Subject: Science--China--History--16th century--Jesuit contributions

Johann Schreck Terrentius, SJ : his European network and the origins of the Jesuit library in Peking
AuthorGolvers, NoëlSchreck, Johann Terrenz 鄧玉函, 1576-1630
PlaceTurnhout, Belgium
PublisherBrepols
CollectionRicci Institute Library
Edition
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Digital Book (PDF)
SeriesDe Diversis Artibus (DDA 107 (N.S. 70))
ShelfDigital Archives, Seminar Room 102-103
Call NumberBV3427.S358 G76 2020
Description648 p. : ill. (some color) ; 24 cm + pdf
Note

Johann Schreck Terrentius, SJ : his European network and the origins of the Jesuit library in Peking / Noël Golvers.
Included bibliographical references and index.

Chapter 1. The European 'Tour’
1.1 The prelude: Terrentius's academic Wanderjahre (c. 1590-1610): From Freiburg to Rome
1.2 Rome (1610-15)
1.3 From Rome to Lisbon: Terrentius's tour as Trigault's companion for China (1616-18)

Chapter 2. The People
2.1 Personal acquaintances: the 'active' network
2.2 Other names

Chapter 3. The Books and Instruments Collected
3.1 Terrentius's personal reading and the Fondo Faber
3.2 The 331 books bought (or received) at the Officina Plantiniana in Antwerp (December, 1616)
3.3 The 75 books, with the inscription: "Missionis Sinensis"
3.4 The instruments
3.5 The arrival in Macau and Peking

Chapter 4. The Multiple Competences of the Polymath Terrentius
4.1 Medicine: Terrentius's double profile
4.2 Mineralogy: minerals, mining and mineral sources
4.3 Botany
4.4 Mathematics
4.5 Terrentius astronomer
4.6 Calendar
4.7 Terrentius and magnetism
4.8 Cryptography
4.9 Linguistics
4.10 Encyclopedism

Chapter 5. A Final Assessment of Terrentius

Appendices
1. Bibliotheca Pontificia in the actual Beitang collection
2. Documents in the archives of the Officina Plantiniana
3. List of the 75 books in the Beitang catalogue with the inscription: "Missionis Sinensis"
4. Short title catalogue of Plantin-Moretus editions among the books Terrentius-Trigault acquired in Europe
5. Necrology of Terrentius (1630)
6. List of 36 letters from / the 35 letters to Terrentius

A thorough analysis of the sinuous peregrinatio academica of Johann Terrentius Schreck (1576-1630) between 1600-1618 through (South-, Central- and NW-) European universities, academies and courts (at Freiburg /Br.; Paris; Rome; Basel; Padua; Strasbourg, Prague, Kassel, etc.) and his rich correspondence displays a widespread network of contacts, covering a broad range of domains, from medicine to alchemy, pharmacy, botany, and through engineering to (pure and applied) mathematics, and calendar making. In all these domains of the contemporary ?Republic of Letters?, this former student of François Viète (Paris), Galileo (Padua) and ex-Lincean, adept of Copernicus and Paracelsus showed himself to be a passionate scholar with multi-faceted and versatile talents. After 1611, with this very rich experience he entered the Society of Jesus, and shortly afterward he was appointed as companion of Nicolas Trigault, who was touring through Europe (1615-1618) as procurator on behalf of the fledgling Jesuit Mission in China, seeking funds, men, books and scientific instruments. This second phase of intensive travelling through European centers of scholarship, patronage, and printing (including Rome; Venice; Basel; Frankfurt; Cologne, Antwerp, etc.) resulted in an enormous collection of books and instruments, which were dispatched to Lisbon from various points in 1617/1618. Shipped to China, these materials arrived in Macau in 1619, and in Peking in 1625, becoming the core of the Jesuit libraries, mainly in Peking, and the basis for the scholarly activities of the Jesuits over the following decades in the domains of mathematics, calendar making, medicine, etc.

Local access dig.pdf. [Golvers-Johann Schreck Terrentius.pdf]

ISBN9782503581439
Life, Thought and Image of Wang Zheng, a Confucian-Christian in Late Ming China
AuthorDing Ruizhong 丁銳中
PlaceBonn
Publisher---
CollectionRicci Institute Library
Edition
LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation (PDF)
Series
ShelfDigital Archives
Call NumberDS753.6.W36 D564 2019d
Descriptionpdf [291 pages : illustrations (some color)]
Note

Life, Thought and Image of Wang Zheng, a Confucian-Christian in Late Ming China / Inaugural-Dissertation zur Erlangung der Doktorwürde der Philosophischen Fakultät der Rheinischen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Bonn vorgelegt von Ruizhong Ding aus Qishan, VR. China.

Thesis (Ph.D.)--Faculty of Philosphy, Rheinischen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, 2019.

Includes bibliographical references (p.269-291)

Table of Wang Zheng’s Works p. 256.

Abstract
This dissertation aims at the core question, which is that Wang Zheng, as a Confucian literati with a classical Chinese tradition and education, how did he interpret the Christian teachings and set up his thought system? In the part of Wang Zheng's life, the author mainly introduced his education, Christian Baptism and official career, which are based on some primary scources. Factually, through the analysis, his religious thought deeply influence his private life and the official career. The second part is about Wang Zheng's thought-Revering Heaven and Caring for Human Beings, which was integrated between Confucian teachings and Christian doctrines. This coherent system of thought has three parts, i.e. knowing the Lord of Heaven, revering the Lord of Heaven and serving the Lord of Heaven, which is mainly based on the texts of WTARJL, RHY, RJSB. In the third part of this research, the author analysed the image of Wang Zheng in the history, which includes three aspects, self-description, historical evaluation and modern image. His image of Confucian-Christian was gradually discovered. Therefore, we can think that Wang Zheng's integrated thought of Revering Heaven and Caring for Human Beings, which instructed his ethical practice of life. In the meantime, we also can find that the topic of his thought was deeply rooted in his historical image.
 
Local access dig.pdf. [Ding-Wang Zheng.pdf]