
Redefining Heresy and Tolerance: Governance of Muslims and Christians in the Qing Empire before 1864 - Hung Tak Wai - 文宇宙|Bookniverse
Redefining Heresy and Tolerance: Governance of Muslims and Christians in the Qing Empire before 1864
Hung Tak Wai
US $52.00
US $65.00
2024/08
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9789888876419
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ePub
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香港大學出版社
書籍簡介
查看更多歷史 > 中國歷史
宗教命理 > 基督教
In Redefining Heresy and Tolerance, Hung Tak Wai examines how the Qing empire governed Muslims and Christians under its rule with a non-interventionist policy. Manchu emperors adopted a tolerant attitude towards Islam and Christianity as long as political stability and loyalty remained unthreatened. However, Hung argues that such tolerance had its limitations. Since the mid-eighteenth century, the Qing court intentionally minimised the importance of the Islamic identity. Restrictions were imposed on the Muslims’ external connections with Western Asia. The Christian minority was kept distant from politics and the Han majority. At the same time, Confucian scholars began to acquire a new understanding of religion, but they were not encouraged to get in touch with the Muslims and Christians. This book demonstrates how, from the late eighteenth to the early nineteenth century, the Qing government prevented Confucian scholar-bureaucrats from interfering in the religious life of Christians and Muslims, and how the Confucians’ understanding of ‘religion’ was reshaped during the implementation of such policy in the period. This book reveals that a different kind of ‘religious tolerance’ had already emerged among Sinophone intellectuals before their contact with the West.
作者簡介
查看更多Hung Tak Wai
Hung Tak Wai is a Hong Kong historian who specialises on globalisation, religion, politics, and minority in East Asia. He served at universities in Hong Kong, Taiwan, United Kingdom, and Saudi Arabia. He is an assistant professor at Waseda University.
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