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{{short description|Book by Athanasius Kircher}} {{short description|Book by Athanasius Kircher}}
{{italic title}} {{italic title}}
] ], depicting ] and ]{{sfnp|Kircher|1667|loc=Frontispiece}}]]


'''{{lang|la|China Illustrata}}''' (] for "China Illustrated") is the 1667 published book written by the ] ] (1602–1680) that compiles the 17th-century European knowledge on the ] and its neighboring countries. '''{{lang|la|China Illustrata}}''' (] for "China Illustrated") is a book published in 1667 by the ] ] (1602–1680). Principally drawn from accounts of the ], it compiles 17th-century European knowledge on the ] ] and its neighboring countries.


== Author and publisher == == Author==
] was a polymath who published around 40 major works in the field of both the humanities and the sciences.<ref name=":1" /> He was based at the Jesuits' College in Rome, where he had access to many reports that Chinese-based missionaries sent back to the ]' administrative offices. The accessibility to essential material, as well as Kircher's vast interest in Chinese language and culture, gave the impulse to present the unknown East in one comprehensive volume of 237 pages. The scholar was therefore considered an expert on China, although he had never visited the country.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Weststeijn|first=Thijs|date=September 6, 2012|title=The Middle Kingdom in the Low Countries. Sinology in the Seventeenth-Century Netherlands|journal=The Making of the Humanities|volume= II|pages=210–240}}</ref> ] was a polymath who published around 40 major works in the field of both the humanities and the sciences.<ref name=":1" /> He was based at the Jesuits' College in Rome, where he had access to many reports that Chinese-based missionaries sent back to the ]' administrative offices. The accessibility to essential material, as well as Kircher's vast interest in Chinese language and culture, gave the impulse to present the unknown East in one comprehensive volume of 237 pages. The scholar was therefore considered an expert on China, although he had never visited the country.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Weststeijn|first=Thijs|date=September 6, 2012|title=The Middle Kingdom in the Low Countries. Sinology in the Seventeenth-Century Netherlands|journal=The Making of the Humanities|volume= II|pages=210–240}}</ref>


== Publication and reception==
Kircher's regular publisher, a printing house in Amsterdam run by Janssonius van Waesberge and Elizer Weyerstraten, produced the first copy of his work. In the same year another publisher named ] brought out a copy of the text. Both editions are almost identical with the same content, pagination, and illustrations.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=http://ricci.bc.edu/books/china-illustrata.html|title=China Illustrata {{!}} Beyond Ricci|website=ricci.bc.edu|language=en|access-date=2018-06-04}}</ref>
]
Kircher himself had never been to China, but compiled the oral and written reports of former Jesuit missionaries to publish a summary of the knowledge on China and Tibet collected by Europeans in the 17th century. The work was published in ] in 1667 in two nearly identical and contemporaneous editions, using the same content, pagination, and illustrations. The first was published by ] under his own imprint and the second was printed by him for Kircher's regular publisher, a house run by Jan Janssonius van Waesberge and Elizer Weyerstraten.<ref name=":2"/><ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=http://ricci.bc.edu/books/china-illustrata.html|title=China Illustrata {{!}} Beyond Ricci|website=ricci.bc.edu|language=en|access-date=2018-06-04}}</ref>


These initial runs were successful and {{lang|la|China Illustrata}} was quickly translated into Dutch (1668),{{sfnp|Glazemaker|1668}} English (1669{{sfnp|Ogilby|1669}} & 1673),{{sfnp|Ogilby|1673}} and French (1670){{sfnp|D'Alquié|1670}} shortly after the Latin original had been published in 1667. The Dutch and French translations were both published in Amsterdam by Janssonius van Waesberge but, upon the death of Weyerstraten, cocredited first to his widow{{sfnp|Glazemaker|1668}} and then to their legal heirs.{{sfnp|D'Alquié|1670}} ]'s English versions only included a greatly abbreviated treatment of Kircher's work in their appendix, being principally concerned with ]'s ] and the Jesuit ]'s rebuttal to some of its claims and aims.{{sfnp|Ogilby|1669}} The work, however, awakened great interest in China and inspired numerous further English publications on far Eastern travels and discoveries.<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal|last=Szczensniak|first=Baleslaw|date=1952|title=Athanasius Kircher's China Illustrata|jstor=301822|journal=History of Science Society|volume= 10|pages=385–411}}</ref> The French edition included a discussion between ], ] of ], and ] and also an early ]{{ndash}}] dictionary.{{sfnp|D'Alquié|1670}}
== Reception and significance ==
]
Kircher himself had never been to China, but compiled the oral and written reports of former Jesuit missionaries to publish a summary of the knowledge on China and Tibet collected by Europeans in the 17th century. At that time ''China Illustrata'' was successful and got translated into Dutch (1668),{{sfnp|Glazemaker|1668}} English (1669{{sfnp|Ogilby|1669}} & 1673),{{sfnp|Ogilby|1673}} and French (1670){{sfnp|D'Alquié|1670}} shortly after the Latin original had been published in 1667. ]'s English versions only included a greatly abbreviated treatment of Kircher's work in their appendix, being principally concerned with ]'s ] and the Jesuit ]'s rebuttal to some of its claims and aims.{{sfnp|Ogilby|1669}} The work, however, awakened great interest in China and inspired numerous further English publications on far Eastern travels and discoveries.<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal|last=Szczensniak|first=Baleslaw|date=1952|title=Athanasius Kircher's China Illustrata|jstor=301822|journal=History of Science Society|volume= 10|pages=385–411}}</ref> The French edition included an exchange of letters between ], ] of ], and ] and also an early ]{{ndash}}] dictionary.{{sfnp|D'Alquié|1670}}


However, ''China Illustrata'' was also criticized. ] described the book as a work of entertainment rather than serious scholarship.<ref name=":3">{{Cite web|url=http://www.deutsches-museum.de/bibliothek/unsere-schaetze/laender-reisen/kircher/|title=Kircher|publisher=]|website=www.deutsches-museum.de|language=de|access-date=2018-06-10}}</ref> Egyptologist ] agreed that Kircher had written a book for the public at large rather than for scholars.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Geschichte der deutschsprachigen Ägyptologie|last=Gertzen|first=Thomas L.|publisher=De Gruyter Oudenbourg|year=2017|location=Berlin/ Boston|pages=33}}</ref> However, {{lang|la|China Illustrata}} was also criticized. ] described the book as a work of entertainment rather than serious scholarship.<ref name=":3">{{Cite web|url=http://www.deutsches-museum.de/bibliothek/unsere-schaetze/laender-reisen/kircher/|title=Kircher|publisher=]|website=www.deutsches-museum.de|language=de|access-date=2018-06-10}}</ref> Egyptologist ] agreed that Kircher had written a book for the public at large rather than for scholars.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Geschichte der deutschsprachigen Ägyptologie|last=Gertzen|first=Thomas L.|publisher=De Gruyter Oudenbourg|year=2017|location=Berlin/ Boston|pages=33}}</ref>


But others argue that ''China Illustrata'' was the first and most important writing to shape Western understanding and knowledge of China for over two hundred years.{{sfnp|Van Tuyl|1986|p=i}}<ref name=":3" /> Indeed, it became one of the most influential and popular books of the 17th century<ref>{{Cite book|title=Asia in the eyes of Europe. Sixteenth through Eighteenth Centuries|last=Lach|first=Donals F.|publisher=The University of Chicago Library|year=1991|isbn=0-943056-14-4|location=Chicago|pages=39}}</ref> and is even today considered "an important source of information on the beginnings of western ] and sinophilism in Europe".<ref name=":2" /><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.deutsches-museum.de/bibliothek/unsere-schaetze/laender-reisen/kircher/das-buch/?sword_list%5B%5D=kirche&sword_list%5B%5D=china&sword_list%5B%5D=illustrata&no_cache=1|title=Das Buch|publisher=]|website=www.deutsches-museum.de|language=de|access-date=2018-06-10}}</ref> But others argue that {{lang|la|China Illustrata}} was the first and most important writing to shape Western understanding and knowledge of China for over two hundred years.{{sfnp|Van Tuyl|1986|p=i}}<ref name=":3" /> Indeed, it became one of the most influential and popular books of the 17th century<ref>{{Cite book|title=Asia in the eyes of Europe. Sixteenth through Eighteenth Centuries|last=Lach|first=Donals F.|publisher=The University of Chicago Library|year=1991|isbn=0-943056-14-4|location=Chicago|pages=39}}</ref> and is even today considered "an important source of information on the beginnings of western ] and sinophilism in Europe".<ref name=":2" /><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.deutsches-museum.de/bibliothek/unsere-schaetze/laender-reisen/kircher/das-buch/?sword_list%5B%5D=kirche&sword_list%5B%5D=china&sword_list%5B%5D=illustrata&no_cache=1|title=Das Buch|publisher=]|website=www.deutsches-museum.de|language=de|access-date=2018-06-10}}</ref>


== Content == == Content ==
] ({{lang|la|Mons in Provincia Kiamsi}}), combining topography with ]{{sfnp|Kircher|1667|p=171}}]]
Kircher's work is an encyclopedia about the Chinese empire containing accurate cartography and illustrations that elucidate the vivid descriptions found in the text. The volume is a cultural account of China ranging from religious practices and social customs over languages to China's natural wonders, such as exotic plants and animals.{{sfnp|Van Tuyl|1986}} By collecting and compiling information taken from fellow Jesuits including ], ], ], ] and ], Kircher achieves to create an authentic secondary study on Chinese people, nature and mythology.<ref>{{Cite book|title=China on Paper. European and Chinese Works from the Late Sixteenth to the Early Nineteenth Century|year=2007|url=https://archive.org/details/chinaonpapereuro00reed|url-access=limited|last=Reed|first=Marcia|publisher=Getty Research Institute|pages=|isbn=9780892368693 }}</ref> Kircher's work is an encyclopedia about the Chinese empire containing accurate cartography and illustrations that elucidate the vivid descriptions found in the text. The volume is a cultural account of China ranging from religious practices and social customs over languages to China's natural wonders, such as exotic plants and animals.{{sfnp|Van Tuyl|1986}} By collecting and compiling information taken from fellow Jesuits including ], ], ], ] and ], Kircher achieves to create an authentic secondary study on Chinese people, nature and mythology.<ref>{{Cite book|title=China on Paper. European and Chinese Works from the Late Sixteenth to the Early Nineteenth Century|year=2007|url=https://archive.org/details/chinaonpapereuro00reed|url-access=limited|last=Reed|first=Marcia|publisher=Getty Research Institute|pages=|isbn=9780892368693 }}</ref>

]
There were several reasons for Kircher to write ''China Illustrata''. First, he wanted to promote the missionaries' work and tell about the great journeys of Europeans in China. Second, he was also driven by his strong personal interest in Chinese language and culture. He collected Chinese objects for display in his museum, a chamber of curiosity in Rome established in 1651 and named '']'' after Kircher himself.<ref name=":3" /> There were several reasons for Kircher to write ''China Illustrata''. First, he wanted to promote the missionaries' work and tell about the great journeys of Europeans in China. Second, he was also driven by his strong personal interest in Chinese language and culture. He collected Chinese objects for display in his museum, a chamber of curiosity in Rome established in 1651 and named '']'' after Kircher himself.<ref name=":3" />


Line 28: Line 29:


===Illustrations === ===Illustrations ===
]{{sfnp|Kircher|1667}}]]
The most important and interesting features of Kircher's bookespecially at that timeare numerous illustrations of nature, rare portraits of emperors and Jesuits, and accurate maps of China that are from high cartographical quality.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Szczesniak|first=Baleslaw|date=1952|title=Athanasius Kircher's: China Illustrata|journal=History of Science Society|volume= 10|pages=385–411|jstor=301822}}</ref> The illustrations of plants and animals are based on ]'s ''Flora Sinensis'' and some of the images are derived from Chinese originals.<ref>{{Cite book|title=China on Paper|last=Reed|first=Marcia|publisher=Getty Research Institute|year=2007|isbn=978-1-60606-068-1|location=Los Angeles}}</ref> The most important and interesting features of Kircher's book{{mdash}}especially at that time{{mdash}}are numerous illustrations of nature, rare portraits of emperors and Jesuits, and accurate maps of China of high cartographical quality.<ref name=":2"/> The illustrations of plants and animals are based on ]'s {{lang|la|Flora Sinensis}} and some of the images are derived from Chinese originals.<ref>{{Cite book|title=China on Paper|last=Reed|first=Marcia|publisher=Getty Research Institute|year=2007|isbn=978-1-60606-068-1|location=Los Angeles}}</ref>


Illustrations play an important role in most of Kircher's works and they "have a quality of ingenuity and strangeness that are particular to his century".<ref name=":4">{{Cite book|title=Athanasius Kircher's Theatre of The World|last=Godwin|first=Joscelyn|publisher=Thames& Hudson|year=2009|isbn=978-0-500-25860-6|location=London|pages=7}}</ref> ''China Illustrata'' contains a number of realistic depictions of Chinese plants and animals, but also fictitious images, such as the "Dragon and Tiger mountain" (''China Illustrata'', p.&nbsp;171) said to be existent in the ]. Although Kircher himself did not create most of the images, he chose them wisely in order to elucidate the descriptions found in the text.<ref name=":4" /> Illustrations play an important role in most of Kircher's works and they "have a quality of ingenuity and strangeness that are particular to his century".<ref name=":4">{{Cite book|title=Athanasius Kircher's Theatre of The World|last=Godwin|first=Joscelyn|publisher=Thames& Hudson|year=2009|isbn=978-0-500-25860-6|location=London|pages=7}}</ref> {{lang|la|China Illustrata}} contains a number of realistic depictions of Chinese plants and animals, but also fictitious images, such as the "Dragon and Tiger Mountain".{{sfnp|Kircher|1667|p=171}} Although Kircher himself did not create most of the images, he chose them wisely in order to elucidate the descriptions found in the text.<ref name=":4" />
]


=== Chapters === === Chapters ===
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==Editions== ==Editions==
]
* {{citation |last=Kircher |first=Athanasius |author-link=Athanasius Kircher |url=https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k111090s |title=China Monumentis, qua Sacris qua Profanis, nec Non Variis Naturae et Artis Spectaculis, Aliarumque Rerum Memorabilium Argumentis Illustrata |language=la |trans-title=China Illustrated in Monuments, Some Sacred, Some Profane, and Also in Various Spectacles of Nature and Art, and in Discussions of Other Memorable Things |location=Amsterdam |publisher=Johannes Janssonius van Waesberge, Elizaeus Weyerstraet, & ] }}, 1667. * {{citation |last=Kircher |first=Athanasius |author-link=Athanasius Kircher |url=https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k111090s |title=China Monumentis, qua Sacris qua Profanis, nec Non Variis Naturae et Artis Spectaculis, Aliarumque Rerum Memorabilium Argumentis Illustrata |language=la |trans-title=China Illustrated in Monuments, Some Sacred, Some Profane, and Also in Various Spectacles of Nature and Art, and in Discussions of Other Memorable Things |location=Amsterdam |publisher=Johannes Janssonius van Waesberge, Elizaeus Weyerstraet, & ] |ref={{harvid|Kircher|1667}} }}, 1667.
* {{citation |last=Kircher |first=Athanasius |author-link=Athanasius Kircher |display-authors=0 |url=https://archive.org/details/gri_33125008480481/page/n7/mode/2up |title=Toonneel van China, door Veel, Zo Geestelijke als Werreltlijke, Geheugteekenen, Verscheide Vertoningen van de Natuur en Kunst, en Blijken van Veel Andere Gedenkwaerdige Dingen, Geopent en Verheerlykt |language=nl |translator=Jan Hendrik Glazemaker |trans-title=The Stage of China, Revealed and Glorified by Many Noteworthy Items, Both Spiritual and Worldly, by Various Displays of Nature and Art, and by Evidence of Many Other Memorable Things |location=Amsterdam |publisher=Johannes Janssonius van Waesberge & Sara Janssonius |date=1668 |ref={{harvid|Glazemaker|1668}} }}. * {{citation |last=Kircher |first=Athanasius |author-link=Athanasius Kircher |display-authors=0 |url=https://archive.org/details/gri_33125008480481/page/n7/mode/2up |title=Toonneel van China, door Veel, Zo Geestelijke als Werreltlijke, Geheugteekenen, Verscheide Vertoningen van de Natuur en Kunst, en Blijken van Veel Andere Gedenkwaerdige Dingen, Geopent en Verheerlykt |language=nl |translator=Jan Hendrik Glazemaker |trans-title=The Stage of China, Revealed and Glorified by Many Noteworthy Items, Both Spiritual and Worldly, by Various Displays of Nature and Art, and by Evidence of Many Other Memorable Things |location=Amsterdam |publisher=Johannes Janssonius van Waesberge & Sara Janssonius |date=1668 |ref={{harvid|Glazemaker|1668}} }}.
* {{citation |last=Nieuhof |first=Johan |author-link=Johan Nieuhof |author2=Johann Adam Schall von Bell |author2-link=Johann Adam Schall von Bell |author3=Athanasius Kircher |author3-link=Athanasius Kircher |display-authors=0 |url=https://archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-126081-3026/page/n7/mode/2up |title=An Embassy from the East-India Company of the United Provinces, to the Grand Tartar Cham Emperour of China, Delivered by their Excell'cies Peter de Groyer, and Jacob de Keyzer, at His Imperial City of Peking, wherein the Cities, Towns, Villages, Ports, Rivers, &c. in Their Passages from Canton to Peking, Are Ingeniously Described... Also an Epistle of Father John Adams Their Antagonist, Concerning the Whole Negotiation, with an Appendix of Several Remarks Taken out of Father Athanasius Kircher |date=1669 |location=London |translator=John Ogilby |translator-link=John Ogilby |publisher=John Macock |ref={{harvid|Ogilby|1669}} }}. * {{citation |last=Nieuhof |first=Johan |author-link=Johan Nieuhof |author2=Johann Adam Schall von Bell |author2-link=Johann Adam Schall von Bell |author3=Athanasius Kircher |author3-link=Athanasius Kircher |display-authors=0 |url=https://archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-126081-3026/page/n7/mode/2up |title=An Embassy from the East-India Company of the United Provinces, to the Grand Tartar Cham Emperour of China, Delivered by their Excell'cies Peter de Goyer, and Jacob de Keyzer, at His Imperial City of Peking, wherein the Cities, Towns, Villages, Ports, Rivers, &c. in Their Passages from Canton to Peking, Are Ingeniously Described... Also an Epistle of Father John Adams Their Antagonist, Concerning the Whole Negotiation, with an Appendix of Several Remarks Taken out of Father Athanasius Kircher |date=1669 |location=London |translator=John Ogilby |translator-link=John Ogilby |publisher=John Macock |ref={{harvid|Ogilby|1669}} }}.
* {{citation |last=Kircher |first=Athanasius |author-link=Athanasius Kircher |author2=Ferdinand de' Medici |author2-link=Ferdinand II de' Medici |author3=Johann Grueber |author3-link=Johann Grueber |display-authors=0 |url=https://archive.org/details/chepfl-lipr-AXC48/page/n7/mode/2up |title=La Chine..., Illustrée de Plusieurs Monuments Tant Sacrés que Profanes, et de Quantité de Recherchés de la Nature & de l'Art à Quoy On à Adjousté de Nouveau les Questions Curieuses que le Serenissime Grand Duc de Toscane a Fait dépuis Peu au P. Jean Grubere Touchant Ce Grand Empire avec un Dictionnaire Chinois & François, Lequel Est Tres-Rare, & qui n'a pas Encores Paru au Jour |language=fr |translator=François Savinien d'Alquié |trans-title=China..., Illustrated by Numerous Monuments Both Sacred and Profane, and by a Quantity of Research on Nature and Art, to Which Has Been Newly Added the Interesting Questions that the Most Serene Grand Duke of Tuscany Has Recently Posed Fr. Johann Grueber Concerning This Great Empire Along with a Chinese and French Dictionary, which Is Very Rare and which Has Not Previously Seen the Light of Day |location=Amsterdam |publisher=Johannes Janssonius van Waesberge & Heirs of Elizaeus Weyerstraet |date=1670 |ref={{harvid|D'Alquié|1670}} }}. * {{citation |last=Kircher |first=Athanasius |author-link=Athanasius Kircher |author2=Ferdinand de' Medici |author2-link=Ferdinand II de' Medici |author3=Johann Grueber |author3-link=Johann Grueber |display-authors=0 |url=https://archive.org/details/chepfl-lipr-AXC48/page/n7/mode/2up |title=La Chine..., Illustrée de Plusieurs Monuments Tant Sacrés que Profanes, et de Quantité de Recherchés de la Nature & de l'Art à Quoy On à Adjousté de Nouveau les Questions Curieuses que le Serenissime Grand Duc de Toscane a Fait dépuis Peu au P. Jean Grubere Touchant Ce Grand Empire avec un Dictionnaire Chinois & François, Lequel Est Tres-Rare, & qui n'a pas Encores Paru au Jour |language=fr |translator=François Savinien d'Alquié |trans-title=China..., Illustrated by Numerous Monuments Both Sacred and Profane, and by a Quantity of Research on Nature and Art, to Which Has Been Newly Added the Interesting Questions that the Most Serene Grand Duke of Tuscany Has Recently Posed Fr. Johann Grueber Concerning This Great Empire Along with a Chinese and French Dictionary, which Is Very Rare and which Has Not Previously Seen the Light of Day |location=Amsterdam |publisher=Johannes Janssonius van Waesberge & Heirs of Elizaeus Weyerstraet |date=1670 |ref={{harvid|D'Alquié|1670}} }}.
* {{citation |last=Nieuhof |first=Johan |author-link=Johan Nieuhof |author2=Johann Adam Schall von Bell |author2-link=Johann Adam Schall von Bell |author3=Athanasius Kircher |author3-link=Athanasius Kircher |display-authors=0 |url=https://archive.org/details/bim_early-english-books-1641-1700_an-embassy-from-the-east_nieuhof-johan_1673/page/n1/mode/2up |title=An Embassy from the East-India Company of the United Provinces, to the Grand Tartar Cham Emperor of China, Deliver'd by their Excellencies Peter de Groyer and Jacob de Keyzer, at His Imperial City of Peking, wherein the Cities, Towns, Villages, Ports, Rivers, &c. in Their Passages from Canton to Peking, Are Ingeniously Described... Also an Epistle of Father John Adams Their Antagonist, Concerning the Whole Negotiation, with an Appendix of Several Remarks Taken out of Father Athanasius Kircher |date=1673 |location=London |translator=John Ogilby |translator-link=John Ogilby |publisher=John Ogilby |ref={{harvid|Ogilby|1673}} }}. * {{citation |last=Nieuhof |first=Johan |author-link=Johan Nieuhof |author2=Johann Adam Schall von Bell |author2-link=Johann Adam Schall von Bell |author3=Athanasius Kircher |author3-link=Athanasius Kircher |display-authors=0 |url=https://archive.org/details/bim_early-english-books-1641-1700_an-embassy-from-the-east_nieuhof-johan_1673/page/n1/mode/2up |title=An Embassy from the East-India Company of the United Provinces, to the Grand Tartar Cham Emperor of China, Deliver'd by their Excellencies Peter de Goyer and Jacob de Keyzer, at His Imperial City of Peking, wherein the Cities, Towns, Villages, Ports, Rivers, &c. in Their Passages from Canton to Peking, Are Ingeniously Described... Also an Epistle of Father John Adams Their Antagonist, Concerning the Whole Negotiation, with an Appendix of Several Remarks Taken out of Father Athanasius Kircher |date=1673 |location=London |translator=John Ogilby |translator-link=John Ogilby |publisher=John Ogilby |ref={{harvid|Ogilby|1673}} }}.
* {{citation |last=Kircher |first=Athanasius |author-link=Athanasius Kircher |display-authors=0 |translator=Charles Don Van Tuyl |date=1986 |url=https://htext.stanford.edu/content/kircher/china/kircher.pdf |title=China Illustrata |lang=en |publisher=] Press |location=] |ref={{harvid|Van Tuyl|1986}} |editor=Dottie Witter |display-editors=0 }}. * {{citation |last=Kircher |first=Athanasius |author-link=Athanasius Kircher |display-authors=0 |translator=Charles Don Van Tuyl |date=1986 |url=https://htext.stanford.edu/content/kircher/china/kircher.pdf |title=China Illustrata |lang=en |publisher=] Press |location=] |ref={{harvid|Van Tuyl|1986}} |editor=Dottie Witter |display-editors=0 }}.
* {{citation |last=Kircher |first=Athanasius |author-link=Athanasius Kircher |display-authors=0 |translator=Biagio Santorelli |language=it |publisher=] |date=2015 |location=Bologna |title=Le Meraviglie della Cina: Un'Esposizione dei Prodigi Sacri e Profani, della Natura e dell'Arte e di Molte Altre Cose Memorabili |isbn=978-88-6923-037-0 |oclc=971545620 |trans-title=The Wonders of China: A Display of the Sacred and Profane Wonders of Nature and Art and of Many Other Memorable Things }}. * {{citation |last=Kircher |first=Athanasius |author-link=Athanasius Kircher |display-authors=0 |translator=Biagio Santorelli |language=it |publisher=] |date=2015 |location=Bologna |title=Le Meraviglie della Cina: Un'Esposizione dei Prodigi Sacri e Profani, della Natura e dell'Arte e di Molte Altre Cose Memorabili |isbn=978-88-6923-037-0 |oclc=971545620 |trans-title=The Wonders of China: A Display of the Sacred and Profane Wonders of Nature and Art and of Many Other Memorable Things }}.

Latest revision as of 18:05, 22 September 2024

Book by Athanasius Kircher

China Illustrata's frontispiece, depicting Schall von Bell and Matteo Ricci

China Illustrata (Latin for "China Illustrated") is a book published in 1667 by the Jesuit Athanasius Kircher (1602–1680). Principally drawn from accounts of the Jesuit China Mission, it compiles 17th-century European knowledge on the Ming-era Chinese Empire and its neighboring countries.

Author

Athanasius Kircher was a polymath who published around 40 major works in the field of both the humanities and the sciences. He was based at the Jesuits' College in Rome, where he had access to many reports that Chinese-based missionaries sent back to the Jesuits' administrative offices. The accessibility to essential material, as well as Kircher's vast interest in Chinese language and culture, gave the impulse to present the unknown East in one comprehensive volume of 237 pages. The scholar was therefore considered an expert on China, although he had never visited the country.

Publication and reception

An illustration of Chinese turtles

Kircher himself had never been to China, but compiled the oral and written reports of former Jesuit missionaries to publish a summary of the knowledge on China and Tibet collected by Europeans in the 17th century. The work was published in Amsterdam in 1667 in two nearly identical and contemporaneous editions, using the same content, pagination, and illustrations. The first was published by Jacob van Meurs under his own imprint and the second was printed by him for Kircher's regular publisher, a house run by Jan Janssonius van Waesberge and Elizer Weyerstraten.

These initial runs were successful and China Illustrata was quickly translated into Dutch (1668), English (1669 & 1673), and French (1670) shortly after the Latin original had been published in 1667. The Dutch and French translations were both published in Amsterdam by Janssonius van Waesberge but, upon the death of Weyerstraten, cocredited first to his widow and then to their legal heirs. John Ogilby's English versions only included a greatly abbreviated treatment of Kircher's work in their appendix, being principally concerned with Johan Nieuhof's account of the first Dutch embassy to Beijing and the Jesuit Johann Adam Schall von Bell's rebuttal to some of its claims and aims. The work, however, awakened great interest in China and inspired numerous further English publications on far Eastern travels and discoveries. The French edition included a discussion between Ferdinando II de' Medici, grand duke of Tuscany, and Johann Grueber and also an early ChineseFrench dictionary.

However, China Illustrata was also criticized. Gottfried Leibniz described the book as a work of entertainment rather than serious scholarship. Egyptologist Adolf Erman agreed that Kircher had written a book for the public at large rather than for scholars.

But others argue that China Illustrata was the first and most important writing to shape Western understanding and knowledge of China for over two hundred years. Indeed, it became one of the most influential and popular books of the 17th century and is even today considered "an important source of information on the beginnings of western sinology and sinophilism in Europe".

Content

The Dragon and Tiger Mountain of Jiangxi Province (Mons in Provincia Kiamsi), combining topography with Chinese mythology

Kircher's work is an encyclopedia about the Chinese empire containing accurate cartography and illustrations that elucidate the vivid descriptions found in the text. The volume is a cultural account of China ranging from religious practices and social customs over languages to China's natural wonders, such as exotic plants and animals. By collecting and compiling information taken from fellow Jesuits including Matteo Ricci, Martino Martini, Johann Adam Schall von Bell, Johann Grueber and Heinrich Roth, Kircher achieves to create an authentic secondary study on Chinese people, nature and mythology.

There were several reasons for Kircher to write China Illustrata. First, he wanted to promote the missionaries' work and tell about the great journeys of Europeans in China. Second, he was also driven by his strong personal interest in Chinese language and culture. He collected Chinese objects for display in his museum, a chamber of curiosity in Rome established in 1651 and named Musaeum Kircherianum after Kircher himself.

Apart from describing and illustrating foreign objects and exotic creatures, the book also dwells on relations between China and the West. Kircher connects Western, Indian, Chinese and Japanese Idolatry and tries to prove the evidence of early Christianity in China. His work emphasises Christian elements in Chinese history, starting with the presence of Nestorians in the city of Xi’an. Kircher bases this assumption on the Sino-Syrian monument that was found there in the 8th century. In his interpretation the inscription on the monument is a proof of the first declaration of the Gospel in China.

Kircher also declared that the Chinese script originated from the Egyptian hieroglyphs, since both writing systems were designed on pictorial principles.

Illustrations

"The Quindecupartite Chinese Empire" (Imperium Sinicum Quindecupartitum), the work's principal map depicting the fifteen "kingdoms or provinces" of China under the Ming dynasty

The most important and interesting features of Kircher's book—especially at that time—are numerous illustrations of nature, rare portraits of emperors and Jesuits, and accurate maps of China of high cartographical quality. The illustrations of plants and animals are based on Michel Boym's Flora Sinensis and some of the images are derived from Chinese originals.

Illustrations play an important role in most of Kircher's works and they "have a quality of ingenuity and strangeness that are particular to his century". China Illustrata contains a number of realistic depictions of Chinese plants and animals, but also fictitious images, such as the "Dragon and Tiger Mountain". Although Kircher himself did not create most of the images, he chose them wisely in order to elucidate the descriptions found in the text.

Chapters

The book is divided into six sections:

Part One explains the meaning and significance of the eighth-century Sino-Syrian monument (42 pages)
Part Two tells about various journeys undertaken in China, including the Journey of Marco Polo (78 pages)
Part Three claims parallels between Western, Indian, Chinese and Japanese Idolatry (38 pages)
Part Four gives descriptions and illustrations of the flora and fauna in China (44 pages)
Part Five talks about the architecture and mechanical arts of the Chinese (11 pages)
Part Six is concerned with the Chinese language and its relationship with the Hieroglyphic characters (12 pages)

Editions

Kircher's attempt to explain the origins of Chinese characters, supposedly showing those formed by plant roots (the 5th type), small birds' wings (6th), turtles (7th), birds and peacocks (8th), and herbs, wings, and branches (9th)

References

  1. Kircher (1667), Frontispiece.
  2. ^ "China Illustrata | Beyond Ricci". ricci.bc.edu. Retrieved 2018-06-04.
  3. Weststeijn, Thijs (September 6, 2012). "The Middle Kingdom in the Low Countries. Sinology in the Seventeenth-Century Netherlands". The Making of the Humanities. II: 210–240.
  4. Kircher (1667), p. 196.
  5. ^ Szczensniak, Baleslaw (1952). "Athanasius Kircher's China Illustrata". History of Science Society. 10: 385–411. JSTOR 301822.
  6. ^ Glazemaker (1668).
  7. ^ Ogilby (1669).
  8. Ogilby (1673).
  9. ^ D'Alquié (1670).
  10. ^ "Kircher". www.deutsches-museum.de (in German). Deutsches Museum. Retrieved 2018-06-10.
  11. Gertzen, Thomas L. (2017). Geschichte der deutschsprachigen Ägyptologie. Berlin/ Boston: De Gruyter Oudenbourg. p. 33.
  12. Van Tuyl (1986), p. i.
  13. Lach, Donals F. (1991). Asia in the eyes of Europe. Sixteenth through Eighteenth Centuries. Chicago: The University of Chicago Library. p. 39. ISBN 0-943056-14-4.
  14. "Das Buch". www.deutsches-museum.de (in German). Deutsches Museum. Retrieved 2018-06-10.
  15. ^ Kircher (1667), p. 171.
  16. ^ Van Tuyl (1986).
  17. Reed, Marcia (2007). China on Paper. European and Chinese Works from the Late Sixteenth to the Early Nineteenth Century. Getty Research Institute. pp. 148. ISBN 9780892368693.
  18. "China illustrata - Ostasieninstitut". www.oai.de (in German). Retrieved 2018-06-10.
  19. Godwin, Joscelyn (1979). Athanasius Kircher. A Renaissance Man and the Quest for Lost Knowledge. London: Thames and Hudson. p. 51.
  20. Kircher (1667).
  21. Reed, Marcia (2007). China on Paper. Los Angeles: Getty Research Institute. ISBN 978-1-60606-068-1.
  22. ^ Godwin, Joscelyn (2009). Athanasius Kircher's Theatre of The World. London: Thames& Hudson. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-500-25860-6.
  23. Kircher (1667), p. 219.
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