Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Nicolas Trigault (1577–1628) was a Jesuit, and a missionary in China. He was also known by his latinised name Nicolaus Trigautius or Trigaultius , and his Chinese name Jin Nige ( simplified Chinese : 金尼阁 ; traditional Chinese : 金尼閣 ; pinyin : Jīn Nígé ).

  2. Nicolas Trigault was a Flemish Jesuit who represented the Jesuits' work in China in Europe. He recruited more missionaries, gathered books, and published Matteo Ricci's writings on China.

  3. 30 de ago. de 2017 · Trigault, Nicolas, SJ (15771628) Edited by Thomas Worcester, SJ, College of the Holy Cross, Massachusetts; Book: The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the Jesuits; Online publication: 30 August 2017; Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781139032780.002

  4. Nicolas Trigault was a Jesuit who brought a large collection of books from Europe to China in 1620s. He also translated Matteo Ricci's account of the Christian mission in China, which described the cultural, scientific, and political aspects of the Ming dynasty.

  5. When Nicolas Trigault re-entered China in 1621 he brought to an end a notable mission to Europe and left two mysteries for future his torians to puzzle over. Trigault, a native of Douai in the Low Coun tries, had first arrived in China, a young Jesuit priest of thirty-three years of age, around the time that Matteo Ricci, the great pioneer of

  6. Trigault left Europe for China in 1610; at the time of his arrival there were eighteen Jesuit missionaries there. He returned to Europe in 1614 for an extended visit in order to raise funds for the China mission and to recruit new missionaries. His travels are fairly well documented through letters, which

  7. This magnificent costume study is also an affecting portrait of Nicolas Trigault, a Flemish Jesuit missionary to China. Rubens, who had close ties to the Jesuit college of Antwerp, made the drawing when Trigault visited the city to raise funds and recruit new missionaries.