摘要
In nineteenth-century China, longitudinal coordinates were widely understood conceptually. From the end of Qianlong’s reign, but during the Jiaqing-Daoguang period especially, the idea of a spherical earth divided into 360 degrees spread to remote places across China, as evidenced by local gazetteers describing a county’s longitude. Though ultimately derived from Jesuit translations of the previous two centuries, this idea circulated independently within China, through imperially-endorsed court texts and the movement of bureaucrats around the empire. But a problem emerges from these passages: they provide little evidence that longitude was actually being measured and calculated on the ground. Rather, these passages indicate that estimates of longitude were being derived from early eighteenth-century Jesuit gazetteers. The idea was there, but not the practice. Why? This talk will introduce the evidence, and offer some preliminary speculation about this puzzling absence.
講者
Prof. John Alekna
Assistant Professor, department of History of Science, Technology and Medicine, Peking University