[O-Edo ōezu]/Takai Ranzan zu.
[Edo],
Go-shomotsushi Izumoji Manjirō: Okadaya Kashichi
1859
Woodblock printed map of Edo, north oriented to the right.
1210 by 1340mm. (47.75 by 52.75 inches).
15206
notes:
A large detailed cadastral map of Edo [Tokyo], showing landowners, main temples and shrines and other points of interest depicted pictorially in relief.
During the end of the Edo Period, Rangaku, or "Dutch Learning," dominated Japanese art and science. This map exemplifies the union of Japanese traditional printmaking and Dutch cartography. The latter half of the Edo Period is known as the Bakumatsu Era, when traditional feudal authorities resisted the increasin...
During the end of the Edo Period, Rangaku, or "Dutch Learning," dominated Japanese art and science. This map exemplifies the union of Japanese traditional printmaking and Dutch cartography. The latter half of the Edo Period is known as the Bakumatsu Era, when traditional feudal authorities resisted the increasin...
bibliography:
Beans, A List of Japanese Maps of the Tokugawa Era I, 39.
provenance: