'Sinology' is the study of
China, and things related to China, by non-Chinese or Chinese living outside China. ''Sino-'' is derived from
Latin ''Sinae'' ("the Chinese"), the origin of which is debatable. In the context of
area studies, sinology is usually known as 'Chinese Studies'.
History
In the
Asian Sinosphere, the studies of China-related subjects began early. In
Japan, sinology was known as ''shinagaku'' (æ”¯é‚£å¦ "China Studies") or ''kangaku'' (æ¼¢å¦ "Han Studies"). In China, the studies of China-related subjects is known as ''Guoxue'' (国å¦/åœ‹å¸ "National Studies"), and sinology is translated as ''Hanxue'' (汉å¦/æ¼¢å¸).
In the
West, some 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 16th century, when
missionaries, notably
Matteo Ricci, introduced
Christianity to China. The first Sinologist of Eastern Europe was
Nicolae Milescu (1636-1708). Early sinological research often concentrated on the compatibility of Christianity with Chinese culture.
During the
Age of Enlightenment, sinologists started to introduce Chinese philosophy, ethics, legal system, and aesthetics into the West. Though often unscientific and incomplete, their works inspired the development of
Chinoiserie and a series of debates comparing Chinese and Western cultures. At that time, sinologists often described China as an enlightened kingdom, comparing it to Europe, which had just emerged from the
Dark Ages. Among those European literati interested in China was
Voltaire, who wrote the play ''L'orphelin de la Chine'' inspired by the ''
Orphan of Zhao'', and
Leibniz who penned his famous ''Novissima Sinica'' (News from China).
In 1732 a missionary priest from the
kingdom of Naples, Matteo Ripa, created in Naples the first Sinology School of the European Continent: the "Chinese Institute", the first nucleus of what would become today's
Università degli studi di Napoli L'Orientale, or Naples Eastern University. The Jesuit Matteo Ripa had worked as a painter and copper-engraver at the
Manchu court of the emperor
Kangxi between 1711 and 1723. In 1732 he returned to
Naples from China with four young Chinese Christians, all teachers of their native language and formed the Institute sanctioned by
Pope Clement XII to teach Chinese to missionaries and thus advance the propagation of Christianity in China.
In 1814, a chair of
Chinese and
Manchu was founded at
Collège de France.
Jean-Pierre Abel-Rémusat, who
taught himself Chinese, filled the position, becoming the first Chinese professor in Europe. By that the first Russian Sinologist,
Nikita Bichurin, had been living in
Beijing for ten years. Abel-Rémusat's counterparts in
England and
Germany were Samuel Kidd (1797–1843) and Wilhelm Schott (1807-1889) respectively, though the first important secular sinologists in these two countries were
James Legge and
Hans Georg Conon von der Gabelentz. Secular scholars gradually came to outnumber missionaries, and in the 20th century sinology slowly gained a substantial presence in Western universities. In modern history, sinology has seen its influence in politics, due to its role in
think tanks.
Sinologists
:''See
List of Sinologists''
Journals
★ ''
Bulletin de l'École française d'Extrême-Orient''
★ ''
T'oung Pao''
★ ''
Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies''
★ ''
Journal of Asian Studies''
★ ''
Journal Asiatique''
★ ''
Late Imperial China ''
See also
★
China watcher
References
★ Cayley, John & Ming Wilson ed., ''Europe Studies China: Papers from an International Conference on the History of European Sinology'', London: Han-Shan Tang Books, 1995.
★ Honey, David B., ''Incense at the Altar: Pioneering Sinologists and the Development of Classical Chinese Philology'', New Haven: American Oriental Society, 2001. (See also E.G. Pulleyblank's
review of the work in the ''Journal of the American Oriental Society'', Vol. 122, No. 3 (Jul.-Sep., 2002), pp. 620-624, available through
JSTOR).
★ Mungello, David E., ''Curious Land: Jesuit Accommodation and the Origins of Sinology'', Stuttgart: F. Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden, 1985.
External links
★
Guoxue
★ Torbjörn Lodén,
"Swedish Sinology: A Historical Perspective"
★
Sinology Project, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
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