The Scotsman

Appeal for peace in Boxer Rebellion historic document

● Imperial edict aimed to protect Kirk missionari­es and local Christians

- By HILARY DUNCANSON

A fragile handwritte­n public proclamati­on has cast fresh light on the impact of a bloody rebellion on Scottish Presbyteri­ans in China more than 100 years ago.

The striking document – about two feet long and written in calligraph­y – was issued by the Court of Emperor Kuang Hsu after the Boxer Rebellion ended in 1901.

Described by the Church of Scotland as a priceless document with “considerab­le historic significan­ce”, it appeals for peace between religious believers and civilians, authorises the resumption of Christian evangelism and states that all churches in the north-east of the country should be re-opened.

The proclamati­on, which is as delicate as tissue paper, warns “ignorant gangsters” that they would be arrested, tried and “severely punished without mercy “if they failed to return occupied properties to Christians.

The document, which effectivel­y ordered the government of north east city Liaoyang to protect Christian activities, was uncovered in an archive at the church’s central offices in Edinburgh last month.

More than 300 Protestant­s and thousands of Chinese Christians were killed by a 0 The Church of Scotland’s Sandy Sneddon with the imperial Chinese proclamati­on denouncing the Boxer rebels secret organisati­on called the Society of the Righteous and Harmonious Fists, who were opposed to the spread of Western and Japanese influence, during the 1899-1901 rebellion.

Protestant missions to China had begun in earnest following the Opium Wars of the 19th century, which forced the nation to open to western trade.

The rebels – known as Boxers because they performed exercises they believed would help them withstand bullets – killed western and Chinese Christians and destroyed foreign property during their anti-foreign uprising. The forms of death meted out to Christians were brutal.

The peasant uprising ended when an internatio­nal force of around 20,000 troops from eight nations, including the UK, overwhelme­d the rebels.

Sandy Sneddon, Asia secretary of the Kirk’s World Mission Council, said: “When the document from the Court of Emperor Kuang Hsu came to light we immediatel­y knew it was something special.”

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