To help Koreans navigate and recognize the location of where they were, a Joseon (1392-1910) geographer and cartographer named Kim Jeong-ho in 1861 decided to create the country’s very first large-scale map of Korea, known as Daedongyeojido, which means “territorial map of the Great East” in English. The second edition was published in 1864 as an accordion-style foldable map.
Since then, different versions of maps with some variations have been created using woodblocks. It’s unknown exactly how many copies of the first and second editions were made, but the Cultural Heritage Administration (CHA) believes there are about 35 surviving Daedongyeojido to date, 21 in Korea and 14 overseas. The figure was recently updated as one of the maps — the most exact variation according to experts — was returned back home from Japan.
The CHA and the Overseas Korean Cultural Heritage Foundation unveiled the map to local media on Thursday at the National Palace Museum in central Seoul. The newly retrieved map that was carefully laid out in one of the exhibition halls of the museum, depicts roughly 47 kilometers (29 miles) of the Korean Peninsula, from north to south. When each foldable sheet — each measuring 20 by 30 centimeters — is laid out to form a whole map, it measures 4 meters wide and 6.7 meters long. The map consists of 23 sheets — 22 that feature different sections of the map and a catalog.
Dongyeodo is another map created during the same period. Kim is believed to have consulted the map as source material for Daedongyeojido. It’s also referred to as a colored transcribed edition of Daedongyeojido. It features geographic information about Joseon, including traffic routes, military facilities and roughly 18,000 place names, whereas Daedongyeojido omits many place names and jugi (information recorded on the margins on the history of respective territories, cartographic techniques applied and instructions on how to use the maps).
In other words, the edition returned from Japan is Daedongyeojido, but includes the annotations usually seen in Dongyeodo in its margins, making it a “perfect combination.”
For example, on the second sheet which illustrates Mt. Baekdu and its neighboring regions, the Baekdusan National Boundary Monument and the distances between military facilities are shown, which are not noted in other woodblock-printed editions of Daedongyeojido. On the 14th sheet, which depicts Ulleung Island and its neighboring regions, it also has information of points of departure for ships heading to Ulleng Island, which is not found in other editions of Daedongyeojido.
“This retrieved edition will provide material for studying the production and use of maps during the Joseon Dynasty,” said Kim. “It will also expand the scope of research on Joseon-era geographic information as the first woodblock-printed edition with transcribed annotations from Dongyeodo that has been identified to date.”
The CHA has not specified the date when the retrieved map will be available for the public to view but said it would soon organize an exhibit to showcase the map.
BY YIM SEUNG-HYE [yim.seunghye@joongang.co.kr]