Publication Date: 1729
Seller: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Map First Edition
1st Edition. Very good. Light wear along original fold lines. Light foxing in margins. Size 8.75 x 8 Inches. This is Joseph Stöcklein's c. 1729 map of China, prepared for his Der Neue Welt-bott . It was an important piece of early cultural exchange between China and Europe, which helped spur the Enlightenment. A Closer Look This map covers the provinces of 'China Proper,' consistent with the territory of the Ming Dynasty, which was deposed and replaced by the Manchu Qing Dynasty in 1644. Provinces are outlined in hand color, with mountains, major waterways, and large cities noted with Latinized placenames: Pekim (Beijing), Quamcheu (Guangzhou), Sigan (Xi'an), and so on. The sites of Jesuit missions and churches, including three in Beijing, are recorded with crosses. Around the perimeter of China, the Gobi Desert, the Great Wall of China, neighboring kingdoms, and the location of the death of Francis Xavier on the coastal island of Shangchuan (Sancian) are indicated, as is the location of an 8th-century Nestorian Stele discovered in Shanxi Province in 1625, tracing the early history of Christianity in China. South of China, Tonkin and Cochinchina are noted as having many Jesuits. Early Jesuit Missions to China Jesuit missionaries arrived in China in the early seventeenth century and were generally distrusted due to their foreign religion, but were allowed to stay in Beijing and several other cities, construct churches and render services that the emperor and his advisors deemed useful. In particular, the Jesuits were great mathematicians, astronomers, painters, musicians, translators, and manufacturers of mechanical devices like clocks. At the same time, many Jesuits mastered Chinese and, in tandem with Chinese associates (some of whom also became Jesuits), translated classical texts of Chinese civilization into Latin and other Western languages (Philippe Couplet, for whom the first edition of this map was prepared, published the Confucius Sinarum Philosophus , an early abridged translation of the Confucian Classics). In the realm of cartography, they synthesized Chinese and Western cartographic knowledge and helped the Qing Dynasty undertake a survey of their vast realm in the early 18th century. The Jesuits' translation of Chinese thought for a European audience had a notable impact. European intellectuals were deeply curious about China and often incorporated the information they received about it into their developing thought systems. For instance, Voltaire saw China as an ideal secular state, unencumbered by religious superstition and driven by rationality and ethics, Leibniz viewed ancient Chinese civilization, particularly the Yijing , as an antecedent to his own mathematical and philosophical system, and the French physiocrats looked to China as a model for an agrarian economic system. Publication History and Census This map was originally engraved by François de Louvemont in 1686 and appeared in Philippe Couplet's Tabula Chronologica Monarchiae Sinicae and in his Confucius Sinarum Philosophus , as well as Jean-Baptiste Nolin's Cartes generales des Royaumes de l'Europe et des particuliers de France , in each case with text below the map. The present printing of the map appeared in Joseph Stöcklein's Der Neue Welt-bott (also known as Allerhand so lehr-als geist-reiche Brief, Schrifften und Reis- Beschreibungen, welche von denen Missionariis der Gesellschaft Jesu ), which adds a page notation ('Zum XII. Theil. Pag. i.') between Taiwan and the Philippines and eliminates the text at the bottom of the sheet. This printing of the map is exceptionally rare. We only find it independently cataloged with the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Library (though the use of the same title in earlier printings means that other examples may exist but be labeled as Nolin's / Couplet's). At the same time, the entire Neue Welt-bott is more widely distributed in institutional collections. References: OCLC 10796249562.