Catholic Missionaries in Early Modern Asia

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Andreea Badea
Asia
Bernard Heyberger
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Category=NH
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Category=QRA
Category=QRAX
Category=QRM
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Catholic
China
China Mission
Chinese Catholicism
Christian Windler
Christianisation processes
Christianity
Church
Dalai Lama's Government
Dalai Lama’s Government
Diocesan Priests
Discalced Carmelites
domestic religious practice
Early Modern
Early Modern Asia
early modern Asian religious encounters
Early Modern China
Eastern Catholicism
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eq_history
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Eurasian cultural exchange
European Missionaries
European Missionaries in Early Modern Asia
Glocal
Higher Order Central Places
History
Holy Mountain
House Oratories
Interreligious
Japan
Jesuit missions
Jesuits
Kirishitan Religion
Kirishitan Women
Late Imperial China
Latin Missionaries
Mendicant Missionaries
Missiology
Missionary
modern Catholic mission
modern Eurasian cultural exchange
Monk
Nadine Amsler
Ottoman
Philip III
post-Tridentine doctrine
princely court
princely court studies
Propaganda Fide
Religion
religious syncretism
Rural Tibetans
Safavid Court
Western Tibetan Plateau
Women Catechists
Xu Guangqi
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367028817
  • Weight: 521g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Nov 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Over recent decades, historians have become increasingly interested in early modern Catholic missions in Asia as laboratories of cultural contact. This book builds on recent ground-breaking research on early modern Catholic missions, which has shown that missionaries in Asia cooperated with and accommodated the needs of local agents rather than being uncompromising promoters of post-Tridentine doctrine and devotion.

Bringing together some of the most renowned and innovative researchers from Anglophone countries and continental Europe, this volume investigates how missionaries’ entanglements with local societies across Asia contributed to processes of localization within the early modern Catholic church. The focus of the volume is on missionaries’ adaptation to four ideal-typical social settings that played an eminent role in early modern Asian missions: (1) the symbolically loaded princely court; (2) the city as a space of especially dense communication; (3) the countryside, where missionary presence was only rarely permanent; (4) and the household – a central arena of conversion in early modern Asian societies.

Shining a fresh light onto the history of early modern Catholic missions and the early modern Eurasian cultural exchange, this will be an important book for any scholar of religious history, history of cultural contact/global history and early modern history in Asia.

Chapter 8 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

Nadine Amsler is Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department for Early Modern History at the Goethe University Frankfurt. She is the author of Jesuits and Matriarchs: Domestic Worship in Early Modern China (Seattle 2018). She is also one of the editors of a special issue of the International History Review entitled Transformations of Intercultural Diplomacies. Comparative Views on Asia and Europe (1700 to 1850) (forthcoming).

Andreea Badea is a researcher at the Department for Early Modern History at the Goethe University Frankfurt. She is the author of Kurfürstliche Präeminenz, Landesherrschaft und Reform: Das Scheitern der Kölner Reformation unter Hermann von Wied (Münster 2009).

Bernard Heyberger is Directeur d’Études at the École des Hautes Études des Sciences Sociales and at the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris. He is the author of Les chrétiens du Proche-Orient au temps de la Réforme catholique (Rome 1994) and, more recently, Les chrétiens au Proche-Orient: De la compassion à la compréhension (Paris 2013).

Christian Windler is Professor of Early Modern History at the Department of History of the University of Bern. He is the author of La diplomatie comme expérience de l’Autre. Consuls français au Maghreb (1700–1840) (Geneva 2002) and Missionare in Persien: Kulturelle Diversität und Normenkonkurrenz im globalen Katholizismus (17.–18. Jahrhundert).