Abstract

Abstract:

This study discusses the production context, supporting networks, and circulation of a large multi-sheet map produced at the Yongzheng court in 1727–8. The 98-sheet map added the entire Russian empire to its Kangxi-era predecessor, which has featured prominently in the literature. By zooming in on this hitherto unexplored Yongzheng edition, new light is shed on the entire series of eighteenth-century Qing-era court maps, which emerge as snapshots of a rapidly evolving, specifically Manchu spatial imaginary rooted entirely in the geo-administrative make-up of the Qing polity.

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