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London 1655, John Crook. Full new leather, raised bands, red label, pp.253-308, complete, engraved frontispiece and map, list of J. Crook titles at the end, 19.2 x 29.5 cm. very very clean no foxing, solid copy. FIRST EDITION S C A R C E . . *** **** *** . . A STUNNING ORIGINAL 1655 EDITION . . * SUTBITLE: cont. "Chief Cities of the Countries, for the Better Understanding of the Story. Written Originally in Latin this is an excellent primary narrative, quite readable. It covers the early history of China as known to foreigners." . * ENGRAVED ILLUSTRATIONS: Contains a lovely frontispiece portrait of the Manchu Emperor. With an excellent map of China from just North of the Great Wall, including the Great Wall, South showing all of the provinces of China, down to Yunnan, including the island of Hainan, Taiwan, Macau, Korea and Japan. . * BIOGRAPHY OF THE AUTHOR: Martini was born in Trento., in 1631 he entered the Austrian province of his order, where he studied mathematics under Athanasius Kircher in the Roman College, probably with the intention of being sent to China. He was a celebrated Jesuit. . *** He set out for China in 1640, and arrived in 1643. While there he made great use of his talents as missionary, scholar, writer and superior. In 1650 he was sent to Rome as procurator for the Chinese Mission, and took advantage of the long, adventurous voyage (going first to the Philippines, from thence on a Dutch privateer to Batavia, he reached Bergen in Norway on 31 August 1653), to sift his valuable historical and cartographical data on China. During his sojourn in Europe the works were printed that made his name so famous. . *** In 1658 he returned with provisionally favorable instructions on the question of ritual to China, where he labored until his death in Hangzhou in 1661. According to the attestation of P, Prosper Intorcetta (Litt. Annuae, 1861) his body was found un-decayed twenty years after; it became a long-standing object of cult not only for Christians, until in 1877, suspecting idolatry, the hierarchy had it buried again. Ferdinand von Richthofen calls Martini "the leading geographer of the Chinese mission, one who was unexcelled and hardly equaled, during the eighteenth century . There was no other missionary, either before or after, who made such diligent use of his time in acquiring information about the country." (China, I, 674 sq.) Extracted from Wikipedia. . * The author was also known as Martino Martini and was a celebrated Jesuit cartographer who did one of the earliest and surely most important atlas on China. A most early and RARE primary resource on China. . *** HIS WRITINGS: Martini's most important work is Novus Atlas Sinensis (Amsterdam 1655), with 17 maps and 171 pages of text, a work which is, according to Richthofen, "the most complete geographical description of China that we possess, and through which Martini has become the father of geographical learning on China". . *** Of the great chronological work which Martini had planned, and which was to comprise the whole Chinese history from the earliest age, only the first part appeared: Sinicæ Historiæ Decas Prima (Munich 1658), which reached until the birth of Jesus. . *** His De Bello Tartarico Historia (Anvers 1654) is also important as Chinese history, for Martini himself had lived through the frightful occurrences which brought about the overthrow of the ancient Ming dynasty. The works have been repeatedly published and translated into different languages. . *** Interesting as missionary history is his Brevis Relatio de Numero et Qualitate Christianorum apud Sinas (Brussels 1654). . *** Besides these, Martini wrote a series of theological and apologetical works in Chinese, including a De Amicitia (Hangzhou 1661) that could have been the first anthology of Western authors available in China (Martini's selection fished mainly into Roman and Greek writings). Several works, among them a Chinese translation of the works of Suarez, still exist in his.
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