Wednesday, June 3, 2020

What Would Marco Polo Have Seen at the Sung Palace? [Reproduced June 2, 2020]


WHAT MARCO POLO MIGHT HAVE SEEN AT THE ROYAL PAVILIONS OF THE SOUTHERN SUNG ON PHOENIX HILL IN THE 13TH CENTURY – A VISUALIZATION



James C. Manley, Ph.D.

California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, California, USA

Email: jcmanleyy@gmail.com; Web: http://www.cpp.edu/~jcmanley


ABSTRACT

Modern GPS and GIS techniques make it possible to visualize the sites of the major pavilions of the Southern Sung Dynasty. Using both western and Chinese sources, the author has created a plausible visualization of what a visitor in the 13th century may have seen as he approached the location of main palace of the Southern Sung near Phoenix Hill. This visualization is based on A.C. Moule’s 1958 publication Quinsai together with a high-quality, digital topographic map provided by Zhejiang University. The visualization software used by the author will be described, together with an invitation to explore possible lines of collaborative work with Chinese faculty in GIS, archaeology, and architecture, aesthetics and “virtual museums.”  The presentation will include the present state of project, including images and data.

BODY

It is a pleasure to join you in this conference. In the time that I have I would like to update my findings from last year, which have not been reported on, and sketch out my plans for the future, which hopefully can involve collaboration with NCUT and other Chinese institutions.

As a philosophy professor interested in GPS and GIS a few introductory words may be in order. My graduate work was done in the area of aesthetics and for many years I have been interested in museums and museum aesthetics. With the advent of the internet, the possibilities for virtual museums and online visualization have grown enormously. I have also done a substantial amount of overseas-type teaching. While in China in the year 2000, I found a candidate for a virtual museum display.

From a discrepancy on a tourist map of Hangzhou, I found myself in a project to locate the foundations of the main palace, or “Da Nei,” occupied by the last emperors of the Southern Sung Dynasty on Phoenix Hill in Hangzhou. The idea was to create a virtual Sung world that could be visited, as it were, like a museum. This visualization could be rendered more specific and concrete over the years with linked collaborations with interested parties and institutions.

I’ve been back to China each summer since then to walk the paths on Phoenix Hill that almost certainly represent paths dating back to the Sung and earlier. In this endeavor I’ve been able to rely on a particularly interesting modern map of the Phoenix Hill area provided by A.C. Moule in Quinsai[1], first published in 1957. The second resource is a wonderfully precise digital topographic map of the area provided by colleagues[2] at Zhejiang University. (The red layer actually indicates green vegetation.)

These two resources have made it possible to do virtual computer walks on Phoenix Hill and then duplicate the walks on the actual Phoenix Hill. This provides an extraordinary sense of how the description of early events may “fit” with the existing terrain. We are or course all fortunate that the Phoenix Hill area is protected and has not been developed in the seven hundred years since the palaces of the Southern Sung fell into ruins.


Moule’s Quinsai is referenced in the much better known work on Sung life and culture by Jacques Gerent in his  Daily Life in China on the eve of the Mongol Invasion[3], which first appeared in 1959. Gernet provides a map “after the reconstruction by A.C. Moule” at the beginning of his text. (Figure 1)


 Figures 1 and 2: (Combined)

The Moule text is much less easy to obtain than Gernet’s, but very much worth the effort. His map, which is a western projection, is more detailed and is “camera-ready,” as it were, to be superimposed over a digital elevation map. Unfortunately, the Moule map is unknown in Hangzhou.

When I interviewed the Director, Shao Qun[4], of the Hangzhou Antiquities Office in 2004, she said this map was not in the archives there, nor any other maps done by foreign scholars, but that Beijing University was currently undertaking a survey of the protected area.  There clearly have been discontinuities in the historical record during the time of Mao, but the city of Hangzhou is moving aggressively to reclaim the history of its rich cultural heritage.

In the meantime, there is an opportunity to make some conjectures which were impossible before about the terrain a visitor may have seen in the 13th century. A central question is, “Where are the foundations of the “Da Nei?” The Da Nei was the central palace of the emperor in Sung times and would have been the place where a distinguished visitor might have an audience.

Once the Moule map is superimposed over the digital elevation model and rectified[5] with respect to landmarks such as the Su Causeway, the tip of the Lei Fung Peninsula and the center of the Alter of Heaven, the palace falls quite clearly in the city near what is now named Sung Cheng Road. Figure 3 shows the Moule map “draped” in 3Dem over the Zhejiang model.[6] For display purposes, I’ve chosen a black outline over a white background.

It is always a challenge to select the most viewable slide, especially within the constraints of this paper. Nevertheless, Figure 3 is a 3D visualization of the Moule map showing the outlines of the Da Nei. Figure 3 looks to the north; Figure 4 to the West. The map fits the territory like a glove, showing especially the route of Wansongling Road through the pass (Fig. 4, far right, dotted line).


 Figures 3:  Overlay Palace Area; 


Figure 4: The Dai Nei

With conscientious rectification, what is dependable in one part of the map will permit a dependable extrapolation to unknown areas. The rough rectification using these large and obvious features defined the area of the Palace. In turn, walking through the palace area can permit further rectification with respect to other geographical features, in particular, valleys and entrances to valleys, as we shall see below.  Figure 4 is an overlay of GPS tracks of my walk in the vicinity of the palace in 2003.

Figure 5 also shows the current best estimate of the coordinates of the Palace corners7] and GPS tracks in the area.  Figure 6 shows a more distant view from the vicinity of the East Gate. This would be the view a visitor would have in the 13th century and would have been the view that Marco Polo might have seen as he approached the palace. It is also the view with which one expert, Lu Jun[8], concurred as showing the likely location of the palace.



Figures 5 : Best Estimate  


East Gate View  (Changed from Beijing, 6/2/2020 - Adding The  Red Hiking Line)

The Palace rests under Phoenix Hill from this view, “like a calligrapher’s table.”  With repeated visits, I am confident that the visualization is consistent with Moule’s intent in the placement of the Palace. The northern part is located in an area called now the “Chinese Medicine Factory.” It is said that Mao ordered the factory built on these foundations when he entered Hangzhou in 1949. Shao Qun said that permission has now been secured to survey this area, which to this point has been off limits to archaeologists. In Moule’s reconstruction, there is a road through the Palace which turns north to connect on the right to North Gate and on the left to Wansongling and West Lake.

Although the 2000 Tourist map showed the Palace of the Southern Sung far to the west, there is consensus among locals that the palace was in the area noted. The question is precisely where. Many local citizens will tell you that it is in the area of the “Chinese Medicine Factory.” This facility is in several parts and extends to the south where Moule placed the two southern gates of the palace wall. In Figure five, one can see red tracks running east to west across the Da Nei. These tracks are from a walk along a street bisecting the current placement of the Da Nei. It is my surmise that this street is located along the path that in the 13th century would have moved through the palace area to intersect with the North Road. Today it is the site of a colorful and active farmer’s market on weekend mornings.

There are geographical features that support this. In the protected area there are paths which lead away from the east side of the Da Nei in natural ways: to the area of the north gate on the east and Wansong Pass to the west. A path leads up the valley to the newly-reconstructed kiln area near the West Gate. What the visitor here discovers is that many of Moule’s places are acknowledged in present-day Hangzhou. A modern gate is placed precisely where Moule’s map would indicate, though without signage.  Although not noted on Moule’s map, Gernet notes the presence of a kiln in the vicinity of imperial palace[9].

Not all of the paths noted on Moule’s map have left modern vestiges. The southern portion of the road on the Da Nei’s west side is lost in a ravine or would be on the east side of large wall that is a part of the medicine factory.




Figures 7 : “Whose woods face one another” - Valley


Figure 8:  Detail

But other geographic features are striking. It is said in Marco Polo’s Travels that the king would often sport with his concubines and that “... after they tired they went into these woods which faced one another....”[10] The sides of the valley leading to West Gate and the kiln are more even than those of the valleys on either side. The inference is inviting that this is the valley “whose woods faced each other”, i.e., the valley of the emperor’s pleasure garden. [Figures 7 and 8]. No pools are currently here, but the topography would imply that there could well be a cascade of small pools placed on this terrain [Figure 8]. Notice that the red GPS tracks closely follow the contours of the terrain. This is an additional cross-check on the rectification of the model.

What did Marco Polo see? Did he even visit Hangzhou? Without entering the debate directly, I do want to acknowledge works such as Frances Wood’s Did Marco Polo Go to China?[11] On the other hand, I’m struck by how geographical features seem to confirm aspects of his narrative. He would most likely have entered from the East Gate of the palace wall, situated on a hill overlooking the palace, now occupied by a radio/transmitting station (point 1) of Figure 9. He might have proceeded as described in Travels[12] through the Da Nei. He would then have seen the paths which continued on to West Lake [Figure : points 4, 5, and 6]


Figures 9 : From East Gate to West Lake 


Figure 10: Through Wansong Pass 

The route is different today. In Figure 10 one can follow the red GPS track through Wansong Pass from the Palace area to West Lake in the distance. According to Moule, in Sung times, the approach would been over the left ridge of the woods which “face each other and then up over the right ridge and then through the pass. The reason for this “up and down” route may well have been flooding in those times along the lower modern route.

CONCLUSION

While the temptations are very great to delve even more deeply into these non-philosophical areas, the author’s main interest is in visualization and a virtual museum of the Phoenix Hill area. Shao Qun of the Hangzhou Antiquities Office said that the first priority for Phoenix Hill was preservation, followed by a survey, followed by education. She said Beijing University was currently doing a survey of the archaeological legacy and will undoubtedly the final arbiter in China on the location of the palace. But the possibilities are very great through open architecture visualization programs such as VTP[13] and others to create a rich virtual world with geo-referenced terrain, populated with appropriate vegetation, CAD-designed buildings, and a variety of historical and other annotations, hidden and manifest, available to “curate” the exhibit.[14]

There are additional recent Chinese texts on Sung architecture and on the hills of Hangzhou, including Phoenix Hill.[15]

In taking the next steps in this project I would like to work cooperatively with Chinese institutions, including the Hangzhou Antiquities Office and Beijing University’s Phoenix Hill Survey Team, in the “Education” phase of the development cycle in creating a museum-quality virtual Phoenix Hill.

ENDNOTES

[1] Moule, A. C. Arthur Christopher 1873-1957. Quinsai; with other notes on Marco Polo. Cambridge, 1958 (first published in 1957)
[2]周斌 zhoubin 浙江大学农业遥感与信息技术应用研究所 and his graduate student Xin Wang.
[3] Gernet, Jacques. Daily life in China, on the Eve of the Mongol Invasion, 1250-1276. Translated by H. M. Wright, Stanford, 1962
[4] [1]邵群 Shao Qun, Cultural Relics Department of Phoenix Hill, Dean of the Cultural Relics Department, interview, July 2004
[5] 3Dem is one of several excellent applications for visualization. It is available at http://www.visualizationsoftware.com/3dem/ ERDAS is another at  http://gis.leica-geosystems.com/ Finally, ArcView: http://www.esri.com/software/arcgis/arcview/
[6] Rectification is, of course, ongoing, but the Da Nei coordinates have remained stable through many cross-checks. These cross-checks test the rectification by walking projected routes and also testing the several software applications (ERDAS, 3Dem, etc.,) against each other.
[7] Coordinates for the "Da Nei" Central Palace Foundations
                                                Latitude                 Longitude             
North West Corner:             30.2269                 120.16192
Southwest Corner:               30.2251                 120.16195
Southeast Corner:                30.2251                 120.16285
Northeast Corner                 30.2269                 120.16285
[8]陆君 Lu Jun, Antiquities Clerk, Wu Hill, interview, July 2004
[9] Gernet, p. 84
[10] Gernet, p. 120
[11] Wood, Frances, Did Marco Polo Go to China? Westview Press, 1995
[12] Marco Polo, quoted in Gernet,  pp. 119-120
[13] VTP for “Visual Terrain Project” at http://vterrain.org/
[14] Ongoing efforts in this regard will be available at http://www.cpp.edu/~jcmanley
[15] Hills of Hangzhou and Phoenix Hill (in Chinese)


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