Chinese merchant and interpreter. He is the earliest recorded Chinese person to visit Sweden.

Early life and career[edit]

Born Choy Chun Ng sometime in 1763, Afock was a merchant from Guangzhou (then known as Canton[3]) in south-eastern China (then the Qing dynasty).

Fade into obscurity and rediscovery[edit]

Although Afock's visit and subsequent six-month stay in Sweden made him a well-known person in the country, his story would eventually fade into obscurity. He would only appear for the first time in Swedish literature in 1916, exactly 130 years after he initially arrived in the country, in the "Svenska folkets underbara öden" (The wonderful destinies of the Swedish people) by historian Carl Grimberg, in which Grimberg writes passingly about the first instance of a Chinese person visiting the country without mentioning Afock by name.[4]

It took more than 20 years before Afock was again mentioned in any academic literature, this time in a doctoral dissertation published in 1939 on art history, as he had been the subject of an etching by Swedish artist Johan Fredrik Martin (1755–1816). From 1939 to the early 1990s, Afock appeared sparingly in literature, being mentioned in an article published in the "Hudiksvallstidningen" (Hudiksvall Newspaper) in 1968, a biography of Count Knut Knutsson Posse (1755–1814) in published in 1971, a biography of Jean-Jacques De Geer [sv] (1737–1809) in 1987, and although he was not explicitly named, the travelogue of Chinese visitors to Sweden from the late 1880s that were published in a 1992 article written by Chinese historian Cai Hongsheng[4]:

It has been seen on a visitor’s book (autograph) in the Fan Lun (Falun) museum of iron work that a Chinese from Fujian who was a follower of their (Swedish) religion (Lutheran Church) visited this place in the 54th year of the reign of Qianlong (1789). This man should be the earliest (Chinese) visitor to Sweden.[5]

In 1998, Afock was the subject of a study by Swedish art historian Jan Wirgin in his book "Från Kina till Europa. Kinesiska konstföremål från de ostindiska kompaniernas tid" (From China to Europe: Chinese artefacts from the East India Company era), where he provided a detailed account of Afock's journey through Sweden as well as new sources.[6]

In 2005, Taiwanese historian Chen Kuo-tung writes about Afock in his book "東亞海域一千年" (A Thousand Years in the Seas of East Asia), comparing him with other Chinese who visited Europe around the 17th and 18th centuries. Chen also writes about the physical remnants of Afock's visit to Sweden consisting of paintings and etchings of his person as well as a porcelain plaque decorated with his name, located today in the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities in Stockholm.[7][8]

The second half of the 2010s saw an increased interest in Afock amongst Western academics. He was included in the 2015 book "This Home Is Not A Home: European Everyday Life in Canton and Macao 1730–1830" by Swedish historian Lisa Hellman, in which Hellman argues that Afock's visit to Sweden and his status as an "exotic novelty" aided in advancing the social status of his patron Olof Lindahl, a supercargo working for the Swedish East India Company, within Swedish high society.[9]

In 2016, Afock was also the subject of a study exploring the impact of Chinese goods and his visit on Swedish gendered relations by historian Jacqueline van Gent in her article published in the Scandinavian Journal of History.[10]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Also rendered as A-fuk.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Dalarnas hembygdsbok (in Swedish). Dalarnas fornminnes- och hembygdsförbund. 1931. ISBN 978-91-87466-78-6.
  2. ^ Åberg, Måns Ahlstedt (2023). ""My good friend the China-man". Afock – den förste kinesen i Sverige (1786)". Personhistorisk Tidskrift. 119 (2023:1): 1.
  3. ^ "Fahlu Weckoblad 1786-09-30" (in Swedish). 30 September 1786.
  4. ^ a b Åberg, Måns Ahlstedt (2023). ""My good friend the China-man". Afock – den förste kinesen i Sverige (1786)". Personhistorisk Tidskrift. 119 (2023:1): 2.
  5. ^ Hongsheng, Cai. Chinese Historical Accounts of Sweden and the Trading Activity of the Swedish East India Company in Canton in Qing Dynasty. in Johansson, Bengt. The Golden age of China trade: essays on the East India Companies' trade with China in the 18th century and the Swedish East Indiaman Götheborg (1992). Hong Kong: Viking Hong Kong Publications. ISBN 9627650021.
  6. ^ Östasiatiska Museet (1998). Wirgin, Jan (ed.). Från Kina till Europa: kinesiska konstföremål från de ostindiska kompaniernas tid. Östasiatiska Museets Utställningskatalog. Stockholm: Östasiatiska Museet. ISBN 978-91-7100-576-2.
  7. ^ Åberg, Måns Ahlstedt (2023). ""My good friend the China-man". Afock – den förste kinesen i Sverige (1786)". Personhistorisk Tidskrift. 119 (2023:1): 3.
  8. ^ Chen, Kuo-tung (2013). 東亞海域一千年 [A Thousand Years in the Seas of East Asia] (in Chinese). Taiwan. ISBN 9789573271925.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ Hellman, Lisa (2019). This house is not a home: European everyday life in Canton and Macao, 1730-1830. Studies in global social history. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-38454-5.
  10. ^ Van Gent, Jacqueline (2016-05-26). "Linnaeus' tea cup: Masculinities, affective networks and Chinese porcelain in 18th-century Sweden". Scandinavian Journal of History. 41 (3): 388–409. doi:10.1080/03468755.2016.1179836. ISSN 0346-8755. S2CID 219716096.