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  1. 12 Ιουν 2017 · In the literature, the ‘Overview Maps of Imperial Territories’ or Huangyu quanlan tu 皇輿全覽圖, is mostly referred to as ‘the Jesuit atlas of China’. The reason is that this early eighteenth-century atlas of all Qing China’s territories plus Korea and Tibet is assumed to have resulted from European missionaries importing ...

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  2. 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’).

  3. Mapping the Qing Empire in the Eighteenth Century: Hand-drawn Maps from the ‘Qing Atlas Tradition’ at the Museum am Rothenbaum in Hamburg

  4. The Qing was a truly cosmopolitan empire that in its 249 years’ rule over China proper, including the Inner Asian borderland, brought long-term stability and harmony between the Han-Chinese and the ethnic-minority people in the Chinese Empire, which was rare in Chinese history.

  5. Qing Imperial Cartography. The aim of QingMaps is to create an interactive map analysis and research visualization tool for students and researchers. Three large atlases are now online and fully searchable.

  6. 2 Δεκ 2018 · This essay argues that the map was used in the Shenyang palace before 1644, the year when the Manchus conquered Beijing and established the Qing, China’s last ruling imperial dynasty, and...

  7. 29 Νοε 2013 · Their empire included lands that stretched far beyond the borders of the territory that was traditionally controlled by the Chinese state. The rulers of the Qing were the previously nomadic Manchus, who had invaded China from the north, causing the Chinese Ming dynasty (1368–1644) to fall.

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