Bulletin

Bulletin
Author: United States. Office of Education
Publisher:
Total Pages: 634
Release: 1934
Genre: Education
ISBN:

Reference Guide to Christian Missionary Societies in China: From the Sixteenth to the Twentieth Century

Reference Guide to Christian Missionary Societies in China: From the Sixteenth to the Twentieth Century
Author: R. G. Tiedemann
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 357
Release: 2016-07-01
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1315497328

This comprehensive guide will facilitate scholarly research concerning the history of Christianity in China as well as the wider Sino-Western cultural encounter. It will assist scholars in their search for material on the anthropological, educational, medical, scientific, social, political, and religious dimensions of the missionary presence in China prior to 1950.The guide contains nearly five hundred entries identifying both Roman Catholic and Protestant missionary sending agencies and related religious congregations. Each entry includes the organization's name in English, followed by its Chinese name, country of origin, and denominational affiliation. Special attention has been paid to identifying the many small, lesser-known groups that arrived in China during the early decades of the twentieth century. In addition, a special category of the as yet little-studied indigenous communities of Chinese women has also been included. Multiple indexes enhance the guide's accessibility.

The Life and Times of Elizabeth Upham Yates

The Life and Times of Elizabeth Upham Yates
Author: Shannon M. Risk
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 249
Release: 2023-03-20
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1666929190

Elizabeth Upham Yates (1857–1942) was a nationally known reformer in the United States in the fields of temperance, women’s suffrage, simple living, and missionary work. The Life and Times of Elizabeth Upham Yates: A Crusader for Women’s Suffrage, Temperance, and Missionary Work documents Yates’s life from her coastal Maine origins through her missionary activities in China in the 1880s to her political career in the 1920s. Upon her return from China to the United States, Yates’s reputation grew as a master orator who stirred the suffrage spirit on campaign trails across the country. In 1920, the first year that women could campaign for office in Rhode Island, she ran for the Democratic ticket for lieutenant governor, earning 50,000 votes. She railed against jingoists like Theodore Roosevelt in the New York Times and chastised male political leadership for ignoring the lynching crisis. During her long career, her suffrage sisters memorialized her as a “prophet and a dreamer.” Shannon M. Risk draws on sources ranging from regional histories and shipping passenger manifests to archival papers at the Library of Congress and Yates’s own writing to shed new light on this suffragist’s life and work.