ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1875 and reissued in 1973, analyses the limited evidence from the works of early Chinese historians that explorers from China had discovered a country they called Fusang – possibly western America, and in all probability Mexico. The original document on which Chinese historians based their accounts of Fusang was the report of a Buddhist monk called Hoei-shin, who, in the year 499 AD, returned from a long journey to the east.

part |2 pages

The Narrative of Hoei-Shin, with comments by Professor Carl F. Neumann

chapter |4 pages

Chapter I

chapter |17 pages

Chapter II

chapter |7 pages

Chapter III

chapter |12 pages

Chapter IV

chapter |4 pages

Chapter V

part |2 pages

Remarks on the Text of Professor Neumann

chapter |12 pages

Chapter VI

part |2 pages

Letter From Colonel Barclay Kennon on The Navigation of The North Pacific Ocean

chapter |18 pages

Chapter VII

chapter |5 pages

Chapter VIII

chapter |11 pages

Chapter IX

part |2 pages

American Antiquities, with Their Relations To The Old World

chapter |11 pages

Chapter X

chapter |9 pages

Chapter XI

chapter |4 pages

Chapter XII

part |2 pages

The Advocates and Opponents of The Narrative Of Hoei-Shin

chapter |34 pages

Chapter XIII

part |2 pages

The Latest Discussion of Fusang

chapter |28 pages

Chapter XIV