Author | Swen Litian [Sun Litian 孫立天 · 孙立天] |
Place | Leiden ; Boston |
Publisher | Brill |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Edition | |
Language | English |
Type | Book, Digital Book (PDF) |
Series | East and West (Leiden, Netherlands) ; v. 9 |
Shelf | Hallway Cases, Digital Archives |
Call Number | BV2290.S84 2021 |
Description | vii, 227 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm. |
Note | Jesuit mission and submission : Qing rulership and the fate of Christianity in China, 1644-1735 / by Litian Swen. Jesuit Mission and Submission' explains how the Jesuits entered the Manchu world after the Manchus conquered Beijing in 1644. Supported by Qing court archives, the book discovers the Jesuits? Manchu-style master-slave relationship with the Kangxi emperor. Against the backdrop of this relationship, the book reconstructs the back and forth negotiations between Kangxi and the Holy See regarding Chinese Rites Controversy (1705-1721), and shows that the Jesuits, although a group of foreign priests, had close access to Kangxi and were a trusted part of the Imperial circle. This book also redefines the rise and fall of the Christian mission in the early Qing court through key events, such as the Calendar Case and Yongzheng's prohibition of Christianity. (pp. 1-22) Introduction Part One: The Jesuits’ Identity and Qing Rulership, 1644-1705 (pp. 25-49) Chapter One: Jesuits and Their Entrance in the Manchu World (pp. 50-74) Chapter Two: The Jesuits’ Strategic Turn (pp. 75-106) Chapter Three: The Jesuits and Kangxi’s Imperial Household Department Part Two: Emperor Kangxi’s Negotiations with The Pope, 1705-1721 (pp. 109-141) Chapter Four: Kangxi, the Jesuits, and the First Papal Legation to China (pp. 142-166) Chapter Five: Kangxi’s Fourteen-Year Wait and the Second Papal Legation Part Three: The Prohibition in 1724 (pp. 169-195) Chapter Six: The Yongzheng Emperor and Christian Missionaries Local access dig.pdf [Swen-Jesuit Mission Qing Rulership.pdf] |
ISBN | 9789004447004 ; 9004447008 |
Author | Buglio, Lodovico 利類思, 1606-1682Magalhães, Gabriel de 安文思, 1610-1677 |
Place | Paris |
Publisher | Chez L. Lucas |
Collection | Rouleau Archives |
Edition | |
Language | French |
Type | Book |
Series | |
Shelf | Rare Book Cabinet |
Call Number | DS708.M17 1690 |
Description | 13 p. l., 385, [11] p. ; 26 cm. |
Note | Nouvelle relation de la Chine, contenant la description des particularitéz les plus considerables de ce grand empire. Composée en l'année 1668. par le R.P. Gabriel de Magaillans, de la Compagnie de Jésus, missionnaire apostolique. Et traduite du portugais en françois, par le Sr. B[ernou]. 'Abregé' de la vie et de la mort du R. père Gabriel de Magaillans ... par le R. père Loüis Buglio. p. 371-385. [OCLC # for 1689 ed.] Note inside front cover indicates Xujiahui device Bibl. Major M78; text identical with 1688 Barbin ed. [Record number and description based on 1688 Barbin edition (held at Gleeson Rare Book Room). Library device: Bibl. Major 徐家匯 M78]. |
Author | Swen Litian [Sun Litian 孫立天 · 孙立天] |
Place | --- |
Publisher | --- |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Edition | |
Language | English |
Type | Thesis/Dissertation (PDF) |
Series | |
Shelf | Digital Archives |
Call Number | BV3417.S946 2019d |
Description | pdf [257 p. : ill.] |
Note | Privileges for being slaves: Christian missionaries in the early Qing court / by Litian Swen. This dissertation works to elucidate the long-term confusion over the identity of the Christian fathers in the early Qing court. The identity for which this dissertation argues is straightforward: Christian fathers were identified by the Kangxi emperor as his family slaves. The master-slave relationship has long been overlooked because it was overshadowed by an overwhelming focus on the Jesuit Adam Schall, who entered the Manchu court as a Chinese-style minister. Shifting the focus from Schall, this dissertation starts by showing two seldom mentioned Jesuits, Ludovico Buglio and Gabriel de Magalhaens, who entered into Manchu service as slaves. It was, this dissertation shows, not Schall but Buglio, Magalhaens, and the network they built through their slave status that set the foundation for future Jesuits’ successful participation in the Manchu empire. With the master-slave relationship between Kangxi and the Christian fathers established, the fourth and fifth chapters examine Kangxi’s receptions of the two papal legations as family guests instead of as foreign embassies of state. Contents: Local access dig.pdf. [Swen-Privileges.pdf] |