Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Legitimacy from Seas: Surveying, Mapmaking, and Cosmology of Manchurian Sea Space during the Early Qing
View through CrossRef
Abstract
This article examines how the Qing empire reconfigured its cosmology of seas –
ilan mederi
– after 1644 to construct a hybrid framework of imperial legitimacy that integrated Manchu and Chinese worldviews. While pre-conquest Manchu cosmology recognized three seas (
dergi mederi, amargi mederi, julergi mederi
) linked to rivers originating from Mount Changbai, early Qing rulers – especially the Kangxi and Qianlong emperors – reinterpreted these concepts within the structure of Chinese
sihai
(four seas) thought. Through extensive surveys, mapmaking projects, and the incorporation of coastal tribes, the Qing systematically relocated and redefined maritime spaces such as
dergi mederi
and
julergi mederi
, aligning them with the culturally resonant
donghai
and
beihai
of Chinese political geography. Ritual reforms, including the establishment of new sea temples and the reorganization of natural worship, further embedded these spaces into imperial ideology. By linking Mount Changbai with Mount Tai and equating Manchuria’s eastern seas with the classical East Sea, the Qing court articulated a unified imperial cosmology that situated Manchu origins within the legitimacy-granting landscape of China proper. This study demonstrates that Qing empire-building relied not only on territorial expansion and administration but also on the deliberate remapping of cosmology, geography, and ritual to fuse two imperial traditions into a coherent ideological order.
Title: Legitimacy from Seas: Surveying, Mapmaking, and Cosmology of Manchurian Sea Space during the Early Qing
Description:
Abstract
This article examines how the Qing empire reconfigured its cosmology of seas –
ilan mederi
– after 1644 to construct a hybrid framework of imperial legitimacy that integrated Manchu and Chinese worldviews.
While pre-conquest Manchu cosmology recognized three seas (
dergi mederi, amargi mederi, julergi mederi
) linked to rivers originating from Mount Changbai, early Qing rulers – especially the Kangxi and Qianlong emperors – reinterpreted these concepts within the structure of Chinese
sihai
(four seas) thought.
Through extensive surveys, mapmaking projects, and the incorporation of coastal tribes, the Qing systematically relocated and redefined maritime spaces such as
dergi mederi
and
julergi mederi
, aligning them with the culturally resonant
donghai
and
beihai
of Chinese political geography.
Ritual reforms, including the establishment of new sea temples and the reorganization of natural worship, further embedded these spaces into imperial ideology.
By linking Mount Changbai with Mount Tai and equating Manchuria’s eastern seas with the classical East Sea, the Qing court articulated a unified imperial cosmology that situated Manchu origins within the legitimacy-granting landscape of China proper.
This study demonstrates that Qing empire-building relied not only on territorial expansion and administration but also on the deliberate remapping of cosmology, geography, and ritual to fuse two imperial traditions into a coherent ideological order.
Related Results
Legitimacy in Policing: A Systematic Review
Legitimacy in Policing: A Systematic Review
This Campbell systematic review assesses the direct and indirect benefits of public police interventions that use procedurally just dialogue. The review summarises findings from 30...
Organizational Legitimacy
Organizational Legitimacy
Organizational legitimacy is a central concept within organizational research. Most definitions of organizational legitimacy refer to the appropriateness or alignment of a subject ...
Freedom in the High Seas
Freedom in the High Seas
This study is to determine how the implementation of the use of forms of freedom in the high seas according to the 1982 Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS 1982) and how the e...
Variability of Sea Surface Salinity in the Southeastern Arabian Sea: Driving mechanisms and influence on the Arabian Sea mini Warm Pool
Variability of Sea Surface Salinity in the Southeastern Arabian Sea: Driving mechanisms and influence on the Arabian Sea mini Warm Pool
<p>With sea surface temperatures (SST) exceeding 30&#730;C in May, the southeastern Arabian Sea (SEAS) hosts one of the warmest open ocean region globally, wh...
Seasonal Arctic sea ice predictability and prediction
Seasonal Arctic sea ice predictability and prediction
Arctic sea ice plays a central role in the Earth’s climate. Changes in the sea ice on seasonal-to-interannual timescales impact ecosystems, populations and a growing number of stak...
Seditious Spaces
Seditious Spaces
The title ‘Seditious Spaces’ is derived from one aspect of Britain’s colonial legacy in Malaysia (formerly Malaya): the Sedition Act 1948. While colonial rule may seem like it was ...
When will the marginal sea grow up?
When will the marginal sea grow up?
<p>The back-arc marginal sea is a small ocean basin located between the volcanic arc and the continental crust. This area is not only an important gathering place for...
Epicontinental seas as efficient carbon sinks: proto-Paratethys & West Siberian seas during the PETM
Epicontinental seas as efficient carbon sinks: proto-Paratethys & West Siberian seas during the PETM
<p>Removal of carbon on geological timescales is generally assumed to be governed by the relative strength of silicate weathering and organic carbon burial. For past ...

