A Short History of Christianity Beyond the West : Asia, Africa, and Latin America 1450-2000 (Theology and Mission in World Christianity)

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A Short History of Christianity Beyond the West : Asia, Africa, and Latin America 1450-2000 (Theology and Mission in World Christianity)

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 303 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9789004699823

Full Description

**Recognized as IBMR Outstanding Book 2024**

Today, the majority of the world's Christian population lives in the Global South. Knowledge of their history is therefore indispensable. This textbook offers a compact and vivid overview of the history of Christianity in Asia, Africa and Latin America since 1450, focussing on diversity and interdependence, local actors and global effects. Maps, illustrations and numerous photos as well as continuous references to easily accessible source texts support the reader's own reading and its use in various forms of academic teaching.

Special bonus material including 250 photos taken by the author can be accessed here: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.27623484.v2

Contents

Foreword

List of Figures and Maps

Technical Notes for Use

In Place of an Introduction: "Christians and Spices" - or: the Multiplicity of Regional Centers in the History of World Christianity

PART 1: 1450-1600

1 The Christian World around 1500

 1.1 Christian Europe around 1500

 1.2 The Islamic World

 1.3 Knowledge of Non-European Cultures, Perceptions of Europe from Outside

 1.4 Christians and Churches in Africa and Asia

2 The Iberian Expansion of the 15th/16th Century

 2.1 The Portuguese on their Way around Africa (1415ff)

 2.2 Spain, Columbus and the "Discovery" of the "New World" (1492)

 2.3 Divided Spheres of Interest ('Inter Cetera' 1493, Tordesillas 1494)

 2.4 Encounters: Vasco da Gama and the Indian St. Thomas Christians (1498ff)

3 Iberoamerica I: Colonization and Christianization

 3.1 American-Indian Cultures on the Eve of the Iberian Invasion

 3.2 Stages of the Conquest

 3.3 Legal Titles: Patronage and 'Requerimiento'

 3.4 Mission Personnel, Duality of Mission and Colonial Church

4 Iberoamerica II: Debates and Controversies

 4.1 Religious Debates: Franciscans and Aztecs in Mexico 1524

 4.2 Controversies over Ethics of Colonialism: Antonio de Montesinos, Bartolomé de las Casas

 4.3 Experiments on the Formation of an American-Indigenous Church

 4.4 Beginnings of Black Slavery in America

5 Mission under the Padroado: Encounters and Conflicts in Africa and Asia

 5.1 Ethiopia: Portuguese as Guests and Allies in the Christian Empire

 5.2 Beginnings of Catholic Presence in Sub-Saharan Africa

 5.3 Goa as an Ecclesiastical and Political Center

 5.4 Francis Xavier: India, Malacca, Moluccas, Japan, Plans for China (1542-1552)

6 Forms of Indigenous Christianity

 6.1 Asia: the South Indian Paravars and the Martyrs of Mannar (Sri Lanka)

 6.2 Africa: the Christian Kongo Kingdom in its Transatlantic Connections

 6.3 Iberoamerica: Voices of American-Indian and Mestizo Christians

7 Reception of the Council of Trent Overseas and the End of Local Experiments

 7.1 State of Expansion at the End of the 16th Century

 7.2 Trent and its Impact on Spanish America

 7.3 India: the Synod of Diamper 1599 and the Forced Union of the St. Thomas Christians

 7.4 Ethiopia: Expulsion of the Jesuits under Emperor Fasilidas (since 1632/33)

Illustrations for Part I 65

PART 2: 17th/18th Centuries

8 Changing Framework

 8.1 Aspects of European Expansion

 8.2 Stages in Mission History

 8.3 Enlightenment and Other Debates

 8.4 Regional Centers, Transcontinental Entanglements

9 Latin America

 9.1 The Church in the Colonial City

 9.2 Native American and Mestizo Voices

 9.3 Jesuit Reductions (1609-1768)

 9.4 On the Eve of Independence

10 Africa

 10.1 Ethiopia: Period of Self-Imposed Isolation

 10.2 Regional Developments

 10.3 Protestant Beginnings

 10.4 Transatlantic Slave Trade, Vision of a Return to Africa

11 Asia

 11.1 Japan: the End of the "Christian Century"

 11.2 China: Accommodation Strategies and Rite Controversy

 11.3 Sri Lanka and the Philippines: Resistance in a Colonial Context

 11.4 Korea: Self-Founded Martyrs' Church (1784ff)

 11.5 Tranquebar 1706 and the Beginnings of Protestant Mission in Asia

Illustrations for Part II

PART 3: 1800-1890

12 The End of the First Colonial Age and the Beginning of the "Protestant Century"

 12.1 Collapse of the Old Colonial Systems (Ibero-America, Africa, Asia)

 12.2 Hitting Rock Bottom of the Catholic Missions (Asia, Africa, America)

 12.3 Developments in the Protestant World

 12.4 Transcontinental Migration Flows, Beginnings of African-Chapter 13

13 Asia

 13.1 South Asia: Missions as a Factor of Modernization

 13.2 Northeast Asia (China, Japan, Korea): Opium Trade and Bible Smuggling

 13.3 Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia

 13.4 Indigenous Versions of Christianity

14 Africa

 14.1 West Africa: Slave Emancipation and Transatlantic Resettlement Projects

 14.2 South Africa: Black Christians and White Settlers

 14.3 East and Central Africa: David Livingstone and Other European "Discoverers"

 14.4 African Christian Rulers: Madagascar, Uganda, Ethiopia

 14.5 S. A. J. Crowther, First Black African Bishop, and Controversies about the "Three Selves"

15 Latin America

 15.1 Independence Struggle and the Church (1804-1830)

 15.2 The Catholic Church and the New States (1830-1890)

 15.3 Romanization of Latin American Catholicism

 15.4 Forms of Protestant Presence in Latin America

Illustrations for Part III

PART 4: 1890-1945

16 Churches and Missions in the Age of High Imperialism

 16.1 Growing Colonial Rivalries

 16.2 New Missionary Actors

 16.3 Indigenous Counter-Movements

 16.4 Multiplicity of Transregional and Transcontinental Networks

 16.5 The First World War as a Caesura and the End of the 'Christianity-Civilization' Model

17 Asia

 17.1 Religious Nationalisms and Indigenization Experiments

 17.2 Ecumenism as a Protest Movement, National Church Aspirations

 17.3 Developments in Catholic Asia

 17.4 Between World War I and World War II

18 Africa

 18.1 The Christian Missions and the "Scramble for Africa"

 18.2 The Emergence of African Independent Churches

 18.3 Themes of the Twenties and Thirties

 18.4 Christian Elites and the Political Independence Movements

19 Latin America

 19.1 The Situation around 1900

 19.2 Regional Profiles: Brazil, Mexico, Cuba

 19.3 World Economic Crisis and Social Question

 19.4 Denominational Pluralization, New Religions

PART 5: 1945-1990

20 Postcolonial Order and Ecclesial Emancipation Movements

 20.1 End of the Second World War, Waves of Decolonization

 20.2 New Alliances, Movement of "Third World"-Countries

 20.3 Forms of Ecclesiastical and Theological Emancipation

 20.4 Growing Importance of the Southern Churches in the Global Ecumenical Movement

 20.5 New Actors and Movements

21 Asia: the 1950s

 21.1 Christians as a Minority in the Process of Nation Building

 21.2 Loss of Status and Persecutions under Communist Rule

 21.3 Search for Christian Identity in the "New Asia"

 21.4 Approaches to New Theological Orientation

22 Africa in the 1960s

 22.1 Church and State in New Africa

 22.2 'Historical' and Independent Churches

 22.3 Approaches to African Theology, Interreligious Initiatives

 22.4 South Africa: Christians and Churches in the Apartheid State

23 Latin America: the 1970s

 23.1 Between Social Revolution and State Repression

 23.2 The Second Vatican Council (1962-1965) and the Bishops' Conference of Medellín (1968)

 23.3 Liberation Theologies: Characteristics, Controversies, Developments

 23.4 Protestant and (Neo)Pentecostal Groups, Revitalization of African American Religions

24 "Shift of Centers": Developments in the 1980s

 24.1 From a North to a South Majority

 24.2 "Return of the Religions", Religious Fundamentalisms

 24.3 "Reverse Missions", Impacts on the West

 24.4 Regional Developments and Profiles

Illustrations for Part V

PART 6: On the Threshold of the 21st Century

25 1989/90 as an Epoch Year in Global Christian History

 25.1 End of the Cold War, Collapse of Apartheid, Crisis of Liberation Theologies

 25.2 Internet, Digital Globalization, Liberalized Travel

 25.3 Changing Geographies of Religion, Transcontinental Churches, New Dynamics of Polycentrism

 25.4 "The Next Christendom" - Discussions and Expectations around the Turn of the Millennium

Outlook, Perspectives

Maps

Bibliography

  Bibliography I: Standard Works, General Surveys

  Bibliography II: Complete List of References

Illustration Credits

Digital Appendix

Index

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