The Evangelistic Imperative and the Modernity of Knowledge Production: Tibetology at the North China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1857–1952
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Interplay of Religion, Politics, and Scholarship: Tibetology at NCBRAS in the Nineteenth Century (1857–1900)
3. From the Study to the Field: The Humanities Turn and Paradigm Shift in Tibetological Research at NCBRAS (1901–1919)
4. Unfinished Transformation: Tibetological Research at the NCBRAS Amid the Tension Between Science and Religion (1920–1952)
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
| 1 | JNCBRAS not only published articles by its members but also those by non-members. According to research, before 1904, JNCBRAS published only 12 articles by non-members; however, as the Society’s influence grew in the early 20th century, the number of non-member articles increased, reaching 58 after 1905 (Y. Wang 2005, p. 84). |
| 2 | Tsering Shakya summarizes the diverse perspectives within Tibetan studies, observing that missionaries, explorers, diplomatic officials, and the media each offered distinct viewpoints. He identifies two main methodological approaches: the analysis of traditional texts and research based on Western social-science methods, the latter applying social-science tools to the study of Tibetan culture and society (Shakya 1994. Klaus Karttunen points out that modern Tibetology was shaped by three geopolitical perspectives—British India (the Southern Perspective), China (the Eastern Perspective), and Russia (the Northern Perspective). Its early development was dependent on missionary and colonial activities, and it was not until the twentieth century that it gradually became professionalized. The integration of multiple disciplines, he argues, is in fact a positive result of its non-professional origins (Karttunen 2013). Niu Haiyang provides a systematic overview of the history of Tibetology in Europe, noting the shift from simple travelogues to scientific research and highlighting the field’s dual emphasis on textual studies and field investigation (Niu 2020, p. 413). Existing scholarship on modern Tibetology has therefore already pointed to the roles of religion and politics in academic research and revealed the transformations the field underwent in the modern era; however, it has yet to engage deeply with concrete cases to explore the interaction and tensions among religion, politics, and scholarship in driving the development and transformation of Tibetological research. |
| 3 | These five individuals were W. R. Morse, an American missionary and the first president of the WCBRS; the geographer G. G. Helde; the archeologist E. Dome; the Council Member J. Hutson; and the Tibetologist J. H. Edgar. |
| 4 | Cultural imperialism represents both a continuation and a deepening of colonialism. As defined by Arthur Schlesinger Jr., it constitutes “a purposeful aggression by one culture against the ideas and values of another” (Schlesinger 1974, p. 363). Building on this concept, Harris further elaborates that Western missionaries in China forged a relation of structural inequality, arguing that “those Chinese who came under missionary influence were placed in a relationship of greater structural dependence on their Western patrons” (Harris 1991, p. 338). |
| 5 | Orientalism is a politically inflected way of seeing. It magnifies East–West differences in ways that display Western power and Eastern deficiency, ultimately making “the Oriental becomes more Oriental, the Westerner more Western” (Said 1979, pp. 44–46). |
| 6 | Nineteenth-century Western knowledge production was entangled with the overseas empire. In Britain, work on Asia and Africa cast Asia as “stagnant” and Africa as “primitive,” linking both to Britain’s global pre-eminence (Hevia 2003, p. 127). |
| 7 | In the first half of the nineteenth century, amid the Anglo-Nepal War and related campaigns, Britain and British India fought Nepal, Bhutan, and Sikkim, extending their reach toward China’s southwest frontiers (Lv 2016, p. 37). Britain’s continuing expansion in the Indian subcontinent—together with rivalry against Russia and France in Asia, the “Great Game”—pressed Western countries to register Tibet’s strategic significance. In this competition, scientific work and political interests became tightly entangled. Cartographic surveys conducted for science were frequently treated as instruments of military control; mapping the Himalayan region functioned as a tool in the Anglo-Russian contest across Central Asia (Meyer and Shareen 2006, p. 207). |
| 8 | At this time, it was difficult for missionaries and explorers to remain for long periods in the Tibetan interior; they could operate only in Tibet’s border regions. The Missions Étrangères de Paris (MEP) sought to make use of the Treaty of Peking to establish mission stations in Tibet. However, in the face of local resistance and broader social unrest, ten of its sixty-nine missionaries were killed, and the MEP was ultimately forced to withdraw from Tibet (Bray 2011, p. 103). |
| 9 | Notably, Prince Uchtomsky, in the preface to Mythologie des Buddhismus in Tibet und der Mongolei, rejected Gruenwedel’s view and argued that Tibetan receptivity to Buddhism had its rationale (Forke 1900, pp. 61–64), signaling a contemporary Western reappraisal of Orientalist Tibetology. |
| 10 | The Chinese Recorder was launched in 1867. The first article in the journal to address Tibet was E. Bretschneider’s “The Study and Value of Chinese Botanical Works,” which recorded certain plants from Tibet (Bretschneider 1871). The China Review, by contrast, was not founded until 1872. Its first Tibetology article was “The Chinese Silver Coinage of Tibet,” published in 1880 (G. Wang 2010, p. 305). |
| 11 | Notably, when Kingsmill addressed East Asian ethnology in his lecture, he held, on the one hand, that early Chinese and Western civilizations exhibited affinities; on the other, he acknowledged that case-by-case research challenged this view, with ethnology and kindred fields indicating that “the Chinese language and Chinese arts had to be relegated to an independent origin” (Kingsmill 1878, p. xxxi). This predicament, to some extent, prompted Western scholars to pursue anthropological studies of East Asian peoples to substantiate the Western-origin thesis. Kingsmill himself advocated an “Aryan origin” of Chinese civilization, seeking to demonstrate it from three angles—language, myth, and ethnogenesis (Zhe Chen 2011). |
| 12 | Library acquisition reports recorded in the JNCBRAS show that the NCBRAS added one Tibetology title in 1876, eight in 1881, and seven in 1885 (JNCBRAS Editorial Board 1876, p. vi; JNCBRAS Editorial Board 1881, pp. A–M; Hirth 1885, pp. 235–74). |
| 13 | Research on Chinese tradition presupposed Chinese-language competence, which early Western residents often lacked. Scholarship notes that the rise inof Western Sinology unexpectedly grew out of translation: Britain’s shortage of China-hands in the mid-nineteenth century prompted intensified training in Chinese language and culture (Guan 2017, p. 110). |
| 14 | In 1891, W. W. Rockhill systematized this thesis in “Tibet from Chinese Sources” in the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society; Christopher Irving cited the piece in 1919 (Irving 1919). |
| 15 | Taking the nineteenth-century British sinologist James Summers as a case in point, one line of research argues that even when researchers did not consciously situate their work within the project of colonial expansion, the primary audience for their intellectual output—readers in the English-speaking world—often read and deployed it within the discursive framework of imperial expansion (Guan 2014). |
| 16 | The five book reviews concern the following works: Charles Atmore Sherring et al.’s Western Tibet and the British Borderland (Kingsmill 1907, p. 229); Thomas Martland Ainscough’s Notes from a Frontier; Sven Anders Hedin’s Trans-Himalaya: Discoveries and Adventures in Tibet (L.F.H. 1910, p. 130); W. W. Rockhill’s Dalai Lamas of Lhasa and Their Relations with the Manchu Emperors of China, 1644–1908 (Anonymous 1911, p. 239); and Origin of Tibetan Writing (Ch 1919, p. 195). |
| 17 | By the late nineteenth century, J. H. Edgar was evangelizing in western Sichuan. The Chinese Recorder characterized his deep engagement with Tibetan communities as “to let loose the Word of God” (Anonymous 1936a, p.298). He was also a capable professional scholar in anthropology and archeology (Liljestrand 1936) and was hailed as “The Livingstone of West China” (Anonymous 1917). |
| 18 | The publication of Notes and Queries on Anthropology in 1874 had already demonstrated the role of fieldwork methods in anthropological research. However, at that time, fieldwork consisted merely of simple observations of non-Western societies; it was oriented primarily toward religious rituals and was influenced by evolutionism. This situation underwent a shift by the early twentieth century. In the 1912 edition of Notes and Queries on Anthropology, the editors characterized the volume as “a handbook for a new era of anthropological research to be based on more exact methods.” They argued that fieldwork required all the elements of professional fieldwork—including long-term residence, language learning, and comprehensive observation—and emphasized that “Anthropology needed trained observers and could no longer rely solely on outsiders.”(Urry 1972). |
| 19 | Moreover, at a time when disciplinary institutionalization was gradually taking shape, J. H. Edgar was still able to cross disciplinary boundaries and maintain a dual concern with anthropology and geography. A contemporary observed that “Mr. Edgar’s power of observation left little unnoticed—the altitude of upper limits of vegetation, habits of afforestation, and habits of population” (Liljestrand 1936). Edgar’s articles in the JNCBRAS amply reflected this characteristic. In 1910–11, he traveled to Kham to carry out climatic observations, carefully recording temperature data for such places as Dajianlu 打箭爐 [Tib. Dar rtse mdo] and Litang 理塘 [Tib. Li thang] (Edgar 1914a, pp. 60–63). |
| 20 | Notably, the NCBRAS’s openness to Chinese society largely targeted English-literate elites, as the 1931 min observed: “When the Society was formed, the Chairman stated, it was impossible for Chinese to co-operate in its activities, one great difficulty being that of language. All that had now been removed. Chinese have given lectures to the Society in English, no less than four having been delivered last year” (JNCBRAS Editorial Board 1931, pp. iii–iv). |
| 21 | Western fascination with Tibet scarcely waned after the 1920s; newspapers such as The New York Times and The Times ran sustained coverage (Tuo and Han 2015, p. 110; Guo 2010, p. 92). |
| 22 | T. Torrance received his early education at Hulme Cliff College (McGrath 2006, p. 6) and had no formal anthropological training. Nevertheless, against the broader backdrop of disciplinary differentiation and professionalization, he embraced scientific research methods. Not only was he a member of the Royal Geographical Society, but he also focused his scholarly attention on Chinese art and archeology. Acting simultaneously as an anthropologist, archeologist, and more, he made pioneering contributions to the development of Chinese scholarship (Bian 2013). |
| 23 | In the 1910s, T. Torrance conducted mission work and investigations in the upper Min River, assembling substantial field materials. On that basis, he wrote The History, Customs and Religion of the Ch’iang, which Isaac Mason introduced to readers as “interesting and informing, especially to ethnologists and students of primitive religions” (Mason 1920, pp. 192–93). |
| 24 | J. H. Edgar pursued a similar line of work. His studies of Tibetan Buddhism aimed to supplant Buddhism with Christianity within Tibetan society (P. Li et al. 2024). |
| 25 | Tibet’s long closure to the West—and the mystique it generated—sustained Western incentives to pursue Tibetology in China. As a 1933 JNCBRAS review of Évariste Régis Huc’s travelogue observed, “The reason for the popularity of these travels has not changed with the passing years. Tibet is still the land of mystery, Lhasa a goal difficult of attainment” (Roberts 1933, p. 166). |
| 26 | Even after the NCBRAS underwent secularization and localization in the 1920s, Western interest in Tibet nonetheless remained marked by colonialist and Orientalist overtones. In 1933, the novel Lost Horizon sparked a “Tibet craze” in the Western world; its romanticized and mystified image of “Shangri-La” catered to Orientalist imaginings among Western publics (Zhigang Chen 2009, p. 45). |
| 27 | As Christian Meyer’s analysis of the formation of the “Science of Religion” (zongjiaoxue) in China demonstrates, the establishment of this discipline was a complex and multifaceted process, gradually shaped through the interplay of multiple forces—including channels of knowledge dissemination, modernization processes, discourses of national identity, and conflicts of interests and positions among different groups (Meyer 2014, p. 332). This article similarly aims to reveal the multiple tensions embodied in the transformation of Tibetan research toward modern academic research. |
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Xiong, L.; Li, P. The Evangelistic Imperative and the Modernity of Knowledge Production: Tibetology at the North China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1857–1952. Religions 2026, 17, 55. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17010055
Xiong L, Li P. The Evangelistic Imperative and the Modernity of Knowledge Production: Tibetology at the North China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1857–1952. Religions. 2026; 17(1):55. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17010055
Chicago/Turabian StyleXiong, Libin, and Peirong Li. 2026. "The Evangelistic Imperative and the Modernity of Knowledge Production: Tibetology at the North China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1857–1952" Religions 17, no. 1: 55. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17010055
APA StyleXiong, L., & Li, P. (2026). The Evangelistic Imperative and the Modernity of Knowledge Production: Tibetology at the North China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1857–1952. Religions, 17(1), 55. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17010055
