Map of China produced by Qianlong’s Imperial Secretariat Qing Qianlong Neifu Yutu [Map of China Produced by Qianlong’s Imperial Secretariat]. Beijing: the Palace Museum, 1760 [but reprinted in 1932]. Extremely important and comprehensive 1932 reprint of this Qianlong period comprehensive map of China and Central Asia, one of only about 100 copies printed. Following his grandfather Emperor Kangxi’s map survey project conducted during 1708-1719, Emperor Qianlong initiated another ambitious geographical survey during 1756-1760, which mainly focused on the northwestern territory conquered by the Qing court during 1755-1758. The major surveyors include He Guozong (?-1767), P. Michel Benoit (1715-1774) and Antoine Gaubil (1689-1759). The other parts of the map were based on Huangyu Quanlan Tu (Overview Atlas of Imperial Territories; see lot 162 for a copy of this map) accomplished during the Kangxi period. The original of the present lot was copperplate, named Huangyu Quantu (Complete Atlas of Imperial Territories) and completed in 1760 with all the 100 copies stored in the collection of Qianlong’s Imperial Secretariat. Few people had the chance to see the maps at that time. It is widely known as Qianlong Shisanpai Tu (Qianlong’s Thirteen-row Map), because the whole map contains thirteen rows, with the title and inscription leaves excluded. In 1925, the copperplate map was rediscovered in the Palace Museum and reprinted in 1932, with two prefaces added. The map centres on China, the westmost longitude is 40°E and the northernmost is 80°. It’s bonded on the east by the Sakhalin, to the south by the Hainan Island, and to the west by the Baltic Sea, Mediterranean Sea and Red Sea. This map was regarded by the renowned historian of Chinese science and technology, Joseph Needham (1990-1995), as the best map produced in Asia at that time, which was of even better accuracy than maps produced in Europe, remarkable at a time of social upheaval and widespread poverty in China. Another copy of the atlas is in the collection of the National Library of China. Lithographic atlas of China, comprising 115 map-sheets printed on rectos only. The map, if assembled, contains 14 rows with the title leaf and 5 preface leaves as the first row (individual sheets are approximately 460 x 750mm each); housed in a 830 x 530mm case, the top and sides of which wrapped with blue brocade decorated with five-claw dragon pattern and inside wrapped with yellow brocade lining. Texts in Chinese. A seal of the Palace Museum, Beijing at the lower left section of the second leaf. The map is set in accurate meridian and parallel lines, latitude and longitude. Numbering printed at either the upper left or upper right corner of each leaf. Profusion of place names. Red ballpen emphasis marks on some leaves. (Disbound, originally bound with string, some light creasing and occasional spotting or pale stains, title leaf with a 90mm tear starting from the middle of the right edge and some light spotting, the fourth leaf to the right at the 11th row with a 120 mm tear starting from the right side. The third leaf of the 13th row, being the final one of the album, with some wear and soiling.
Map of China produced by Qianlong’s Imperial Secretariat Qing Qianlong Neifu Yutu [Map of China Produced by Qianlong’s Imperial Secretariat]. Beijing: the Palace Museum, 1760 [but reprinted in 1932]. Extremely important and comprehensive 1932 reprint of this Qianlong period comprehensive map of China and Central Asia, one of only about 100 copies printed. Following his grandfather Emperor Kangxi’s map survey project conducted during 1708-1719, Emperor Qianlong initiated another ambitious geographical survey during 1756-1760, which mainly focused on the northwestern territory conquered by the Qing court during 1755-1758. The major surveyors include He Guozong (?-1767), P. Michel Benoit (1715-1774) and Antoine Gaubil (1689-1759). The other parts of the map were based on Huangyu Quanlan Tu (Overview Atlas of Imperial Territories; see lot 162 for a copy of this map) accomplished during the Kangxi period. The original of the present lot was copperplate, named Huangyu Quantu (Complete Atlas of Imperial Territories) and completed in 1760 with all the 100 copies stored in the collection of Qianlong’s Imperial Secretariat. Few people had the chance to see the maps at that time. It is widely known as Qianlong Shisanpai Tu (Qianlong’s Thirteen-row Map), because the whole map contains thirteen rows, with the title and inscription leaves excluded. In 1925, the copperplate map was rediscovered in the Palace Museum and reprinted in 1932, with two prefaces added. The map centres on China, the westmost longitude is 40°E and the northernmost is 80°. It’s bonded on the east by the Sakhalin, to the south by the Hainan Island, and to the west by the Baltic Sea, Mediterranean Sea and Red Sea. This map was regarded by the renowned historian of Chinese science and technology, Joseph Needham (1990-1995), as the best map produced in Asia at that time, which was of even better accuracy than maps produced in Europe, remarkable at a time of social upheaval and widespread poverty in China. Another copy of the atlas is in the collection of the National Library of China. Lithographic atlas of China, comprising 115 map-sheets printed on rectos only. The map, if assembled, contains 14 rows with the title leaf and 5 preface leaves as the first row (individual sheets are approximately 460 x 750mm each); housed in a 830 x 530mm case, the top and sides of which wrapped with blue brocade decorated with five-claw dragon pattern and inside wrapped with yellow brocade lining. Texts in Chinese. A seal of the Palace Museum, Beijing at the lower left section of the second leaf. The map is set in accurate meridian and parallel lines, latitude and longitude. Numbering printed at either the upper left or upper right corner of each leaf. Profusion of place names. Red ballpen emphasis marks on some leaves. (Disbound, originally bound with string, some light creasing and occasional spotting or pale stains, title leaf with a 90mm tear starting from the middle of the right edge and some light spotting, the fourth leaf to the right at the 11th row with a 120 mm tear starting from the right side. The third leaf of the 13th row, being the final one of the album, with some wear and soiling.
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