Robert Van Gulik


The Chinese Gold Murders

A Judge Dee Detective Storywith ten plates drawn by the author in Chinese style

PREFACE

THE CHINESE GOLD MURDERS takes us back to the beginning of Judge Dee's career when, thirty-three years of age, he had been appointed to his first post in the provinces, viz. that of magistrate of Peng-lai, a port city on the northeast coast of Shantung Province.

Then the Tang Emperor Kao-tsung (64ß-683) had just succeeded in establishing Chinese suzerainty over the greater part of Korea. According to the chronology of judge Dee Mysteries, Judge Dee arrived in Peng-lai in the summer of A.D. 663.

The reader will find a pictorial map of Peng-lai in the front of the book, and in the Postscript information on the ancient Chinese judicial system, taken over, with a few changes, from the preceding volume of the series, together with an account of the Chinese sources utilized.


ROBERT VAN GULIK

SKETCH MAP OF PENG-LAI

1. Tribunal

2. Temple of Confucius

3. Temple of War God

4. Temple of City God

5. Drum Tower

6. Nine Flowers Orchard

7. Hostel

8. Crab Restaurant

9. Wharf

10. River

11. Korean Quarter

12. Creek

13. Rainbow Bridge

14. White Cloud Temple

15. Flower Boats

16. Watergate

17. Town House Dr. Tsao



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