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When the atlas under discussion was printed in the years 1717–1721, the Qing Empire, founded in Manchuria, had consolidated military and administrative control over all the former Ming provinces within the Great Wall (historians call this ‘China proper’).
This paper aims to provide (i) a first detailed description of the map scroll’s layout, its materiality and content, (ii) an attempt to classify it among the ‘Qing court atlases’ and (iii) a discussion of the scroll’s date of production and origin. See full PDF. download Download PDF. Related papers.
12 Ιουν 2017 · Curiously, the atlas known as ‘Overview Maps of Imperial Territories’ or Huangyu quanlan tu 皇輿全覽圖 hardly rings a bell among historians of cartography. Yet, this enormous atlas of Qing China, printe...
20 Ιουν 2022 · Three enormous maps of China, created during the reign of three different emperors of the Qing dynasty, have now been made available in open access and are downloadable via Leiden University Libraries’ (UBL) Digital Collections.
13 Οκτ 2024 · The Qing dynasty, the last imperial dynasty of China, was established by the Manchus in 1636 and ruled China until its fall in 1912 following the Xinhai Revolution. Founded in Shenyang and expanding to Beijing in 1644, the Qing dynasty eventually assembled the territorial base for modern China, becoming the largest empire in Chinese history by ...
View PDF chevron_right. The fourth khan of the originally inner-Asian Manchus, Elhe Taifin (r.1661–1722), initiated a project to map his Daiqing Empire (1636–1912), of which a large part consisted of the Chinese territories. The resulting atlases, made up of individual.
This interactive Map Chat from the MacLean Collection contains thirty-two annotated trilingual toponyms out of over 230 marked in Manchu. Dr. Richard A. Pegg | Project Manager. Dr. Anne-Sophie Pratte | Author | MacLean Collection Map Fellow 2021. Andrew J. Reading | Imaging. Katie E. Osborne | Design & Development | MacLean Collection Intern.