The Russian Ecclesiastical Mission in Peking During the Eighteenth Century


Book Description

Preliminary Material /Eric Widmer --Introduction /Eric Widmer --The Beginnings of the Ecclesiastical Mission in China /Eric Widmer --Ilarion Lezhaiskii: The First Ecclesiastical Mission to China /Eric Widmer --Izmailov, Lange, and Kul'chitskii: Back to the Beginning /Eric Widmer --Vladislavich, Platkovskii, and the Kiakhta Treaty /Eric Widmer --The Institutions of the Russian Mission /Eric Widmer --The Missionary Life in Eighteenth-Century Peking /Eric Widmer --The Ecclesiastical Mission and the Problem of "China" in Eighteenth-Century Russia /Eric Widmer --Sino-Russian Relations in the Eighteenth Century /Eric Widmer --Russian Missionaries and Students in Peking in the Eighteenth Century /Eric Widmer --Rulers of Russia and China in the 17th and 18th Centuries /Eric Widmer --Notes /Eric Widmer --Bibliography /Eric Widmer --Index /Eric Widmer --Harvard East Asian Monographs /Eric Widmer.




The Russian Ecclesiastical Mission in Peking During the Eighteenth Century


Book Description

"This book is the first analytical treatment in any language of the “most durable ‘sino–foreign’ institution in modern Chinese history.” It traces the beginnings of a Russian-Orthodox presence in Peking several decades back before the commonly held date of its origin. It also shows how the news of the plight of prisoners from the Russian fortress of Albazin (taken by the Ch’ing in 1685) was transmitted back to Russia, and how the indecisiveness of the official Russian response colored the entire subsequent history of the mission. The chapters on the Orthodox missionary life in Peking and on the institutions of the mission provide us with new insight into life in the Ch’ing capital. The tentative beginnings of Russian scholarly and scientific interest in Chinese matters, an outgrowth of the missionary presence in Peking, are also discussed. The book tackles an especially difficult case, for by ordinary standards the Russian ecclesiastical mission was a failure, not a success. The monks and students were an unruly lot, the mission itself never functioned as a full diplomatic institution, and the Chinese frequently treated the missionaries with neglect or disdain. Yet, as the author demonstrates, even this apparent failure had a purpose. The mission served to maintain a minimal contact between the two empires throughout a long period of conflicting ambitions and actions in the Inner Asian theater."







The Jesuits in China


Book Description

This is a report by, Hieromonk Feodosy Smorzhevsky, who lived in Peking from 1745 to 1755 at the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission. Smorzhevsky, a former teacher in the Kievan Academy, was elevated in Moscow from Hierodeacon of the Kiev-Sofia Monastery to Hieromonk before leaving for Peking. He returned to his native land at the age of thirty-five and was consecrated Archimandrite in Sevsky Monastery where he died in 1758.




The Jesuits in China


Book Description

This is a translation by Barbara Maggs of a work originally published as: "Ob iezuitakh v Kitae. (Otryvok iz kitaiskikh zapisok Ieromonakha Feodosiia Smorzhevskogo)" [On the Jesuits in China (Excerpt from Notes on China by Hieromonk Feodosy Smorzhevsky)] contributed by E.F. Timkovsky, Sibirskii vestnik [Siberian Herald], Pt. 19 (1822), 107-32, 181-210; Pt. 20 (1822), 227-54, 295-310, 329-56. The book is an important source of information on China in the eighteenth century, on the Jesuits in China, and on the Russian Orthodox Mission in Peking.




History of Humanity: From the sixteenth to the eighteenth century


Book Description

The fifth volume of the this series examines historical events and cultural, social and political structures which were introduced between the 16th and 18th centuries.




Eastern Christianity and Politics in the Twenty-First Century


Book Description

This book provides an up-to-date, comprehensive overview of Eastern Christian churches in Europe, the Middle East, America, Africa, Asia and Australia. Written by leading international scholars in the field, it examines both Orthodox and Oriental churches from the end of the Cold War up to the present day. The book offers a unique insight into the myriad church-state relations in Eastern Christianity and tackles contemporary concerns, opportunities and challenges, such as religious revival after the fall of communism; churches and democracy; relations between Orthodox, Catholic and Greek Catholic churches; religious education and monastic life; the size and structure of congregations; and the impact of migration, secularisation and globalisation on Eastern Christianity in the twenty-first century.




The Russian Orthodox Community in Hong Kong


Book Description

Hong Kong has been a unique society from its establishment as a political region separate from mainland China in the nineteenth century under British colonial rule until the present day as a special administrative region of the People’s Republic of China. A hub of interregional and international migration, it has been the temporary and long-term home of people belonging to many racial, ethnic, and cultural groups. This book examines the evolution of the community established by clergy and congregants of the Russian Orthodox Church. This community was first developed in the 1930s and then revived after a hiatus of over two decades from the 1970s to the 1990s with the founding of the Orthodox Parish of Apostles Saints Peter and Paul (OPASPP) at the turn of the twenty-first century. This study demonstrates how the OPASPP has become a vital provider of knowledge about Russian language and culture as well as a religious institution serving both heritage and convert believers. The community formed by and around the OPASPP is important to foster Sino-Russian relations based on individual-to-individual contact and mutual exposure to Chinese and Russian cultures in a region of China which allows spiritual and social diversity with minimal political constraints.




Eastern Orthodox Mission Theology Today


Book Description

The purpose of the ASM Series is to publish, without regard for disciplinary, national, or denominational boundaries, scholarly works of high quality and wide interest on missiological themes from the entire spectrum of scholarly pursuits, e.g., theology, history, anthropology, sociology, linguistics, health, education, art, political science, economics, and development, to articulate but a partial list. Always the focus will be on Christian mission. By "mission" in this context is meant a cross-cultural passage over the boundary between faith in Jesus Christ and its absence. In this understanding of mission, the basic functions of Christian proclamation, dialogue, witness, service, fellowship, worship, and nurture are of special concern. How does the transition from one cultural context to another influence the shape and interaction of these dynamic functions? Missiologists know that they need the other disciplines. And other disciplines, we dare to suggest, need missiology, perhaps more than they sometimes realize. Neither the insider's nor the outsider's view is complete in itself. The world Christian mission has through two millennia amassed a rich and well-documented body of experience to share with other disciplines. Interaction will be the hallmark of this Series. It desires to be a channel for talking to one another instead of about one another. Secular scholars and church-related missiologists have too long engaged in a sterile venting of feelings about one another, often lacking in full evidence. Ignorance of and indifference to one another's work has been no less harmful to good scholarship. The promotion of scholarly dialogue among missiologists may, at times, involve the publication of views and positions that other missiologists cannot accept, and with which members of the Editorial Committee do not agree. The manuscripts published reflect the opinions of their authors and are not meant to represent the position of the American Society of Missiology or the Editorial Committee of the ASM Series. We express our warm thanks to various mission agencies whose financial contributions enabled leaders of vision in the ASM to launch this new venture. The future of the ASM series will, we feel sure, fully justify their confidence and support. William J. Danker, Chairperson ASM Series Editorial Committee




Ferdinand Verbiest, S.J. (1623-1688) and the Chinese Heaven


Book Description

This book describes more than 220 copies of various astronomical publications by the missionary Ferdinand Verbiest, S.J. (1623-1688) sent from Peking.