C1662

Qveicheu imperii sinarvm Provincia decimaqvarta

Mapmaker:

Joan Blaeu (1596 - 1673)

Map of Qveichev fourteenth province of China, present day Guizhou, a mountainous province in southwest China, based on information provided by the Jesuit missionary, Martino Martini (1614-1661) to Blaeu. The map extends from Poyang Lake in the north to Longnan … Read Full Description

$A 1,350

In stock

S/N: NASI-009-ASI-CHI–229000
(RW05-B)
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Details

Full Title:

Qveicheu imperii sinarvm Provincia decimaqvarta

Date:

C1662

Mapmaker:

Joan Blaeu (1596 - 1673)

Condition:

Repaired tear at lower left sheet edge, not affecting engraved area, othewise in good condition with centre fold as issued.

Technique:

Original hand coloured copper engraving.

Image Size: 

485mm 
x 400mm
AUTHENTICITY
Qveicheu imperii sinarvm Provincia decimaqvarta - Antique Map from 1662

Genuine antique
dated:

1662

Description:

Map of Qveichev fourteenth province of China, present day Guizhou, a mountainous province in southwest China, based on information provided by the Jesuit missionary, Martino Martini (1614-1661) to Blaeu. The map extends from Poyang Lake in the north to Longnan county in the south and west to Pingxiang. 

Martini’s most important work is Novus Atlas Sinensis, which appeared as part of volume 10 of Joan Blaeu’s Atlas Maior (Amsterdam 1655). This work, a folio with 17 maps and 171 pages of text was, the most complete geographical description of China at the time.

From the Spanish edition of Blaeu’s, Novus atlas sinensis a Martino Martinus, Soc. Iesu

Reference: Koeman Vol I, BI 56, p.226, 117.  [432] Spanish text.

Mapmaker:

Martino Martini (1614-1661)

Martino Martini, Wei Kuangguo his Chinese name, was a Jesuit missionary and a distinguished scientist – mathematician, historian and cartographer – who lived and worked in China in the 1600s.

He set out for China in 1640, and arrived in Portuguese Macau in 1642 where he studied Chinese for some time. In 1643 he crossed the border and settled in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, from where he did much traveling in view of gathering scientific information, especially on the geography of the Chinese empire: he visited several provinces, as well as Peking and the Great Wall. He made great use of his talents as missionary, scholar, writer and superior.

In 1651 Martini left China for Rome as the Delegate of the Chinese Mission Superior, returning in 1658, after a most difficult journey. He was again involved in pastoral and missionary activities in the Hangzhou area where he built a three naved church that was considered to be one of the most beautiful of the country (1659–61).

He died of cholera in 1661.

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