Maps of the Edo Period

  • Berry, Mary Elizabeth: Japan in print: information and nation in the early modern period, Berkeley, Calif 2006 (Asia: local studies/global themes 12).
  • Fiévé, Nicolas; Waley, Paul (Hg.): Japanese capitals in historical perspective: place, power and memory in Kyoto, Edo and Tokyo, London 2003.
  • Gonnami, Tsuneharu: Images of foreigners in Edo period maps and prints, in: Journal of East Asian Libraries (116), 01.10.1998, bas, S. 5–18.
  • Kawamura, Hirotada: The National Map of Japan in the Tokugawa Shogunate (1633–1725): Misunderstandings Corrected, in: Imago Mundi 69 (2), 2017, S. 248–254.
  • Leca, Radu: Maps of the World in Early Modern Japan, in: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History, 2020. Online: <https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190277727.013.69>.
  • Loh, Joseph F.: When Worlds Collide: Art, Cartography, and Japanese Nanban World Map Screens, Columbia University, New York 2013.
  • Papelitzky, Elke: A description and analysis of the Japanese world map Bankoku sōzu in its version of 1671 and some thoughts on the sources of the original Bankoku sōzu, in: Journal of Asian History 48, 01.01.2014, bas, S. 15–59.
  • Shapinsky, Peter D.: Polyvocal Portolans: Nautical Charts and Hybrid Maritime Cultures in Early Modern East Asia, in: Early Modern Japan 14, 2006, S. 4–26.
  • Yamashita, Kazumasa (Hg.): Chizu de yomu Edo jidai = Japanese maps of the Edo period, Tokyo 1998.
  • Yonemoto, Marcia: Mapping early modern Japan: space, place, and culture in the Tokugawa period (1603-1868), Berkeley, Calif 2003 (Asia: local studies/global themes 7).
  • Yonemoto, Marcia: The „spatial vernacular“ in Tokugawa maps, in: Journal of Asian Studies 59 (3), 01.08.2000, bas, S. 647–666.
  • Edo jidai ‘kochizu’ sōran, Tokyo 1997.