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D'Anville's map of China proper and Chinese Tartary, created in 1734. Map of independent Tartary (in yellow) and Chinese Tartary (in violet), in 1806.. Chinese Tartary (Chinese: 中國韃靼利亞; pinyin: Zhōngguó Dádálìyà or Chinese: 中属鞑靼利亚; pinyin: Zhōng shǔ Dádálìyà) is an archaic geographical term referring to the regions of Manchuria, Mongolia, Xinjiang (also ...
Map of independent Tartary (in yellow) and Chinese Tartary (in violet), in 1806.. Tartary (Latin: Tartaria; French: Tartarie; German: Tartarei; Russian: Тартария, romanized: Tartariya) or Tatary (Russian: Татария, romanized: Tatariya) was a blanket term used in Western European literature and cartography for a vast part of Asia bounded by the Caspian Sea, the Ural Mountains, the ...
One of the earliest European maps using the term "Manchuria" (Mandchouria) (John Tallis, 1851). Previously, the term "Chinese Tartary" had been commonly applied in the West to Manchuria and Mongolia [8] Map of the three provinces of Northeast China (1911) [9] Map of Manchukuo and its rail network, c. 1945
Royaume de Thibet ("Kingdom of Tibet") in la Chine, la Tartarie Chinoise, et le Thibet ("China, Chinese Tartary, and Tibet") on a 1734 map by Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d'Anville, based on earlier Jesuit maps.
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China has upset many countries in the Asia-Pacific region with its release of a new official map that lays claim to most of the South China Sea, as well as to contested parts of India and Russia ...
Map of China proper in 1900 from the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary. ... China proper, Chinese Tartary, and the states tributary to China.
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