Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Who has a detailed map of all parts of China in Ming Dynasty?

Who has a detailed map of all parts of China in Ming Dynasty?

The map of China in Ming Dynasty is as follows:

There were thirteen bureaus and envoys in Beijing and Guangdong in the Ming Dynasty, including North Zhili, Shaanxi, Shanxi, Shandong, Henan (five northern provinces above), South Zhili, Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Huguang, Sichuan (five central provinces above), Guangdong, Fujian, Guangxi, Guizhou and Yunnan (five southern provinces above).

In the Ming Dynasty, * * * set up sixteen divisions, five divisions and two left-behind divisions. Thirteen of them are Dusi with the same name as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the other three are Wanquan Dusi, Daning Dusi and Liaodong Dusi.

At the beginning of the Ming Dynasty, more than forty guards were set up along the outer Mongolia border, including Dongsheng Guard, Wonan River Guard, Kaiping Guard and Daning Guard, all of which were important frontier areas in the Ming Dynasty, and their trends were generally Yinshan Mountain, Daqingshan Mountain and Xilamulun River.

After Yongle in the Ming Dynasty, due to the cold weather and poor farming, the border gradually moved south. In the middle of Ming Dynasty, with the revival of Mongolia, the border moved inward again, and the Great Wall was built to defend Mongolia, and nine important towns were set up along the Great Wall to strengthen defense. The Great Wall also became the dividing line between farming areas and nomadic areas at that time.

Baidu Encyclopedia-Ming Dynasty