Description |
1 online resource (xv, 270 pages). |
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data file |
Series |
Studies in missionaries and Christianity in China
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Studies in missionaries and Christianity in China.
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Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Contents |
The food of beasts: martyrdom and death in perspective -- Catholic christianity in China: Nestorian inroads, Franciscan successes, Jesuit accommodations, and the modern chaos -- The Dominican martyrs of Fujian -- The Jesuit martyrs of Hebei -- The Franciscan martyrs of Hunan and Shanxi -- Other martyrs from other missions -- Conclusion: conflict to accommodation: resettling in the aftermath -- Appendix: beatification and canonization dates of China's saints. |
Summary |
"While previous works on the history of Christianity in China have largely centered on the scientific and philosophical areas of Catholic missions in the Middle Kingdom, China's Saints recounts the history of Christian martyrdom, precipitated as it was by cultural antagonisms and misunderstanding. Anthony Clark shows that Christianity in China began and grew under similar circumstances to those during the Roman Empire, with the notable exception that Catholic missionaries were not successful at producing a "Chinese Constantine." One of the principal results of Catholic martyrdom in China was the increased indigenization of Christianity. During the reconstruction of mission churches, hospitals, and orphanages after the hostilities of the Boxer Uprising (1898-1900), the Roman Catholic tradition of venerating martyrs was attached to the reinvigoration of Christian communities. Not only did Catholic architecture accommodate to Chinese sensibilities, but causes for sainthood were also begun at the Vaticanto add Chinese names to the Church's list of saints. The implications of Clark's work extend beyond the subject of Christianity in China to the broader fields of cultural, social, economic, political, and religious history. This pioneering study followsthe trails of Western missionaries and Chinese converts as they negotiate the religious and cultural chasms that existed between the West and China, and it demonstrates that these differences resulted in two very different outcomes. Whereas converts appear to have bridged the cultural divide, often to the point of self-sacrifice, political and cultural tensions on the macro level sometimes ended with forceful conflicts. This book contributes to a deeper understanding of cultural and religious interaction, and provides an account of an heretofore unstudied chapter in the history of Christianity on the global landscape."--Book details |
Local Note |
eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America |
Language |
English. |
Subject |
Catholic Church -- China -- History.
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Catholic Church. |
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Christian saints -- Biography.
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Christian saints -- Biography. |
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History. |
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China -- Church history.
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China. |
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Church history. |
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Christian martyrs -- China.
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Christian martyrs. |
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Christian saints. |
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BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY -- Religious. |
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RELIGION -- History. |
Genre/Form |
Biographies.
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Church history.
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History.
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Biographies.
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Other Form: |
Print version: China's saints Bethlehem [Pa.] : Lehigh University Press ; c2011. 9781611460162 (cloth : alk. paper) (DLC) 2010048594 |
ISBN |
9781611460179 ebook |
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1611460174 |
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9781611460162 cloth alkaline paper |
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1611460166 cloth alkaline paper |
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1283014394 |
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9781283014397 |
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9786613014399 |
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6613014397 |
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