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In-8°, 16 cc, pp. 327, più errata, c. di tav. ripiegata (Situs provinciarum imperii Sinici), occhietto, vignetta calcografica sul frontespizio, illustrazioni calcografiche. Rilegatura in pergamena con nervi e titolo al dorso. ROUGEMONT (Franciscus de), b. a Maastricht il 2 aprile 1624, d. a Chang-chu (Cina) il 4 novembre 1676. Nelle scuole dei gesuiti a Bruxelles e Anversa fece i suoi studi inferiori con risultati brillanti e nel1641entrò nella Compagnia di Gesù. All'assedio di Kortrijk nel 1646 si distinse, sebbene non fosse ancora un sacerdote, per il suo zelo nella cura dei soldati feriti. Nel 1654 ricevette la consacrazione del sacerdote e, quando padre Martino Martini, procuratore della missione cinese in Europa, venne a cercare missionari per questo lavoro, riuscì a convincere i suoi genitori a richiedere quella missione a favore del figlio dal Generale dell'Ordine. L'anno seguente partì da Amsterdam per Lisbona con il gesuita di Amsterdam Ignazio Hartoghvelt. Dopo un ritardo a Coimbra, lasciarono Lisbona il 30 marzo 1656 e arrivarono il 6 novembre a Coa. A piedi, continuò il suo viaggio lungo la costa di Malabar, Visschersen Transvancore, e poi attraversò il Siam, dove il suo compagno Hartoghvelt morì a Yoethia nel 1658. Nello stesso anno, de Rougemont raggiunse Macao, e nel 1659, raggiunse la corte imperiale, in Cina. I cristiani da lui formati sono stati riconosciuti per il loro zelo e conoscenza della religione. In seguito a una violenta persecuzione dei cristiani durante la minore età dell'imperatore Kang-hi i missionari furono portati prigionieri a Pechino, poi esiliati nel Canton e imprigionati nella chiesa per 6 anni. R. capì che questa persecuzione aveva la sua ragione principale nella nazionalità straniera dei missionari. Per togliere quest'arma dalle mani degli avversari, pensò di addestrare un clero nativo e pensò che consentire una liturgia della chiesa in lingua cinese avrebbe promosso questo piano. Nel 1667 inviò un dettagliato memorandum al generale dell'ordine Oliva (stampato in Analecta Bollandiana XXXIII (1914), 279-93). Solo nel 1671, quando l'imperatore Kang-hi fu convinto dell'innocenza dei missionari, questi tornarono alle loro congregazioni cristiane. Il Rougemont ha continuò il lavoro interrotto per altri 5 anni. Durante un viaggio verso l'isola di Tsong-ming, si ammalò a Tsang-chu e morì tra le braccia di Padre Couplet. I suoi fedeli cristiani vennero per raccogliere il corpo del loro padre spirituale e dopo due giorni di cammino lo seppellirono solennemente sul Monte Voxan fuori dalla città di Changsho. Egli aveva usato il tempo della sua disoccupazione forzata per compilare la sua Historia Tartaro-Sinica nova (Lovanii 1673), in cui racconta ampiamente la persecuzione subita. Il Rougemont ha dato un ottimo contributo alla conoscenza della letteratura cinese. Con i padri Intorcetta, Herdrich e Couplet, intraprese l'importante lavoro: Confucius Sinarum philosophus, messo in stampa nel 1687 per ordine di Luigi XIV a Parigi. In-8 °, 16 cc, pp. 327, plus errata, folded table (Situs provinciarum imperii Sinici), half-title, woodcut on the title page. ROUGEMONT (Franciscus de), b. in Maastricht on April 2, 1624, d. in Changchu (China) on November 4, 1676. In Jesuit schools in Brussels and Antwerp he made his lower studies with brilliant results and in 1641 he entered the Society of Jesus. At the siege of Kortrijk in 1646 he distinguished himself, even if he was not yet a priest, for his zeal in caring for wounded soldiers. In 1654 he received the priest's consecration and, when Father Martino Martini, procurator of the Chinese mission in Europe, came to look for missionaries for this job, he managed to convince his parents to carry out that mission in favor of his son by the General of the Order. The following year he left Amsterdam for Lisbon with the Jesuit of Amsterdam Ignazio Hartoghvelt. After a delay in Coimbra, they left Lisbon on 30 March 1656 and arrived on 6 November in Coa. On foot, he continued his journey along the coast of Malabar, Visschersen Transvancore, and then he crossed Siam, where his companion Hartoghvelt died in Yoethia in 1658. In the same year, Rougemont reached Macau, and in 1659, he reached the imperial court , in China. The Christians he trained were listed for their zeal and knowledge of religion. Following a violent persecution of Christians during the minor age of Emperor Kang-hi, the missionaries were taken prisoner to Beijing, then exiled to the Canton and imprisoned in the church for 6 years. R. understood that this persecution had its main reason in the foreign nationality of the missionaries. To remove this weapon from the hands of opponents, he thought of training a native clergy and thought that allowing a Chinese-language church liturgy would promote this plan. In 1667 he sent a detailed memorandum to the general of the order Oliva (printed in Analecta Bollandiana XXXIII (1914), 279-93). Only in 1671, when Emperor Kang-hi was convinced of the innocence of the missionaries, did they return to their Christian congregations. Rougemont continued the interrupted work for another 5 years. During a trip to Tsong-ming Island, a Tsang-chu fell ill and died in the arms of Father Couplet. His faithful Christians came to collect the body of their spiritual father and after two days of walking they saw him solemnly on Mount Voxan outside the city of Changsho. He had used the time of his forced unemployment to compile his Historia Tartaro-Sinica nova (Lovanii 1673), in which he widely recounts the persecution he endured. Rougemont made an excellent contribution to the knowledge of Chinese literature. With his fathers Intorcetta, Herdrich and Couplet, he undertook the important work: Confucius Sinarum philosophus, printed in 1687 by order of Louis XIV in Paris.
1971WRCAM56376Mostly various locations in Tennessee and Virginia plus Salt Lake City 1971. 240 letters various paper stocks and sizes including some Mormon-related stationery most letters at least three pages in length each stapled plus a handful of clippings postcards assorted photographs and an appointment book. Neatly organized chronologically and by sender in labeled manila folders and stored in a single document box. Minor tears to a few letters else mostly clean and very good overall. An important archive of correspondence centering on Mormon missionary activities in the American South during the Great Depression and the years of World War II. All of the letters were written to Ruby Marion a Mormon woman from Virginia. The most significant letters come from Ralph Horrock a Mormon missionary operating mostly out of Tennessee but also Virginia. Horrock's letters to Marion number almost eighty and are filled with interesting information on Mormon missionary efforts. Other important letters were written to Marion by Mormon Elder Gaell Lindstrom from both Virginia and Salt Lake City her husband William "Bill" Tragdon and Ruby Marion's mother and sister. The letters from Marion's husband mother and sister mostly concern family matters but the letters from Horrock and to a lesser degree from Lindstrom are highly significant for their voluminous content on Mormon missionary activities in the American South. <br> <br> Ralph Horrock was sent to Tennessee to spread the Mormon faith at the end of 1934. He and a companion were ordered to travel throughout the countryside and preach the tenets of Mormonism. Horrock is reserved in his letters at first writing that he would have preferred to stay in Virginia where Marion was located. He is clearly smitten with Ruby Marion however and writes more and more about his love for her as his correspondence continues. Marion visited Horrock in Tennessee in the summer of 1935 and their correspondence continues to January of 1936 but their romantic relationship clearly did not flourish. Marion would eventually marry William Tragdon some time after 1948. <br> <br> Often traveling by foot through the South Ralph Horrock and his companion elders visited both the cities and the small country towns they found preaching the Mormon faith at local town halls and school houses sometimes finding challenging audiences. They established Sunday school classes held prayer meetings preached at funerals of deceased Mormons living in Tennessee and more. Horrock mentions proselytizing to some of the country people and even holding river baptisms. Inevitably he also relates to Marion various gossip about the inner workings of the Mormon Church in Tennessee and Virginia asks Marion for gossip she might know and also asks about the movements of other missionaries in the region. Horrock finds much joy in his work for quite a long time - at one point a local community in Tennessee asks him to build a church and stay there as their preacher - but by the conclusion of his letters to Marion the joy seems to have faded. A handful of brief excerpts of Horrock's letters to Marion reveal the compelling and informative nature of his correspondence: <br> <br> March 23 1934. Marysville Tn.: "I don't think I will have any more lonesome and blue spells for a while now because I am too busy what I mean they sure do the Missionary work here in Tenn. We get in about six hours tracting per day and I sure love to tract here for people love to talk with you on religion and no fooling some of them are sure interested. Since I came here I sure have had plenty of opportunities to preach. We hold cottage meetings three and some times four times a week. There is one thing I can say about this state of Tennessee - it sure is a land of opportunity for a missionary. I am now really learning to be a preacher you ought to hear me some time but I better shut up for self praise is not very good is it" <br> <br> May 30 1935. Silver Point Tn.: "We had a swell meeting at Knoxville but I guess I told you about it in my last letter. We are now away out in the sticks right out with the good old hill billies I think we are about forty miles from Nashville. We are having wonderful success out here we are holding cottage meetings most every night so you can see we are getting plenty of preaching.We would have been in McMinnville last Sunday but at the last moment before we left Knoxville the D.P. changed his mind and sent us to Silver Point. They are holding a big memorial celebration here next Sunday and they wanted two Elders here to preach for them so here we are. I have to go about five miles to a little old country post office to mail this letter so I will have to hurry to get it there before the afternoon mail arrives." <br> <br> June 25 1935. Spencer Tn.: "I am glad to say I am still all together and healthy even though we are in a somewhat hostile section. The people here would like to be tough but after all they are only wind bags. You recall I told you we were going to hold some meetings in the County Court House at Spencer and I thought that we might meet up with some opposition. Well we held our first one last night and we had the building almost full. No one caused us a bit of trouble rather they were all ears and I am sure they heard something last night they had never heard before. The thing that gets the best of these people is this - even though we do present strange doctrine to them we have scripture to prove each point we bring out. People might come to hear us with the intention of giving us trouble. But after they hear us prove our points so clearly from the Bible the only thing they can do is take it and keep still. I feel that the Lord has greatly blessed us in our work here and if we have succeeded in doing a good work I do not want to take the honor to my self.We are having more success here than any other place I have been in since I came to Tennessee. We held an open air meeting here Sunday and almost a hundred people came to hear us. Tonight we are holding services again at the Court House and I am expecting the House to be full." <br> <br> July 21 1935. Smithville Tn.: "You said something about the Elders going to Harrisonburg to Baptize those people over there. Do you know whether or not they did I would really like to know of them coming into the Church because I had such a large part in bringing them to a knowledge of the Truth. If they are Baptized then I can look back and with the assurance that I really did accomplish something while I was there.Who is the new D.P. in Virginia or do they know yet I really pity the poor fellow who gets the job.Virginia is the best District in the Mission in lots of ways but when it comes to getting real practical experience then give me Tennessee. I have ten chances to preach here where I get one there. And another good thing the people like to hear the Gospel here and they come out in such large crowds we have to hold our meetings outside. Whenever we held cottage meetings in Va. we never did get over twenty people out but here it is nothing at all to get over a hundred. You know it is really some difference. Are the Elders still laboring in the cities yet I really would hate to do that. The city don't provide half the fun and experiences that the country does. I would go wild if I had to stay in the city. We held a baptism the other day and after the services we went swimming and some also went wading so you see we have some real fun too once in a while." <br> <br> September 2 1935. Spencer Tn.: "We really have so much work to do we really don't have time to stop and see if we are well or sick. I can say though that I am really enjoying myself more than words can tell. There is one thing about missionary work that makes it better than any thing I have ever done before and that is the more you work the better you like it. I really did not know what real missionary work was until I came to Tennessee. Over in Virginia it was just easy come easy go and we only got to preach about once or twice in a week and even at that I thought I really was doing something. But since I came here I am fully convinced that I only wasted time in Va. We get to preach somewhere here every night and twice on Sunday and we get many other experiences that goes to make this the greatest work in the world." <br> <br> September 7 1935. Spencer Tn.: "As usual we are having wonderful success in presenting the Gospel before the people and we have made lots of friends which I am very thankful for. We have just come today out of a back woods country which is so far out of the way the Elders haven't visited it for years. The people there sure did turn out to hear us preach. We used the School House to hold our meetings in and so many people came there wasn't room for them so they had to sit outside and listen. I wish we could stay there longer but it was impossible for we had to come into Spencer and get our mail. I have a job ahead of me that is going to be hard to do. There is an old woman that lives in the county that has a husband that is dead and he has been dead for about ten years. When he died she could not get any Elders to preach his funeral so she buried him without holding a funeral with the intention of having the first Elders that came hold it at his grave. We happened to be the first ones to come so the job is ours. It's going to be hard to do but I guess we will have to do it. There is no other way out. Well you know this Missionary work is not all sunshine and roses if we didn't get the bitter once in awhile we would not enjoy the sweet." <br> <br> December 2 1935. Morristown Tn.: "I am not enjoying my work here in the least. I never was in such a dirty hole as this little town is. We haven't a friend or a member within fifty miles. I haven't preached for so long I really believe I have forgotten how. I never was so divested of spiritual will power in my life as I am right now and I don't mind saying I am getting sick of it. Every other Elder in this District is laboring in a city where there is a brand that will provide them some place to work where they can at least see where they are accomplishing something. Still I suppose I shouldn't bother you with my troubles no doubt they do not interest you." <br> <br> Horrock concludes his correspondence the next month by relating that he is getting transferred to Chattanooga where he "will have plenty of good work to do." He writes to Marion for the last time that he does not know what his address will be so he asks Marion "not to write until you hear from me again." Perhaps Marion never heard from Horrock again. <br> <br> Other letters in the archive are written to Ruby Marion from another Mormon Elder named Gael Lindstrom who also appears to have served as a missionary in Virginia and West Virginia. In his fifty-two letters Lindstrom writes sparingly about his experiences as a Mormon missionary but when he does he provides interesting details. For instance on July 30 1943 in Huntington West Virginia Lindstrom writes: <br> <br> "We have spent a few days of this week in Huntington W.Va. as we are not so very far from there. It seemed good to return to the place where I had spent about seven months before coming into Virginia. Elder Price's father will be here in about ten days to work the rest of his mission with him. That will leave Elder Bray and I as the only Elders left in the district. Your guess is as good as mine as to what will happen then. He is coming down to Home Creek next Tuesday to do a little traveling with us in this section. He can't take us out of here too soon for me. This is really woods. Last nite we held a meeting in a small miner's union hall which was dimly lit by three gas lamps. There were about 35 present but I'm afraid all they came for was the novelty of it as they have a complete lack of amusements around here of any description." <br> <br> He also writes frequently of other elders or members of the church other church activities and leadership changes his travels to Mirror Lake and more. Lindstrom spent about six months in Louisville Kentucky where he was assigned in early 1944; two of his letters from Louisville are written on LDS stationery. By June 1944 he is back in Salt Lake City where he misses "being back in the mission field." The bulk of his letters emanate from Salt Lake City during the rest of 1944 and through mid-1947. Many of his letters concern his activities in the antiques trade which Marion may have been involved with as well. The two apparently corresponded about opening an antiques shop in Salt Lake City. Lindstrom's correspondence concludes with news that he is opening his own photography studio after working some time in the camera department at Auerbach's Department Store in Salt Lake City. <br> <br> The archive also includes correspondence from Ruby Marion's husband William Tragdon and Marion's mother and sister. Tragdon worked in the aeronautical engineering field and traveled extensively throughout the country. He was quite smitten by Marion evidenced by his thirty-seven letters home to "Kitten" from February to September 1948. Tragdon's letters are deeply personal missives to his wife and eventually to both his wife and son Howard in the late-1950s with occasional information on larger family matters. His two somber letters from 1970 and 1971 indicate that he and Marion had divorced. <br> <br> The letters from Marion's mother and sister are also mostly concerned with family matters. One interesting letter from Marion's sister Evelyn dated 1946 mentions a recent banquet where she "saw quite a few of the old missionaries that we once knew." Evelyn's letter also mentions Mormon presidents Tew and Doxey and a few other church colleagues she encountered at the banquet. <br> <br> There is also a folder containing ten letters from various correspondents to Marion from the 1930s to the 1970s. Some of these letters concern missionary matters from Virginia to as far away as the Dutch East Indies. The latter are written by a correspondent who signs his name as "Dee." Dee writes on Dec. 23 1944 that "We hold L.D.S. services on the island & have 100 present each Sunday." This folder also contains a selection of unused photo postcards from two photographs of Mormon Church elders one inscribed to Marion by Elder Clark O. Thompson and the other inscribed to "Dear Sister Ellinger" from Elder Frank Miller. <br> <br> The archive is rounded out by a small appointment book presumably kept by Marion or a family member from 1955 to 1960. The book is almost entirely comprised of appointments notes and schedules of Masonic meetings. The final folder contains several letters sent to Ruby Marion by V-Mail during World War II. The various letters appear to come from family friends named Jesse Terry Sgt. D. Sanders and H. Kenneth Coburn who also sent a signed photograph to Marion. All of these letters were sent to Marion at her address in Waynesboro Va. <br> <br> An engaging and far-ranging collection of correspondence to a Mormon woman from Virginia with illuminating information on Mormon missionary activities in the American South during the Great Depression. unknown books
1900531900s or earlier No Worldcat/OCLC record in French. SIENHSIEN Mission had been one of the biggest mission in Old China. This was a SIENHSIEN RECRUIT LETTER IN OLD CHINA.<br />Some wear on covers. 12pp. Good. SIENHSIEN Mission, China paperback
17473878FBRostock, Verlag Christian Koppe, 1747-1749. 4°. 26,5 x 21,5 cm. [1] Blatt, 58, 472 Seiten; [1] Blatt, 56, 748; 28 Seiten, [2] Blatt, 548; 56, 264, 552 Seiten, [16] Blatt. Ganzlederbände der Zeit auf 4 Zierbünden mit Streicheisenlinien auf den Deckeln und rotem Sprengschnitt. [12 Warenabbildungen]
Very Good Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928) Contemporary fine quarter leather binding. Five raised bands to spine, second gilt title as "Tarih-i seyyâh", others gilt decorations. Brown boards are embossed decoratively. Demy 8vo. (21 x 15 cm). In Ottoman script (Old Turkish with Arabic letters). [12], 194 p. Hegira: 1142 = Gregorian: 1729. Slightly wear on colophon and the first page. Otherwise a good copy. Extremely uncommon first Ottoman edition printed in the first printing house of the Islamic world as the third Islamic incunabula, of this eye witness and first-hand account, and one of the most important chronicles describing the history of late Safavid Iran in the 18th century, the Iranian invasion of Afghanistan and the siege and the fall of Isfahan in 1722 written by Kruzinski who was a Polish Jesuit missionary served in the Persia in the early 18th century. In 1720 he was nominated advocate general of the mission in Persia and became the secretary to the Bishop of Isfahan. Krusinski himself, however, claimed later on that he is not only the author but also the translator of this work. As a chronicle, this is a history of Iran under the Safavids from 1499 up to 1727 with a special focus on the 1722 Afghan invasion that terminated the Safavid dynasty. "His account of the conditions and events preceding and during the siege and the subsequent demise of the Safavids is unique. It also offers key insights into the workings of the late Safavid state and government as well as the functions of the royal harem." (Bloomsbury). Translated and expanded by Ibrahim Müteferrika of Kruzinski's Latin manuscript written in 1726 in Istanbul and entitled "Historia revolutionis monarchia Persica". The book was first published in Italian, French, and English translations, in Rome (1727), Paris (1728), and London (1728). The founder of the legendary first printing house in the Islamic world, Ibrahim Müteferrika (1674-1745), was the editor and translator of this book. Ceridehâne [i.e. Journal House] Printing House is the successor of the Müteferrika Press in the early 19th century. "The book is a Turkish translation of the history of Iran written in Latin by the Jesuit missionary Judas (Jan) Tadeusz Krusinski (1675-1751). The work, whose title can be translated as 'A voyager's description on the apparition of the Afghans and on the reasons of the Safavid Empire being undermined', focuses on the Afghan invasion of 1722 which led to the fall of the Safavid dynasty, but also offers an overview on the historical processes of early 18th-century Safavid Iran. The publication of this work was made actual not only by the vicinity of Iran to the Ottoman Empire but also by the historical turn reorganizing the relations of power in the region and triggering the intervention of the Ottomans as well. This may have been the reason that among the first Turkish incunabula this was the work published in the highest number of copies. This publication also offers an early example of copyright disputes, as Krusinski considered the Turkish translation as his own work, while Müteferrika, who does not mention his name in the printed version, suggests himself to be the translator". (Source: The Mysterious Printer Ibrahim Muteferrika and the Beginnings of Turkish Book Printing: Library of Hungarian Academy of Sciences Online). The workshop of Müteferrika began its historical mission in 1728. They published 17 works in 22 volumes. The printing house served as a means to the long-term goal of Müteferrika, his efforts to broaden the horizon and modernize the knowledge of Ottoman society and Islamic civilization. This is evidenced by the subjects of the books selected for publishing, the motivations put forth in the publisher's introductions, as well as by the documents illuminating the background of the publication of each book, also published in print. One of 1200 copies. OCLC: 312516053 (For printed copies: Two copies).; Özege: 19897.
1891BB009<p> CHINA: Propaganda against Western Missionaries<br /></p><p>The Cause of the Riots in the Yangtse Valley. A "Complete Picture Gallery" by CHOU HAN. Hankow China 1891. With 32 full=page woodblock plates printed in color. Oblong 4to original printed wrappers sewn spine soiling minor repairs.</p><p>The author Chou Han is described by the translator Griffith John 1831-1912 as 'a gentleman of high official rank Taotai in Hunan' and was part of an orchestrated propaganda campaign aimed at discouraging Western Christian missionaries from working and traveling in China. This volume was perhaps his most significant and horrific attack on western culture managing a "reptile press" in Hunan creating unrest and distrust amongst the Chinese people see John's "A Voice from China" 1907 p. 220. Chou Han himself is probably represented in plates IX XIII XXVI and XXIX; the images are virulently anti-foreigner and specifically anti-Christian. John translated and circulated the present work to draw attention to the British authorities of the problems faced by missionaries in Asia. </p><p>Very Rare. ONLY 3 COPIES CAN BE TRACED AT AUCTION IN THE PAST 40 YEARS ABPC & RBH. </p><br /> paperback books