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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Eugenio Menegon, Boston University: “The Matriarch, the Duchess, the Queen, and the Countess: Aristocratic Patronesses of the Chinese Catholic Mission and their Role in Early Modern Chinese-European Relations”
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SUMMARY:Eugenio Menegon, Boston University: “The Matriarch, the Duchess, the Queen, and the Countess: Aristocratic Patronesses of the Chinese Catholic Mission and their Role in Early Modern Chinese-European Relations”
DESCRIPTION:<!--break--><span style="line-height:normal">What do a Chinese élite lady in Shanghai, a Portuguese duchess in Madrid, an Austrian queen in Lisbon, and a Bavarian countess in Augsburg all have in common? These women, in spite of distance in time and space, all became revered patronesses of the Jesuit missions in China in the early modern period. </span><p>	<span style="line-height:normal">Candida Xu (許甘第大, 1607-1680), granddaughter of the most prominent Chinese Catholic convert of the late Ming period, the imperial Grand Secretary Xu Guangqi 徐光啓, once widowed at age forty-six poured her fortune and energies in religious endeavors within the Catholic mission, and became a paragon of patronage and holiness both for her compatriots and the European readers of her French (1688), Spanish (1691) and Dutch (1694) biographies. </span></p><p>	<span style="line-height:normal">The Portuguese noblewoman and heiress Maria de Guadalupe de Lencastre y Cárdenas Manrique, Duchess of Aveiro (1630-1715), cultivated a sprawling epistolary network with Jesuit missionaries across the globe, including several in China, financially supporting them, and receiving in return spiritual blessings and information on their activities. </span></p><p>	<span style="line-height:normal">Maria Anna Habsburg of Austria (1683-1754), Queen Consort of Portugal and Regent of Portugal from 1742 until 1750, through her Jesuit confessor, the Austrian astronomer of the China Portuguese mission Augustin Hallerstein, organized a lavish embassy to the Qianlong Emperor to save the Chinese church from annihilation. </span></p><p>	<span style="line-height:normal">Finally, Countess Maria Theresia von Fugger-Wellenburg (1690-1762), a descendant of the Fugger banking dynasty in Swabia, through the Bavarian Jesuit Florian Bahr, supported Chinese abandoned infants and acted as a chain of communication between the Qing and the Wittelsbach courts. </span></p><p>	<span style="line-height:normal">This presentation examines these prominent women’s interactions with, and patronage of, the Jesuit missionaries in China, and, how, through their correspondence, as well as their political and financial influence, they sustained a far-flung network of male ecclesiastical admirers and expressed feminine spirituality and influence across the continents. </span></p><p>	<span style="line-height:normal">Eugenio Menegon teaches Chinese and world history at Boston University. His latest book, Ancestors, Virgins, and Friars: Christianity as a Local Religion in Late Imperial China (Harvard Asia Center and Harvard University Press, 2009) centers on the life of Catholic communities in Fujian province since the 1630s. His current book project is an examination of the daily life and political networking of European residents at the Qing court in Beijing in the 17th and 18th centuries. </span></p><p>	<span style="line-height:normal">This event, presented by the <a href="https://www.brown.edu/academics/early-modern-world"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">Center for the Study of the Early Modern World,</span></span></a> is free and open to the public. </span></p><p>	<span style="line-height:normal"><a href="http://events.brown.edu/cogut/"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">Cogut Institute for the Humanities</span></span></a> </span></p><p>	<span style="line-height:normal"><a href="https://events.brown.edu/view/event/date/20191113/event_id/view/all/tags/Humanities"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">Humanities</span></span></a>, <a href="https://events.brown.edu/view/event/date/20191113/event_id/view/all/tags/Early%20Modern%20World"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">Early Modern World</span></span></a> </span></p><p>	 </p>
LOCATION:Center for the Study of the Early Modern World, Brown University, Annmary Brown Memorial, 21 Brown St., Providence, RI 02912
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20191113T223000Z
DTEND:20191114T000000Z
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