Shamans, Lamas, and Evangelicals : The English Missionaries in Siberia - C R BAWDEN Fba

Shamans, Lamas, and Evangelicals

The English Missionaries in Siberia

By: C R BAWDEN Fba

Hardcover | 1 November 2024

At a Glance

Hardcover


RRP $242.00

$171.25

29%OFF

or 4 interest-free payments of $42.81 with

 or 

Available for Backorder. We will order this from our supplier however there isn't a current ETA.

First published in 1985, Shamans, Lamas and Evangelicals tells the little known yet fascinating story of a missionary venture to Eastern Siberia in the year 1818. Two missionaries, one English, one Swedish, with the tiresome voyage across the Baltic behind them, set out with their wives to face the daunting prospect of a 3000-mile journey by sledge across the rough snow roads of Siberia in the depths of winter.

The mission was unusual in its conception. Established by the London Missionary Society and the backing of the Tsar, Alexander I, its aim was to bring the Christian gospel to the Buryats, and, once that was accomplished, to cross into China, evangelize the Mongols there, and then set about the conversion of the Chinese. The mission failed, but it was nonetheless an extraordinary episode. It is the story of men who first had to learn Russian in order to teach themselves Mongolian, who brought up their families, founded schools, treated the sick, and translated the entire Bible into Mongolian, printing the Old Testament on their own local press. This is an interesting historical reference work for scholars and researchers of Russian history and Mongolian history.

Industry Reviews

Review of the Original Publication:

"This book tells the full story of the mission to the Buryat Mongols of Eastern Siberia launched in 1814 by the London Missionary Society in conjunction with the British and Foreign Bible Society at a time when the ideas of Alexander I about the spreading of the Gospel made such a venture possible... It was thought that the translation of the Bible into Mongolian and the subsequent conversion of the Buryats would lead to greater things. The idea was of penetrating China- after evangelizing various tribes in Siberia- at a time when there was no access to the Chinese coastal ports. It was a grand design which, as Professor Bawden shows, was based on false premises..."

- George Lewinson, The Slavonic and East European Review, Vol. 64, No. 4 (Oct. 1986), pp. 612-614

More in Regional Studies

Orientalism : Western Conceptions of the Orient - Edward W. Said

RRP $24.99

$18.95

24%
OFF
Sport in Contemporary India : Society, Culture and Governance - Lovely  Dasgupta
Indian Youth in the Midst of Crisis and Challenges - Sanjay Kumar
South Asia from the Margins : Transformations in the Political Space - Asad ur Rehman
Land, People and Economy of Pakistan : A Geographic Perspective - K. R. Dikshit
Land, People and Economy of Pakistan : A Geographic Perspective - K. R. Dikshit
'Performing' Nature : Ecology and the Arts in South Asia - Priyanka Basu
Inside the Westminster Menswear Archive - Andrew Groves

RRP $59.99

$49.25

18%
OFF
Puer Tea : Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic - Jinghong Zhang

RRP $53.90

$36.35

33%
OFF