The Chinese Repository
Editor | Elijah Coleman Bridgman, S. Wells Williams |
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First issue | 1832 |
Final issue | 1851 |
Country | China |
The Chinese Repository was a periodical published in Canton between May 1832 and 1851 to inform Protestant missionaries working in Asia about the history and culture of China, of current events, and documents. The world's first major journal of Sinology,[1] it was the brainchild of Elijah Coleman Bridgman, the first American Protestant missionary appointed to China. Bridgman served as its editor until he left for Shanghai in 1847, but continued to contribute articles. James Granger Bridgman succeeded him as editor, until September 1848, when Samuel Wells Williams took charge.[2]
References
- ↑ Lazich, Michael C. (June 2006). "American Missionaries and the Opium Trade in Nineteenth-Century China". Journal of World History (University of Hawaii Press) 17 (2): 199 – via JSTOR.
- ↑ Michael Poon, "CSCA: A Note on The Chinese Repository, Twenty volumes, Canton, 1832-1851", 2008. Archived August 20, 2008 at the Wayback Machine
Further reading
- Barnett, Suzanne W. (1971). "Silent Evangelism: Presbyterians and the Mission Press in China, 1807-1860". Journal of Presbyterian History 49 (4): 287–302. JSTOR http://www.jstor.org/stable/23327276.
- Malcolm, Elizabeth L. (1973). "The Chinese Repository and Western Literature on China 1800 to 1850". Modern Asian Studies 7 (02): 165–178. doi:10.1017/S0026749X00004534.
External links
- The Chinese Repository, Bibliotheca Sinica, University of Vienna. Includes listing of the volumes available online.
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