Talk:The General Taiwan Map of Kangxi
General Taiwan Map of Kangxi
[edit]The General Taiwan Map of Kangxi is the earliest known surviving single scroll map of
Taiwan in China, with a horizontal length of 536 cm and a vertical width of 66 cm. This
map was drawn during the Kangxi period of the Qing Dynasty. The exact year of the
drawing is unknown. However, scholars generally agree that it was during the 38th to
43rd (1699-1704) year of the Kangxi period of the Qing Dynasty (1). The Qing court
commissioned Western missionaries to measure the topography of Taiwan, which Chinese
landscape painters then drew (2).
The General Taiwan Map of Kangxi is a long horizontal scroll drawn with traditional
Chinese landscape techniques. The map presents a bird’s-eye view of western Taiwan
from west to east over the Taiwan Strait, with north on the left and south on the right. The
map’s content is a realistic depiction of the 17 th and 18 th centuries, including the
mountainous terrain and rivers in western Taiwan from north to south, the deployment of
administrative armaments, roads, urban and rural life, and other landscapes. This map is
the epitome of social and cultural life in Taiwan during this period and the knowledge of
Taiwan’s geography in the early Qing Dynasty. It also serves as a geographic, armament,
and custom map. It is an essential collection of the National Taiwan Museum (3)(4).
This map was purchased by the Governor-General of Taiwan from the Cheng family in
Hsinchu in 1902 (Meiji year 35) during the Japanese rule in Taiwan as a collection of the
National monument of Taiwan. After the end of the Second Sino-Japanese War, the
Government of the Republic of China took over Taiwan; the collections of other Taiwan
Governor’s Palace Museums were taken over by the National Taiwan Museum (5). 126yt (talk) 07:43, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
- This is a duplicate of the Kangxi Taiwan map article. Dave-okanagan (talk) 19:22, 13 November 2024 (UTC)