国立情報学研究所 - ディジタル・シルクロード・プロジェクト
『東洋文庫所蔵』貴重書デジタルアーカイブ
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| 0348 |
Southern Tibet : vol.1 |
| 南チベット : vol.1 |
引用情報
OCR読み取り結果
dunque significa . . . Mar grande dalle rive del quale successivamenta discostandosi
il Padre, entrò in terra Toktokai . . .¹, while on both Delisle's maps Toktokai re-
mains at a considerable distance west of Grueber's route. In another point he fol-
lows Grueber closely, as may be seen from his maps, namely when the Father
says of Koko-nor: »Questo è un mare . . . di done hà l'origine il fiume Giallo
di China.»
If Koko-nor appears twice on Delisle's map, we find Lhasa thrice, under different
names. The first is Utsang, capital in the Kingdom of Utsang, the two provinces
of U or Wei and Tsang, which we remember from the title of the Chinese work
Wei-tsang-t'u-chih. This Utsang Delisle places south of the river Maurousso,
since Huc's and Prshevalskiy's memorable journeys better known as Mur-us or
Murussu, and also as Di-chu, or the upper Yangtse-chiang. North of the river is
M. Bainhara or Bayan-khara-ula, continuing eastwards in the range Altountchi
»terroir d'ou l'on tire de l'or».¹
Continuing southwards, past Moriul, we reach Poutala residence du Grand
Lama, which is the second Lhasa of the map. The third, Lassa or Barantola, is
the capital of the Kingdom of Lassa or Boutan.
E.N.E. of Poutala is Grueber's Retink, at the southern foot of M. Tanla. Is
this Tanla meant to be Nien-chen-tang-la, the eastern Transhimalaya? It seems so,
for Potala and Reting-gompa are indeed situated at the southern foot of the Trans-
himalaya. But such conclusions are useless as there are three Lhasa's on the map.
Add to this that on the northern side of Delisle's Tanla is a river Aghdame, now
known as Akdam, a right tributary to the Mur-ussu. Dr. TRONNIER identifies Grue-
ber's Toktokai with Mur-ussu.² On Delisle's map both are entered as separate
rivers, and Toktokai is also called Hatounousso. The latter may perhaps be identical
with the Hatun-gol of Prshevalskiy,³ the Mongol name for the Yellow River where it
leaves Oring-nor; as gol, ussu, and muren all mean river in Mongol, the river in
question can as well be called Hatun-ussu, exactly the same as the Hatounousso of
the map.
To return to Tanla we read south of this range the name Tçoumera, which
sounds somewhat like d'Anville's Tchimouran and Littledale's Charemaru, as the
highest peak of Nien-chen-tang-la is said to be called. On Delisle's map, however,
the name is attached to a tent-camp.
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