Kuniezu
The kuniezu (国絵図) were a series of Japanese provincial land maps, created during the Edo period, which the Tokugawa shogunate ordered be created by every province.[1] They are sometimes contrasted with nihonzu (日本図), which were national maps created by the shogunate.[2]
In 1983, two of these map sets—the Genroku Kuniezu and the TempŠKuniezu—were designated Important Cultural Properties of Japan.[3][4]
ShÅhÅ Kuniezu
Work on the ShÅhÅ Kuniezu (æ£ä¿å›½çµµå›³) was started in 1644 . The original copy was destroyed by fire in 1873 ja:æ£ä¿å›½çµµå›³.
Genroku Kuniezu
Work on the Genroku Kuniezu (元禄国絵図) began in 1696 (Genroku 9) and ended in 1702 (Genroku 15).[3] The cadastral survey and mapping project was started and finished in the Genroku era.[3] It was the fourth official map of Japan.[5]
The scale of the maps reduced "ri" (3927m) to 6 "sun" (18 cm) [about 1/21,600 scale]. Each map showed mountains, rivers, roads and other landmarks.[3] Road milestones and names of villages with recognized yields of rice were recorded. Castle towns were recorded with the names of local area and names of the lords of the castles.[3]
Some considered this set of maps as inferior to the previous ones which had been ordered. The Genroku maps were corrected in 1719 (KyÅhÅ 4).[5]
This was the first complete set of provincial maps that included both Ezo and the Ryūkyū Kingdom,[6] which at that time, was a vassal state of the Satsuma Domain.
TempÅ Kuniezu
Work on the TempÅ Kuniezu (天ä¿å›½çµµå›³) started in 1835 and ended in 1838.[4]
References
- ↑ Traganeou, p. 37 n26.
- ↑ ja:江戸幕府ã®åœ°å›³äº‹æ¥
- 1 2 3 4 5 National Archives of Japan (NAJ), "Genroku Kuniezu"; retrieved 2013-5-20.
- 1 2 National Archives of Japan (NAJ), "TempÅ Kuniezu"; retrieved 2013-5-20.
- 1 2 Traganeou, Jilly. (2004). The Tokaido Road: Traveling and Representation in Edo and Meiji Japan, p. 230.
- ↑ Fassbender, Bardo et al. (2012). The Oxford Handbook of the History of International Law, p. 483; John Brian Harley et al. (1987). The History of Cartography, p. 397 n211; excerpt, "The maps are reproduced in color in RyÅ«kyÅ« kuniezu shiryÅshÅ« [ç‰çƒå›½çµµå›³å²æ–™é›†] (Collected historical materials of provincial maps of RyÅ«kyÅ«)..., 1992.