A fine example of the first edition of Du Halde’s “encyclopedic survey of China”
Description Geographique Historique, Chronologique, Politique, et Physique de l'Empire de la Chine.
Paris,
P.G. Lemercier,
1735
Four volumes, folio (430 by 285mm), 65 plates and engraved maps, mostly folding or double-page, full contemporary speckled calf, spine in seven compartments separated by raised bands, lavishly gilt.
12641
notes:
A fine example of the first edition of du Halde's "encyclopedic survey of China" (Lust), and one of the earliest European sources on Chinese ceramics.
Du Halde, who became a Jesuit priest in 1708, was entrusted by his superiors to edit the published and manuscript accounts of Jesuit travellers in China. The present work records the narratives of 27 of these missionaries. The narratives cover every aspect of Chinese society, from the language to the production of ...
Du Halde, who became a Jesuit priest in 1708, was entrusted by his superiors to edit the published and manuscript accounts of Jesuit travellers in China. The present work records the narratives of 27 of these missionaries. The narratives cover every aspect of Chinese society, from the language to the production of ...
bibliography:
Augustin de Backer and Carlos Sommervogel, Bibliothèque des écrivains de la Compagnie de Jésus, (Liège: L. Grandmont-Donders, 1869-1876) IV, 35; Brunet II, 870; Cordier Sinica I, 45-48; John Lust, Western Books on China Published up to 1850 (London: Bamboo, 1987), 12; A.H. Rowbotham, "The Impact of Confucianism on Seventeenth Century Europe", The Journal of Asian Studies 4 (1945); Seymour Schwarz and Ralph E. Ehrenberg, The Mapping of America (London: Wellfleet Press, 1980).
provenance:
Bookplate of the Chateau de Menneval, Normandy.
Greenwood’s large-scale map of Lancashire
Half a tent is better than none…
The first complete geological map of France
The final battle in the Trafalgar campaign
The first atlas printed in Venice, the first wholly printed in colours, incorporating the first map to indicate Japan, the second map in a Ptolemaic atlas to show America.
Nolli’s fine plan of Rome
John Ainslie’s Landmark Map of Scotland
Silicon Valley in 1992
Nautical instrument maker’s shop sign
Sydney Harbour during the Gold Rush
The Capital of Prussia
The search for black gold continues
A fine and detailed plan of early Victorian London
One of the first sea charts of north-east Asia
Stanford’s map of North West India
Cuba and Jamaica 




