Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "1601" ¶ 12
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Jesuit and Matteo
The Latinized name " Confucius " is derived from " Kong Fuzi ", which was first coined by 16th-century Jesuit missionaries to China, most probably by Matteo Ricci.
Instead of trying to approach Christianity through the traditions of the local religion and creating a nativised church as latter fellow Jesuit Matteo Ricci did in China, he was eager for change.
* 1552 – Matteo Ricci, Italian Jesuit missionary ( d. 1610 )
The Matteo Ricci College was founded in 1973 and named after Italian Jesuit missionary, Matteo Ricci.
** Jesuit Matteo Ricci is allowed to enter the country.
* Copies are printed of the geographical map of East Asia created by Matteo Ricci, an Italian Jesuit stationed in Ming Dynasty Beijing, China, with Chinese-written labeling and map symbols.
* May 11 – Matteo Ricci, Italian Jesuit priest ( b. 1552 )
* October 6 – Matteo Ricci, Italian Jesuit missionary to China ( d. 1610 )
While some of these missions were associated with imperialism and oppression, others ( notably Matteo Ricci's Jesuit mission to China ) were relatively peaceful and focused on integration rather than cultural imperialism.
According to the Figurists ( a group of Jesuit missionaries mainly led by Joachim Bouvet into China at the end of the 17th and the beginning of the 18th century and based on ideas of Matteo Ricci 1552 to 1610 ), Fu Xi in China's ancient history is actually Enoch.
Although Fernão Pires de Andrade and his Portuguese comrades were the first to open up China to the West, another significant diplomatic mission reaching all the way to Beijing would not be carried out until an Italian, the Jesuit Matteo Ricci ( 1552 – 1610 ) ventured there in 1598.
Matteo Ricci ( 1552 – 1610 ), one of the founding fathers of Jesuit China missions, may have been the first European to write about feng shui practices.
The Italy | Italian Jesuit Matteo Ricci ( left ) and the Chinese mathematics | Chinese mathematician Xu Guangqi ( right ) published the Chinese language | Chinese edition of Euclid's Elements ( 幾何原本 ) in 1607.
The first European to reach China with a musical instrument was Jesuit priest Matteo Ricci who presented a Harpsichord to the Lee imperial court in 1601, and trained four eunuchs to play it.
The Italian Jesuit Matteo Ricci created the first comprehensive world map in the Chinese language in the early 17th century, while comprehensive world gazetteers were later tanslated into Chinese by Europeans.
The most famous of the Jesuit missionaries was Matteo Ricci, an Italian mathematician who came to China in 1588 and lived in Beijing in 1600.
In the West, some researchers would date the origins of sinology as far back as Marco Polo and Ibn Battuta in the 13th and 14th century, but the systematic study of China began in the late 16th century, when Jesuit missionaries based at St. Paul's College, Macao, notably Matteo Ricci, introduced Christianity to China.
Matteo Ricci, the Jesuit missionary who lived in China for twenty-seven years from 1583, expressed horror at the open and tolerant attitude that the Chinese took to homosexuality and naturally enough saw this as proof of the degeneracy of Chinese society.
In 1603, Yi Gwang-jeong, Korean diplomat, returned from Beijing carrying a world atlas and several theological books written by Matteo Ricci, a Jesuit missionary to China.
* 1780-1836-the collection of the Venetian former Jesuit Matteo Luigi Canonici ( 1727 – c. 1806 ) ( sold London, Sotheby's, June 15, 1836, no.
Named after the 16th Century Italian Jesuit missionary, Matteo Ricci, the College was founded in 1975 as an experimental college where a student could complete high school and university studies in 6 years.
The prominent Jesuit Matteo Ricci, received a visit from a young Jewish Chinese man in 1605.
Seattle Prep has an innovative curriculum arrangement with Seattle University wherein students of Seattle Prep can qualify for admission to Seattle University after three years of education at Seattle Prep under the Matteo Ricci College program, named after the 16th Century Jesuit missionary to China Matteo Ricci.

Jesuit and Ricci
* August 2 – Lorenzo Ricci, Italian Jesuit leader ( d. 1775 )
* November 24 – Lorenzo Ricci, Italian Jesuit leader ( b. 1703 )
Ricci sent an ethnic Chinese Jesuit Lay Brother to visit Kaifeng ; later, other Jesuits ( mostly European ) also visited the city.

Jesuit and becomes
* July or August – Portuguese Jesuit priest António de Andrade becomes the first European to enter Tibet.
* Jesuit astronomer Christoph Scheiner becomes the advisor to Archduke Maximilian, brother of Holy Roman Emperor Rudolph II in Vienna.
* 1547-Wealthy Spaniard Juan Fernández becomes a Jesuit.
* 1563-Jesuit missionary Luis Frois, who will later write a history of Jesuit activity in Japan, arrives in that country ; Omura Sumitada becomes the first daimyo ( feudal landholder ) to convert to Christianity
* 1681-After arriving in New Spain, Italian Jesuit Eusebio Kino soon becomes what one writer described as " the most picturesque missionary pioneer of all North America.
The initially cynical seminary director, the abbé Pirard ( of the Jansenist faction more hated than the Jesuit faction in the diocese ), likes Julien, and becomes his protector.
* Johann Baptist Cysat, Swiss Jesuit geometer and astronomer and one of Christoph Scheiner's pupils, becomes the first to study a comet through the telescope and gives the first description of the nucleus and coma of a comet.
* July or August-Portuguese Jesuit priest António de Andrade becomes the first European to enter Tibet.

Jesuit and first
He was the first Jesuit to teach at the university, where the subject of his course was the Summa Theologica of Thomas Aquinas.
As the first Jesuit in India, Francis had difficulty procuring success for his missionary trips.
Francis was the first Jesuit to go to Japan as a missionary.
His efforts left a significant impression upon the missionary history of India and, as one of the first Jesuit missionaries to the East Indies, his work is of fundamental significance to Christians in the propagation of Christianity in China and Japan.
Chinese thought on the form of the earth remained almost unchanged from early times until the first contacts with modern science through the medium of Jesuit missionaries in the seventeenth century.
The gegenschein was first described by the French Jesuit astronomer and professor Esprit Pézenas ( 1692 – 1776 ) in 1730.
The later forms of Late Middle Japanese are the first to be described by non-native sources, in this case the Jesuit and Franciscan missionaries ; and thus there is better documentation of Late Middle Japanese phonology than for previous forms ( for instance, the Arte da Lingoa de Iapam ).
He also became the patron of the Jesuit missionaries in Japan and supported the establishment of the first Christian church in Kyoto in 1576, although he remained an adamant atheist and never converted to Christianity.
There has historically been general agreement with non-preterists that the first systematic preterist exposition of prophecy was written by the Jesuit Luis de Alcasar during the Counter Reformation.
Preterism was first expounded by the Jesuit Luis De Alcasar during the Counter Reformation.
In October 1874, his parents enrolled him in a new Jesuit school called Externat de la rue de Vienne, which was still under construction for his first five years there.
In fact, Gaston-Laurent Coeurdoux, a French Jesuit who spent all his life in India, was the first to make that observation.
* December 20 – BEGGARS Fraternity ( the first social fraternity at a Jesuit college in the United States ) is founded by nine men, who secured permission to do so from the Pope.
* Missionary Juan Fonte establishes the first Jesuit mission among the Tarahumara, in the Sierra Madre Mountains of Northwest Mexico.
He was educated at the Jesuit College in Reims and at the Collège de Navarre in Paris, where he quickly showed his intellectual ability, and gained his first public distinctions in mathematics.
Her first biographer, a Jesuit named Engelbert Keilert, described her as smart, well-versed, and able to read and write and correspond with church officials.
Among the critics of the views put forward in this book was a Jesuit, Francis Line ( 1595 – 1675 ), and it was while answering his objections that Boyle made his first mention of the law that the volume of a gas varies inversely to the pressure of the gas, which among English-speaking people is usually called Boyle's Law after his name.
In 1548 St. Ignatius founded there the first Jesuit college of the world, which later gave birth to the Studium Generale ( the current University of Messina ).
The first Jesuit influence upon this doctrine was not until 1609, " when Suarez rejected Azpilcueta's basic proof and supplied another " ( Malloch, p. 145 ; speaking of Francisco Suárez ).
In 1697 the Jesuit missionary Juan María de Salvatierra established Misión de Nuestra Señora de Loreto Conchó, the first permanent mission in Baja California peninsula.
Jesuit control over the peninsula was gradually extended, first in the region around Loreto, then to the south in the Cape region, and finally toward the north across the northern boundary of present day Baja California Sur.
It became the first university in Mindanao, and the first Jesuit institution, among those existing in the Philippines, even first before its sister school Ateneo de Manila to be given university status.

1.802 seconds.