Folding Screen Maps
JAPAN's ENCOUNTER WITH THE
WORLD
Drawn of the modern
cartography - Accepting European maps - Updated versions of the
Spanish and Portuguese maps
In 1543 some Portuguese on a Chinese ship
drifted ashore on Tanegashima Island in Kyusu thus inaugurating
exchanges between Japan and Europe. But the Tokugawa Shogunate
established a seclusion policy about a century later, severely
restricting exchanges between Japan and Europe. Two important
innovations for Japan from Europe during the one hundred years
until the seclusion were firearms and Christianity. These had great
impact on Japanese history and culture. European maps also had a
great influence; as great as firearms and religion.
Westerners thought they had discovered the
unknown country of gold, Zipangu. This had happened accidentally in
that great age of discovery, making clear another point on the
surface of the globe. However, the incident meant even more from
the Japanese standpoint since it caused the Japanese people to
acknowledge the world outside. Till that time the Japanese people
had their own geographical concept of the world consisting only of
Japan, China, and India. Exploration activities during the great
age of discovery played an important role in spreading geographical
knowledge gained in the West to civilizations in other parts of the
world. Such encounters between Japanese and Western views were made
in the second half of the 16th.century. This impact brought about
the production of the folding screen world map.
DAWN OF
THE MODERN CARTOGRAPHY
The second half of the 16th century is notable
as the period of the dawn of modem cartography in Europe. Literary
works on geography and maps created by Claudius Ptolemaeus in the
second century were revived in the early 15th century after a long
period of being ignored during the Middle Ages, and were
distributed in print at the end of the century. Portugal and Spain
started efforts to discover the areas unclaimed on the maps. They
sent exploration voyages to many parts of the world in late 15th
and early 16th centuries, led by Vasco da Gama, Christopher
Columbus, Ferdinand Magellan and other explorers. They confirmed
that Zipangu was actually Japan, identifying it as the easternmost
point of the Eurasian continent. Maps started to depict all parts
of the globe.
The second half of the 16th century was also the period when there was notable progress in the projection method
of cartography, and maps began to be printed and distributed by
mapmakers in the Low Countries in northern Europe. A typical
example of the development of modem cartography is Theatrum
Orbis Terrarum by Abraham Ortelius, the atlas of the world
published in Antwerp.
The first map shows how people in those days saw
the world. It looks somewhat awkward to us. A giant island lies in
the North Pole area, and in the Southern Hemisphere, a massive
continent extends across modem Australia. But the general idea of
the world is not very different from that of today. Missionary boys
brought the atlas back to Japan when they returned from their trip
to Europe in 1590, and it is certain that the Japanese people in
those days shared the same geographical view of the world.
ACCEPTING EUROPEAN MAPS
While views and maps of the world were
encountered and exchanged between the East and West in the second
half of the 16th century, the Japanese learned a lot from maps
produced in Europe, which is evidenced by the folding screen maps.
More than twenty works produced from the Azuchi-momoyama to the
early Edo period (late 16th century through the early 17th century)
are well known. Maps showed variety, such as a map of the world, a
pair of maps of the world and Japan, a city map, and a pair with
the map and a western painting.
Four such folding screen maps are believed to be
the first maps produced by Japanese based on European maps of the
late 16th century, or Azuchi-momoyama period. (One is owned by
Jo-toku-ji temple in Fukui Prefecture, others are privately owned).
Three folding screens carry gorgeous and dazzling paintings of
quite exotic motif, which are believed to have been created by
painters who learned skills at an artmaking school offered by
Jesuits. (The three screens are owned by the Imperial Household
Agency, Kosetu Museum of Art and Kobe City Museum
respectively.)
The three folding
screens, which date back to the early 17th century, give useful
information on exchanges between the East and the West, since the
original European works on which they were based are identified.
The three screens are also important from the viewpoint of Japanese
art history, as the early great works of art produced under the
influence of western art. The oldest group of maps describe
navigation routes with the Iberian Peninsula as the central point.
Depictions of wide rivers and large lakes in inland areas remind us
of older maps of the world created by Portugal and Spain rather
than maps of Ortelius and other maps made in Flanders or the
Netherlands. It is assumed that these maps were produced based on
Portuguese originals. The maps are believed to have been produced
around the year 1592, when Toyotomi Hideyoshi attempted to invade
Korea, since the maps carry many bits of information that are
related to the invasion. The maps also carry names of places in
northern China that had been unknown before the invasion. Nagoya in
Hizen Province, where the stronghold for the invasion was located,
is drawn larger than it actually was and navigation routes to the
Korean Peninsula are also described. The maps are believed to be
the first works with European influences of the early 1590s by
Japanese cartographers who learned from European maps.
Meanwhile, researchers in the East and the West
have found that the screen maps created by painters in the Jesuit
school are based on the world map created by a Dutch map maker,
Petrus Kaerius, in 1609. Japan's acquisition of European maps
shifted from the Spanish and Portuguese style to the Dutch style,
which conformed to the major trend of Japanese history.
Kaerius's world map of 1609 has paintings of the
ten most powerful sovereigns of the time surrounding the map. The
figures of the sovereigns around the map were adopted as a motif in
Taisei Oukou Kiba-zu Byobu, or the folding screens
with the motif of Western royal cavalry that are fine examples of
Japanese art in the early days of Western influence. They are owned
by the Kobe City Museum and Suntory Museum of Art. This shows that
the world maps introduced to Japan in those days were not only an
important way to convey geographical information, but also
influenced Japanese culture in early modem times in many ways.
In particular, the folding screen map owned by
the Imperial Household Agency is acclaimed the best world map
produced in those days. The map inherited almost all factors of the
original map with some improvements in representation of Japan and
Asia, which is quite meaningful. Another remarkable feature is that
ten cities are marked on the Japanese archipelago on the map. Not
all cities are identified, but the largest ones are recognized as
Edo and Kyoto/Osaka, and one is identified as Sunpu, given the
distance between the mark and Izu Peninsula on the map. The reason
why Sunpu was chosen as one of the ten major cities is probably
because Tokugawa Ieyasu lived there for the last ten years of his
life. According to historical records, Tokugawa Ieyasu looked at
the folding screen with maps of the world in September 1611. The
folding screen world map owned by the Imperial Household Agency
might be the one Ieyasu looked at. It would be quite difficult to
prove this, considering the length of time it would have taken for
the original to reach Japan, but many historians believe that this
is so.
There are other examples of maps inspired by
Kaerius's world map. The one owned by Kosetsu Museum of Art forms a
pair with a world map and a painting of the battle between Roman
soldiers and pagan Turkish soldiers. The one owned by Kobe City
Museum forms a pair with a world map and city maps of Lisbon,
Seville, Rome, and Constantinople, with a Christian feel about
them. Another feature of this map is that the original rectangular
map described using Mercator projection was reformed to an
egg-shaped one and Japan appears in massive size on a projecting
part. In addition, figures of ships appear in the East China Sea on
the map that are not found on the original map. They are suspected
to be trade ships approved by the government which shows this map
is quite important since it tells us more than mere decorative art
would do.
UPDATED
VERSIONS OF SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE MAPS
The early 1590s were a notable turning point in
the history of maps in Europe as well as in Japan when Japanese map
artists started to produce folding screen maps based on the world
maps introduced by the Spanish and Portuguese. During this period,
Japan's recognition of world geography was totally changed. Japan
studied European maps and reproduced them on folding screens. On
the other hand, Europe also improved its geographical knowledge of
Far East Asia.
The 'discovery' of Japan in
1543 was, for Europeans, the solution to the old question of where
the east side of the Eurasian continent ended, which had been
unsolved since Ptolemaeus' day. However, Japan and the surrounding
areas must have been mapped out based on limited information and
imagination. Even the Portuguese map by those who were the
discoverers shows the Japanese archipelago in a shape that is quite
different from reality. The Theatrum Orbis Terrarum produced
by Ortelius in 1570 has two different shapes of Japan in one atlas.
But the Japan that appears on the map created by the Portuguese
cartographer Teixera in 1595 is depicted in a shape that can be
recognized by anybody at a glance. This means that Europe had
acquired new knowledge on the map of Japan immediately before
Teixera made his map, which was quite new to Europeans and
different from their knowledge until then. Similarly, a group of
the oldest folding screen maps made in the 1590s have more
sophisticated descriptions of Japan and the Far East than European
maps of the same period. This indicates that Japan (or Asia)
created its own new maps in this period.
Before the Edo period, there were no maps in
Japan except several examples of general maps known as
Gyoki-zu that were drawn in simple shapes used since ancient
times. Representations of Japan on folding map screens are an
advanced version of such Gyoki-zu, and highly developed. The
late 16th century is truly a turning point in the history of maps
both in Japan and Europe.
The late 16th century was also a turning point
in another respect. The chief missionary of the Jesuits, Alessandro
Valignano, left reports of his tours in Japan in 1583 and 1592.
Comparison between his accounts of Japanese geography shows that
the second report is in much greater detail than the first.
Valignano wrote that the detailed information on Japanese geography
in the second report is attributable to the devoted research by a
person named I.Moreira. His statement is quite important. Given
documents by Jesuit missionaries in the 17th century, such as the
representation of Asia on Kon-yo Bankoku Zenzu, a large map
of the world created by Matteo Ricci and the description of the
Japanese geography in History of the Churches in Japan by
Joao Rodriguez, it appears that the Jesuits acquired detailed
information on the geography of Japan and Asia. Some historians say
that the Society had strong interest in creating maps of the areas
where they went on missions and was involved in producing new maps
of Asia. The late 16th century was the time when Europe truly
discovered Japan.
Considering the facts I have mentioned so far,
even though it has been a matter of controversy, it seems that the
Europeans initiated the development of cartography in Japan. Some
historical records imply that Japan offered some information that
helped to make the maps more sophisticated.
No clear evidence has been found so far that
could end the controversy, and what we can do now is collect
circumstantial evidence. I believe that the development of
cartography in Japan is attributable not solely to one-sided
efforts by Japan or Europe, but the results of exchanges of
information. However, it is reasonable to consider that Europe
contributed more to the development of maps in Japan and the Far
East, from the viewpoint of the representation of the Japanese
archipelago on the world map. The folding screen maps do not simply
indicate that Japan learned from European maps and reproduced them
on folding screens. They mean a significant turning point in the
history of cartography in Europe. Artists who made folding screen
maps made first-class world maps that were not to be found anywhere
in Europe. I earnestly hope for greater research to be conducted on
the folding screen maps that evidence large-scale cultural
exchanges between the East and the West.
TADAYOSHI MIYOSHI
Kobe City Museum
The celebration of the 400 year cultural and economical exchange
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offering a number of beautiful, rare and important items with an
accent on this unique relationship between both countries.
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