New atlas of China, Chinese Tartary and Tibet. drawn up by Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d’Anville. The first edition of "the principal cartographic authority on China during the 18th century". It was the second major atlas of China produced in Europe following the Martini/ Blaeu Novus Atlas Sinensis 1655. Atlas composed of general & special maps of these countries, as well as the map of the Kingdom of Korea. Includes engraved title page, with index “Liste et ordre des cartes comprises dans cet atlas”,12 pages of descriptive text by a Swedish officer and 42 engraved maps, with decorative cartouches and compass roses. Some maps bound out of sequence, some folded and some outline hand color. Descriptive text on some maps. Includes a general map of Tibet together with 9 regional maps and 12 maps of Chinese Tartary. Maps 3, 11, 12 show Great Wall of China. Map 18 shows Japan. Maps show topography, vegetation, waterways, ports, roads. Some maps include notes. Relief shown pictorially. D'Anville's maps also appeared in du Halde's1732 "Description geographique historique...de l'Empire de la Chine et de la Tartarie Chinoise." Based on Jesuit sources, D'Anville's maps remained the definitive European rendering of China's provinces until the end of the 19th century. "The Kangxi Emperor employed Jesuit brothers (1708–18) to produce maps of the provinces of China using a combination
of Western and Chinese survey methods. The maps were completed by 1721. They were sent back to Europe and
became the basis for maps of China produced by Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d’Anville in 1735. The main changes from
traditional Chinese mapping were to use latitude and longitude as primary coordinates, map them using a spherical
projection, and use astronomical measurements of latitude and longitude to establish baselines. Changes in latitude and
longitude were found using traditional metric survey and relationships between distance north–south and latitude and
distance east–west and longitude to convert to degrees." (David L.B. Jung) See full article by Jung here
https://rumsey3.s3.
pub_note
New atlas of China, Chinese Tartary and Tibet. drawn up by Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d’Anville. The first edition of "the principal cartographic authority on China during the 18th century". It was the second major atlas of China produced in Europe following the Martini/ Blaeu Novus Atlas Sinensis 1655. Atlas composed of general & special maps of these countries, as well as the map of the Kingdom of Korea. Includes engraved title page, with index “Liste et ordre des cartes comprises dans cet atlas”,12 pages of descriptive text by a Swedish officer and 42 engraved maps, with decorative cartouches and compass roses. Some maps bound out of sequence, some folded and some outline hand color. Descriptive text on some maps. Includes a general map of Tibet together with 9 regional maps and 12 maps of Chinese Tartary. Maps 3, 11, 12 show Great Wall of China. Map 18 shows Japan. Maps show topography, vegetation, waterways, ports, roads. Some maps include notes. Relief shown pictorially. D'Anville's maps also appeared in du Halde's1732 "Description geographique historique...de l'Empire de la Chine et de la Tartarie Chinoise." Based on Jesuit sources, D'Anville's maps remained the definitive European rendering of China's provinces until the end of the 19th century. "The Kangxi Emperor employed Jesuit brothers (1708–18) to produce maps of the provinces of China using a combination
of Western and Chinese survey methods. The maps were completed by 1721. They were sent back to Europe and
became the basis for maps of China produced by Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d’Anville in 1735. The main changes from
traditional Chinese mapping were to use latitude and longitude as primary coordinates, map them using a spherical
projection, and use astronomical measurements of latitude and longitude to establish baselines. Changes in latitude and
longitude were found using traditional metric survey and relationships between distance north–south and latitude and
distance east–west and longitude to convert to degrees." (David L.B. Jung) See full article by Jung here https://rumsey3.s3.amazonaws.com/images/KangxiMap.pdf
Pub Note
false