Japanese and the Jesuits

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A01=J F Moran
alessandro
Alessandro Valignano
Arima Harunobu
Author_J F Moran
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Category=NHF
Catholic missionary encounters in Japan
Christian Lords
Christian missions history
Common Language
cross-cultural religious exchange
De Granada
early modern East Asia
East Indies
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eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
francisco
Gregory XIII
Hear Confessions
hideyoshi
ieyasu
Japan Mission
Japanese Brothers
Japanese Jesuit
Jesuit educational methods
Jesuit House
Jesuit Superior
Kakure Kirishitan
konishi
Konishi Yukinaga
Luis Frois
Macao College
Matsuda Kiichi
missionary adaptation strategies
Muslim World
Pagan Lord
religious syncretism Japan
Sixteenth Century Japan
Takayama Ukon
Testi Mony
tokugawa
toyotomi
Toyotomi Hideyoshi
valignano
Young Man
yukinaga

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415756075
  • Weight: 294g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Mar 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Japanese and the Jesuits examines the attempt by sixteenth century Jesuits to convert the Japanese to Christianity. Directing the Jesuits was the Italian Alessandro Valignano, whose own magisterial writings, many of them not previously translated or published, are the principle source material for this account of one of the most remarkable of all meetings between East and West.
Valignano arrived in Japan in 1579. In promoting Christianity, he always sought the support of the ruling classes, but an important part of his strategy was also to have the missionaries adapt themselves thoroughly to Japanese customs, etiquette and culture. He was insistent that they must master the Japanese language, and he brought to Japan a European printing press, which turned out grammars and dictionaries for the missionaries, and works of instruction and devotion for the Japanese Christians.
Following Valignano's death, Christianity was proscribed and missionaries banished from Japan. This does not detract from his remarkable achievements. He understood perfectly well that foreign missionaries by themselves were not capable of converting Japan to Christianity, and one of his principal concerns was the training of Japanese Jesuits and priests, and breaking down the barriers between them and the Europeans. Few people have ever been more acutely aware of, or grappled more determinedly with, problems in Japanese-Western relationships.

J.F. Moran has taught at the Universities of Hiroshima, Sheffield, Tsukuba, Yamaguchi, Oxford and Tokyo. His Oxford doctorate is on the history of the Japanese language, and he has published textbooks of English for Japanese students, and learned articles on Japanese language and Jesuit history. J.F.Moran is now head of the Department of Japanese at Stirling University.

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