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Photo: Elizabeth Mann
Map of China
Photo: Elizabeth Mann

Map of China

Date1619
Label TextBesides being used for trade and travel, maps often carry ideological weight because geographic knowledge ultimately offers a means to control the world—to understand, describe, organize, navigate, and even exploit and conquer. This map focuses on China, Korea, and Japan and also includes the northern part of Luzon (today’s Philippines) and the Americas as if very close at upper right. Cartouches in Latin describe fantastical ideas about native cultures and technologies. Supposedly, the Chinese invented a wind-driven land chariot and the Japanese crucified criminals bound on a cross. In Europe, the golden age for the atlas began in the Netherlands and Italy, followed by German, French, and British cartographers. Naturally, Ottoman, Mughal, and Chinese mapmakers produced very different world views.
Object number48.127
ProvenanceFrance; John Howell, Books, San Francisco, California; Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, Washington, Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection, May 29, 1948
Photo CreditPhoto: Elizabeth Mann
Credit LineEugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Dimensions16 1/4 x 22 1/4 in. (41.28 x 56.52 cm)
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
French
1662
Object number: 48.121
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
French
ca. 1658
Object number: 48.122
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
Moullart-Sanson
ca. 1690
Object number: 48.110
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A. F. Zurneri
ca. 1700
Object number: 48.111
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
N. Sanson d'Abbeville
1656
Object number: 48.112
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
N. Sanson d'Abbeville
1656
Object number: 48.113
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
N. Sanson d'Abbeville
1656
Object number: 48.114
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
N. Sanson d'Abbeville
1656
Object number: 48.115
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
N. Sanson d'Abbeville
1656
Object number: 48.116
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
N. Sanson d'Abbeville
1650
Object number: 48.117
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
N. Sanson d'Abbeville
1658
Object number: 48.118
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
N. Sanson d'Abbeville
1658
Object number: 48.119