Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Anti-missionary_riots_in_China> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 32 of
32
with 100 triples per page.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China abstract "Starting with the arrival in China of the Jesuit China missions in 1552, the number of Western missionaries increased gradually. The Treaty of Tientsin in 1858 gave the Christians free run in the country and the right to purchase land to build. The Western missionaries saw themselves the God sent preachers while Chinese saw them as the barbarians (Chinese: 夷), the extension of foreign invasion, shielded by treaties and backed by their governments' gunboats. Anti missionary riots became part of the landscape, culminating the Boxer Rebellion in 1900.".
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageID "48303781".
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageLength "1822".
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageOutDegree "20".
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageRevisionID "687044814".
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Anhui.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Anti-missionary_riots_in_Wuhu.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Boxer_Rebellion.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Category:19th-century_riots.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Category:19th_century_in_China.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Category:Christianity_in_China.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_language.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Fujian.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Jesuit_China_missions.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Jiangsu.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Kucheng_massacre.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Sichuan.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Tianjin_Massacre.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Treaty_of_Tientsin.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Yangzhou_riot.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Youyang_anti-missionary_riot.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Zhili.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageWikiLinkText "Anti-missionary riots in China".
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China subject Category:19th-century_riots.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China subject Category:19th_century_in_China.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China subject Category:Christianity_in_China.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China comment "Starting with the arrival in China of the Jesuit China missions in 1552, the number of Western missionaries increased gradually. The Treaty of Tientsin in 1858 gave the Christians free run in the country and the right to purchase land to build. The Western missionaries saw themselves the God sent preachers while Chinese saw them as the barbarians (Chinese: 夷), the extension of foreign invasion, shielded by treaties and backed by their governments' gunboats.".
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China label "Anti-missionary riots in China".
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China wasDerivedFrom Anti-missionary_riots_in_China?oldid=687044814.
- Anti-missionary_riots_in_China isPrimaryTopicOf Anti-missionary_riots_in_China.