Author: Lume, Lucio

Atlante della Cina di Michele Ruggieri, S.I.
Date1993
Publish_locationRoma
PublisherIstituto poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato
CollectionRicci Institute Library
Edition
LanguageItalian, Chinese, Latin
Record_typeAtlas
Series
ShelfGold Room Folio
Call NumberG2305.R84 1993
Description1 atlas (ix, 137 p., 80 folded maps) ; 46 cm.
NoteAtlante della Cina / di Michele Ruggieri, S.I. ; [riproduzione in fac-simile delle tavole conservate nella Collezione Manoscritti della Biblioteca dell'Archivio di Stato di Roma], a cura di Eugenio Lo Sardo ; Archivio di Stato di Roma ; [Comitato scientifico, Lucio Lume, presidente ... et al.].
Scale not given. Illustrations on endpapers.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 3-8) and indexes.
Reproductions of ms. maps and text accompanied by modern commentaries and transcription of text. Original ms. in the library of the Archivio di Stato di Roma, identified as: ASR, Biblioteca, Manuscritti, ms. 493 (p. 11). Most maps produced beginning from 1590 (p. 33). Map place names in Chinese; text in Latin with parts in Italian.
See also OCLC#31359249. Casalini Libri CASA 94180857.
Atlante della Cina di Michele Ruggieri 羅明堅, S.J. (1543-1607)

"Born in Spinazzola in Puglia (Italy), Ruggieri entered the Society of Jesus at the age of twenty-nine after holding official posts under Philip II, King of Naples. He was assigned to the Eastern missions and arrived in Goa on September 13, 1578. (Matteo Ricci was a fellow passenger). In July 1579 he arrived in Macau to implement the revolutionary missiological policy inaugurated by Alessandro Valignano 範禮安, S.J. (1538-1606). In 1583, after establishing friendly contacts with Chinese officials in Guangdong Province he was granted permission to build a church and residence at Zhaoqing 肇慶. In September of 1583 Ruggieri and Ricci took up residence there, establishing the first post-medieval Christian mission in China.
Like Ricci and other pioneers of the Jesuit China mission, Ruggieri was accomplished in many areas, and cartographic and linguistic skills were deemed particularly important. On Ruggieri's map (c. 1609) can be seen detailed information on terrain, cities, and waterways. Learning the Chinese language was not restricted to local dialects but also to learning guanhua 官話, the official language known in Western countries as Mandarin. Dictionaries and lexicons were created and the first semi-standard romanizations for Chinese characters were created (based on Portuguese letter values: see the Portuguese-Chinese Dictionary in this display). Published letters describing Chinese civilization sent by Ricci, Ruggieri, and others to Europe were highly popular and avidly studied by historians and philosophers."--Display placard text.

Multimedia
SubjectJesuits--China--Biography China--Description and travel Early maps--Facsimiles China--Maps--Early works to 1800 China--Maps, Pictorial--Early works to 1800 Ruggieri, Michele, 羅明堅, 1543-1607 Jesuits--Italy--Biography Cartography--China--History
ISBN882400380X