China-South China Sea/Ancient Map

Centuries-old map shows how ancient Chinese fishermen navigated South China Sea

  • English

Shotlist


Tanmen Township, Qionghai City, Hainan Province, south China - Released on May 17, 2024 (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
1. Aerial shots of fishing village
2. Various of fisherman Lu Jiabing opening door, entering house
3. Coconut tree
4. Various of Lu showing, introducing "Genglubu," ancient nautical route map
5. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Lu Jiabing, fisherman (starting with shot 4/partially overlaid with shots 6-7/ending with shot 8):
"I'm not sure when this Genglubu was written. Anyway, it's been passed down from generation to generation, and I'm the sixth in line to inherit it. We used it along with a compass at sea. The needle of the compass points toward south and north. 'Zi' refers to north and 'Wu' to south. There are 24 squares, each containing one character. One square represents 15 degrees, and there are 360 degrees in total."
++SHOTS OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
6. Genglubu
7. Various of Lu showing, introducing compass to reporter
++SHOTS OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
8. Compass
9. Line in Genglubu
10. Various of Lu introducing Genglubu compass
11. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Lu Jiabing, fisherman (starting with shot 10/partially overlaid with shots 12-13/ending with shot 14):
"One red circle represents a single sea route. Our ancestors' exploration covered the entire South China Sea. It has been passed down through generations. Whenever my grandfather headed out to sea, he would read Genglubu by the light of kerosene lamp the previous night. I'd climb on his back to look at it along with him. In the beginning, I would follow my father to work in the Nansha Islands. We would stay there for six months. We sailed all over the Nansha Islands."
++SHOTS OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
12. Various of Lu introducing "Genglubu"

FILE: China - Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
13. Various of waves
++SHOTS OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
14. Aerial shots of sea, waves, birds

Tanmen Township, Qionghai City, Hainan Province, south China - Released on May 17, 2024 (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
15. Various of Lu introducing ancient sea chart
16. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Lu Jiabing, fisherman (starting with shot 15/partially overlaid with shot 17):
"This is the sea chart passed down in my family. The names marked on the entire nautical chart were all left by our ancestors. Meiji Island (Panganiban Reef) was called 'Shuangmen.' These are the sections that are connected. We call them 'Duanjie' as it's easier to remember. Its official name is Ren'ai Reef. These places are known as the 'ancestral waters.' These are the places our ancestors explored and developed. So, I feel proud of them."
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
17. Various of Lu introducing ancient sea chart to reporter
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++

FILE: China - Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
18. Aerial shots of sea, boats

Storyline


Centuries-old maps handed down to fishermen by their ancestors in Tanmen Township of China's southernmost Hainan Province provides compelling evidence to China's sovereignty over the South China Sea, according to a China Global Television Network (CGTN) documentary released on Friday.

Like many people in Tanmen, Lu Jiabing was born into a fishermen' family going back generations. What distinguishes Lu's family is a treasured family heirloom -- a booklet used to navigate the South China Sea which Tanmen residents call "Genglubu", meaning "Route Map."

Each family's Genglubu is different from another. Passed down through successive generations, the documents embody the Tanmen fishermen's adventurer spirits, and have become an important basis for China's territorial rights in the South China Sea.

"I'm not sure when this Genglubu was written. Anyway, it's been passed down from generation to generation, and I'm the sixth in line to inherit it. We used it along with a compass at sea. The needle of the compass points toward south and north. 'Zi' refers to north and 'Wu' to south. There are 24 squares, each containing one character. One square represents 15 degrees, and there are 360 degrees in total," Lu told CGTN.

Out on the vast ocean, the compass and Genglubu have forged new routes at sea for the fishermen over the past centuries. One line of text on the map indicates a route From the Xisha Islands' Panshiyu in the central part of the sea to the Nansha Islands' Shuangzi in its south, covering some 280 nautical miles.

Among Tanmen's fishermen of centuries past, there were several hundred Genglubu in circulation, and the Lu family's manuscript is one of the most detailed. It records 135 routes -- 84 in the Nansha Islands and 38 in the Xisha Islands.

"One red circle represents a single sea route. Our ancestors' exploration covered the entire South China Sea. It has been passed down through generations. Whenever my grandfather headed out to sea, he would read Genglubu by the light of kerosene lamp the previous night. I'd climb on his back to look at it along with him. In the beginning, I would follow my father to work in the Nansha Islands. We would stay there for six months. We sailed all over the Nansha Islands," said Lu.

Long before satellite navigation or even accurate nautical charts came into being, Hainan fishermen used Genglubu and drove wooden sailboats to cultivate the sea. These documents have survived to witness the development the South China Sea islands by local people.

"This is the sea chart passed down in my family. The names marked on the entire nautical chart were all left by our ancestors. Meiji Island (Panganiban Reef) was called 'Shuangmen.' These are the sections that are connected. We call them 'Duanjie' as it's easier to remember. Its official name is Ren'ai Reef. These places are known as the 'ancestral waters.' These are the places our ancestors explored and developed. So, I feel proud of them," Lu said.

DOWNLOAD
  • ID : 8377389
  • Dateline : May 17, 2024/File
  • Location : China
  • Category : politics,society
  • Duration : 2'47
  • Audio Language : Chinese/Nats/Part Mute
  • Source : China Central Television (CCTV),China Global Television Network (CGTN)
  • Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland
  • Published : 2024-05-18 01:46
  • Last Modified : 2024-05-18 01:51:28
  • Version : 2

China-South China Sea/Ancient Map

Centuries-old map shows how ancient Chinese fishermen navigated South China Sea

Dateline : May 17, 2024/File

Location : China

Duration : 2'47

  • English


Tanmen Township, Qionghai City, Hainan Province, south China - Released on May 17, 2024 (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
1. Aerial shots of fishing village
2. Various of fisherman Lu Jiabing opening door, entering house
3. Coconut tree
4. Various of Lu showing, introducing "Genglubu," ancient nautical route map
5. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Lu Jiabing, fisherman (starting with shot 4/partially overlaid with shots 6-7/ending with shot 8):
"I'm not sure when this Genglubu was written. Anyway, it's been passed down from generation to generation, and I'm the sixth in line to inherit it. We used it along with a compass at sea. The needle of the compass points toward south and north. 'Zi' refers to north and 'Wu' to south. There are 24 squares, each containing one character. One square represents 15 degrees, and there are 360 degrees in total."
++SHOTS OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
6. Genglubu
7. Various of Lu showing, introducing compass to reporter
++SHOTS OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
8. Compass
9. Line in Genglubu
10. Various of Lu introducing Genglubu compass
11. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Lu Jiabing, fisherman (starting with shot 10/partially overlaid with shots 12-13/ending with shot 14):
"One red circle represents a single sea route. Our ancestors' exploration covered the entire South China Sea. It has been passed down through generations. Whenever my grandfather headed out to sea, he would read Genglubu by the light of kerosene lamp the previous night. I'd climb on his back to look at it along with him. In the beginning, I would follow my father to work in the Nansha Islands. We would stay there for six months. We sailed all over the Nansha Islands."
++SHOTS OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
12. Various of Lu introducing "Genglubu"

FILE: China - Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
13. Various of waves
++SHOTS OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
14. Aerial shots of sea, waves, birds

Tanmen Township, Qionghai City, Hainan Province, south China - Released on May 17, 2024 (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
15. Various of Lu introducing ancient sea chart
16. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Lu Jiabing, fisherman (starting with shot 15/partially overlaid with shot 17):
"This is the sea chart passed down in my family. The names marked on the entire nautical chart were all left by our ancestors. Meiji Island (Panganiban Reef) was called 'Shuangmen.' These are the sections that are connected. We call them 'Duanjie' as it's easier to remember. Its official name is Ren'ai Reef. These places are known as the 'ancestral waters.' These are the places our ancestors explored and developed. So, I feel proud of them."
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
17. Various of Lu introducing ancient sea chart to reporter
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++

FILE: China - Date Unknown (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
18. Aerial shots of sea, boats


Centuries-old maps handed down to fishermen by their ancestors in Tanmen Township of China's southernmost Hainan Province provides compelling evidence to China's sovereignty over the South China Sea, according to a China Global Television Network (CGTN) documentary released on Friday.

Like many people in Tanmen, Lu Jiabing was born into a fishermen' family going back generations. What distinguishes Lu's family is a treasured family heirloom -- a booklet used to navigate the South China Sea which Tanmen residents call "Genglubu", meaning "Route Map."

Each family's Genglubu is different from another. Passed down through successive generations, the documents embody the Tanmen fishermen's adventurer spirits, and have become an important basis for China's territorial rights in the South China Sea.

"I'm not sure when this Genglubu was written. Anyway, it's been passed down from generation to generation, and I'm the sixth in line to inherit it. We used it along with a compass at sea. The needle of the compass points toward south and north. 'Zi' refers to north and 'Wu' to south. There are 24 squares, each containing one character. One square represents 15 degrees, and there are 360 degrees in total," Lu told CGTN.

Out on the vast ocean, the compass and Genglubu have forged new routes at sea for the fishermen over the past centuries. One line of text on the map indicates a route From the Xisha Islands' Panshiyu in the central part of the sea to the Nansha Islands' Shuangzi in its south, covering some 280 nautical miles.

Among Tanmen's fishermen of centuries past, there were several hundred Genglubu in circulation, and the Lu family's manuscript is one of the most detailed. It records 135 routes -- 84 in the Nansha Islands and 38 in the Xisha Islands.

"One red circle represents a single sea route. Our ancestors' exploration covered the entire South China Sea. It has been passed down through generations. Whenever my grandfather headed out to sea, he would read Genglubu by the light of kerosene lamp the previous night. I'd climb on his back to look at it along with him. In the beginning, I would follow my father to work in the Nansha Islands. We would stay there for six months. We sailed all over the Nansha Islands," said Lu.

Long before satellite navigation or even accurate nautical charts came into being, Hainan fishermen used Genglubu and drove wooden sailboats to cultivate the sea. These documents have survived to witness the development the South China Sea islands by local people.

"This is the sea chart passed down in my family. The names marked on the entire nautical chart were all left by our ancestors. Meiji Island (Panganiban Reef) was called 'Shuangmen.' These are the sections that are connected. We call them 'Duanjie' as it's easier to remember. Its official name is Ren'ai Reef. These places are known as the 'ancestral waters.' These are the places our ancestors explored and developed. So, I feel proud of them," Lu said.

ID : 8377389

Published : 2024-05-18 01:46

Last Modified : 2024-05-18 01:51:28

Source : China Central Television (CCTV),China Global Television Network (CGTN)

Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland

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