The Iconology of Empire

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[a, b] Yu ji tu 禹跡圖(Map tracing the tracks of Yu the Great);

Hua yi tu 華夷圖 (Map of the Chinese and non-Chinese).
[c] Pingjiang tu 平江圖 (Map of Suzhou city).
[d, e, f] Dili tu 墜理圖 (Geographic Map of China); Tianwen tu 天文 圖 (Map of the heavens); Diwang shaoyun tu 帝王紹運圖 (The chronological table of Emperors).

SKU: 20503 Type:

[a, b] ANONYMOUS [c] Li Shoupeng [d, e,f] [Wang Zhiyuan after Huang Shang]
[a, b] Xi'an, c1900 [1136].
[c] Suzhou, [绍定二年, 1229]. [d, e, f] [Suzhou, 1247 but later].
Ink rubbings from stone steles.
[a, b] 800 by 790mm (31.5 by 31 inches); 790 by 780mm (31 by 30.75 inches).
[c] 2680 by 1365mm (105.5 by 53.75 inches).
[d, e, f] 1790 by 960mm (70.5 by 37.75 inches); 1810 by 985mm (71.25 by 38.75 inches); 1830 by 965mm (72 by 38 inches).
20503

To scale:

notes:

notes:

A collection of six stone stele rubbings comprising the earliest geographically accurate map of China, the first urban plan made within the realm, and the oldest stone-engraved celestial map of the Chinese heavens.

The original engravings were made between 1136 and 1247 during the Southern Song dynasty. Together they represent a comprehensive study of ancient Chinese cartographical rubbings.

Among the earliest techniques in the art of Chinese cartograp...

bibliography:

bibliography:

De Weerdt, 'Maps and Memory: Readings of Cartography in Twelfth- and Thirteenth-Century Song China', 'The International Journal for the History of Cartography', volume 61, part 2, pages 145–167 (2020); Smith, 'Mapping China and Managing the World; Culture, Cartography and Cosmology in Late Imperial Times', pages 56–58 (2013).

provenance:

provenance: