| 1882 Perron map ZHOUSHAN (CHUSAN) & PUTUO, ZHOUSHAN ARCHIPELAGO, CHINA, #89 |
Nice small map titled Grande Tchousan et Poutou, from wood engraving with fine detail and clear impression, approx. size with margins is 17 x 16 cm. From La Nouvelle Géographie universelle, la terre et les hommes, 19 vol. (1875-94), great work of Elisee Reclus. Cartographer is Charles Perron.
Zhoushan Archipelago
Chinese (Pinyin) Zhoushan Qundao or (Wade-Giles romanization)
Chou-shan Ch'ün-tao, conventional Chusan Archipelago
group of more than 400 islands off the northern coast of Zhejiang province,
eastern China. The administrative centre of the archipelago is at Dinghai, the
main town on Zhoushan Island. Daishan Island lies north of Zhoushan Island.
The Zhoushan islands represent the submerged peaks of the northeasterly
continuation of the mountain ranges of Zhejiang and Fujian provinces, which at
one time were connected with the ranges of the southwestern part of the Korean
peninsula. The islands are steep and rugged, and many of them rise to elevations
800 feet (250 metres) and more above sea level. The highest peak of Zhoushan
Island, the largest island of the group, rises to 1,640 feet (500 metres).
Situated at the entrance to Hangzhou (Hangchow) Bay, the islands also receive
much of the silt load discharged from the mouth of the Yangtze River (Chang
Jiang) to the north, and many are surrounded by mud banks; over time some of the
islands have become attached to the mainland.
The islands were first brought under regular Chinese administration in the 8th
century, after which they were administered from Shanghai on the mainland. The
islands were important because they provided excellent harbours for the
flourishing trade linking Japan, the Ryukyu Islands, and the Zhejiang ports of
Ningbo and Hangzhou.
The connection with Japan was not merely commercial in character. One of the
small islands to the east of Zhoushan itself, Putuo Shan, became an important
Buddhist centre. Now covered with monasteries, cave temples, and shrines, it was
a place of pilgrimage as early as the Song dynasty (960–1279). It is believed to
have been founded in 916, its early cult being connected with Avalokitesvara
(Chinese Guanyin), the goddess of mercy, an image of whom was brought there from
the Tiantai Mountains, a centre of Buddhism on the nearby mainland. A temple to
the goddess was rebuilt and greatly enlarged in the 11th century and in 1131
became a major temple of Chan (Zen) Buddhism. Extensive sea traffic with Japan
enabled the island centre to develop strong links with the major centres of Zen
Buddhism in Japan; in the late 13th century, when the Mongol ruler Kublai Khan
attempted his conquest of Japan, he employed monks from Putuo Shan as
intermediaries. During the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) the area was badly damaged
by the raids of Japanese pirates, and the temples fell into disrepair. They
were, however, restored in 1580. During the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12) they
were given imperial recognition.
In the early 16th century the islands began to play a role in European trade. In
1661 some of the monasteries were looted and pillaged by the Dutch. At the end
of the 18th century, one of the demands presented by the British mission to
Beijing (1794; led by Lord Macartney) was for the establishment of a British
trading settlement in the islands. During the first Opium War (1839–42), fought
between Great Britain and China, part of the archipelago was for a time occupied
by the British.
With the growth of modern shipping and the emergence of Shanghai as a major port
in the 19th century, the commercial importance of the archipelago decreased. It
remains, however, one of the most important Chinese fishing grounds and is home
to an enormous fishing fleet. The islands produce great quantities of fish for
market and such marine products as kelp and other seaweeds and algae. The
islands are also intensively cultivated, producing two crops of rice per year.
Some of the mud flats have been reclaimed in order to extend the area under
cultivation.
Dinghai, the chief town of the archipelago, is a walled city located some
distance inland on Zhoushan Island; it is connected to the coast by a short
canal. Dinghai became the administrative centre when the Qing dynasty
transferred the administration of the islands from the mainland to there in the
17th century.