China Daily (Hong Kong)

On his majesty’s service, and at his mercy

Missionari­es in China from the 16th century had royal reins placed on their work

- By ZHAO XU

he moment they sought help from a Chinese emperor was the moment they placed themselves in the hands of these powerful — and often equally intelligen­t — men. But the manipulati­on, if that’s what you want to call it, was mutual,” says Zhang Xiping, whose book However, for von Bell, this initial chaos proved to be the beginning of a new era in which the missionary saw himself rise to a prominence previously unimaginab­le.

The Chongzhen Calendar, the product of his hard labor, was adopted by the Qing court. Moreover, he was able to cultivate a close relationsh­ip with Emperor Shunzhi, the ambitious and wide-eyed young master. For the next half century, despite occasional twists and setbacks, Jesuit missionari­es in China enjoyed a prolonged honeymoon, first with Shunzhi and then with his son and successor Emperor Kangxi.

Kangxi owed his very life to the French missionary Joachim Bouvet (1656-1730), who pulled the emperor from the abyss of death with a dose of Quinine. Bouvet, together with his fellow French Jean Francois Gerbillon (1654-1707) also acted as the math teacher for Kangxi, who seemed to have inherited the curiosity from his short-lived father.

However, Kangxi, who became emperor when he was 8 and dealt a fatal blow to his political foes to secure his own role when he was 15, probably knew more about balancing power than any of his missionary teachers or aides.

He harnessed the powers of the missionari­es with great skill. On one hand, the emperor employed their knowledge to the fullest, pushing them to work double hard.

He used cannons devised by the missionari­es to wipe out powerful rebels (The Ming Emperor Chongzhen had also relied on the missionari­es’ canons to halt the advance of Kangxi’s ancestors.) and he engaged many of them in one of the biggest projects of his reign — mapping his vast empire.

For about a decade, between 1708 and 1718, groups of missionari­es were dispatched from the capital to different parts of the country, where they carried out detailed surveys drawing on their astronomic­al and cartograph­ical knowledge, before returning with maps crisscross­ed with latitudina­l and longitudin­al lines. One French missionary is even said to have died of overwork on the southweste­rn Chinese border.

The emperor was ever conscious of ensuring that the Jesuit missionari­es’ presence did not drive a wedge between him and those who viewed Christiani­ty as a menace to Confuciani­sm, the dominant moral system of Qing China.

Li Xiumei, associate law professor at the Beijing Administra­tion Institute, has spent the past decade looking into the lives of these Jesuit missionari­es, many of whom were buried on what is now the campus of the institute.

“Missionary work during the early reign of Kangxi was in its heyday,” she says. “There are estimated to have been 200,000-300,000 believers across the country. And the emperor approved the building of several of churches within his own capital, but that does not mean he was behind the spreading of the Catholic faith.”

In fact, by keeping the most talented and hardest-working missionari­es within his own service, the emperor in effect kept them from going about their holy mission.

“For the missionari­es, who would not have enjoyed such high-profile presence without the Chinese emperors’ patronage, the royal favor was in fact a double-edged sword,” Li says.

Later, in 1692, Emperor Kangxi, facing contention­s rising from within the Catholic missionari­es in China, issued the Edict of Tolerance Toward the Catholic Faith. It decreed that all missionari­es wishing to stay and do missionary work in China must show respect to local culture and customs. The events leading to the issuance of the edict marked a turning-point in the relationsh­ip between the missionari­es and the Qing rulers.

When Emperor Yongzheng, the son of Kangxi and a devout Buddhist, succeeded his father in 1722, he further tightened the control over Western missionari­es, banning their religious activities in almost every corner of his empire.

However, one place was exempt — the Forbidden City in Beijing, the royal palace and center of power for hundreds of years. There the missionari­es continued to serve the emperor with their expertise in nonreligio­us matters.

“Sometimes they seemed more like decoration­s to the court than daring and passionate men who had traveled the globe guided by an urge to convert,” Li says.

One of them was the Italian Giuseppe Castiglion­e (1688-1766), a missionary turned court painter whose half-century stay in China coincided with the reign of three Qing emperors. In one of his portrait busts, Emperor Yongzheng appears wearing voluminous brown curls — wig style popular with the Western monarchs and aristocrac­y of his time.

Castiglion­e later became the de facto official portraitis­t for Emperor Qianlong, son and successor of Yongzheng. Qianlong also recruited the Polish missionary Florian Joseph Bahr and his Czech counterpar­t Johann Walter among others, in forming his own chamber orchestra.

Combining the concept of perspectiv­e essential to Western paintings with a color palette and brush stokes that were unmistakab­ly Chinese, Castiglion­e gave his own interpreta­tion on canvas of Ricci’s cultural adaptation and accommodat­ion theories, theories believed to have accounted for the Jesuit missionari­es’ success in China.

“By providing a detailed pictorial account for Qing Dynasty’s longestrei­gning emperor, Castiglion­e himself became part of the history he helped preserve,” Li says.

“Qianlong appreciate­d Castaglion­e’s service so much that he allotted a piece of land to him in the capital’s suburb, something that was clearly against his law. But at the same time, the Italian, who also helped lay royal gardens and introduced the technique of enameling to China, never got a free day to preach before his death at the age of 78.”

The death was deeply mourned by Emperor Qianlong, whose decree upon hearing the news was inscribed on the painter’s tombstone steps away from those of Ricci and von Bell.

In 1644, when the Qing soldiers stormed into Beijing, many missionari­es fled, but not von Bell. He chose to stay inside the little church Ricci was allowed to build in Beijing about 1605. Beside him was the Chongzhen Calendar, which he planned to present to his new master in exchange for trust and support for continued missionary work.

“His willingnes­s to take the risk is admirable,” Li says. “But keeping in mind the favor and endorsemen­t he had previously received from the Ming emperors and his official friends, it is clear his real faith lay with no one of this world, but with God alone.”

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Above left: Matteo Ricci and Xu Guangqi, a Ming Dynasty politician and scientist who Ricci befriended. Above right: Qing Emperor Yongzheng (1654-1722).
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Above left: Matteo Ricci and Xu Guangqi, a Ming Dynasty politician and scientist who Ricci befriended. Above right: Qing Emperor Yongzheng (1654-1722).
 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? From left: Astrologic­al instrument­s constructe­d under the supervisio­n of Jesuit missionari­es during the Qing Dynasty and housed at the Beijing Ancient Observator­y; cannon constructe­d under the supervisio­n of von Bell.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY From left: Astrologic­al instrument­s constructe­d under the supervisio­n of Jesuit missionari­es during the Qing Dynasty and housed at the Beijing Ancient Observator­y; cannon constructe­d under the supervisio­n of von Bell.
 ??  ?? Qing Emperor Shunzhi (1638-1661).
Qing Emperor Shunzhi (1638-1661).

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