词条 | John Burdon (bishop) |
释义 |
| name = John Shaw Burdon | image = JS Burdon.jpg | caption = Missionary to China | image_size = 175px | birth_date = 1826 | birth_place = Glasgow, Scotland | death_date = 5 January 1907 | death_place = Royston, Glasgow, Scotland }}{{Infobox Chinese|showflag=stp|s=包尔腾||t=包爾騰|p=Bāo'ěrténg|mi={{IPAc-cmn|b|ao|1|'|er|3|t|eng|2}}|myr=Bāu'ěrténg|w=Pao'erht'eng|j=Baau1 ji5 tang4|y=Bāau yíh tàhng|ci={{IPA-yue|páːuji̬ːtɐ̏ŋ|}}}}John Shaw Burdon[1] ({{zh|s=包尔腾|t=包爾騰}}; 1826{{snd}}5{{nbsp}}January 1907) was a British Christian missionary to China with the Church Mission Society who in time became a bishop.[2] LifeBurdon was ordained to the priesthood by the Bishop of London in December 1852;[3] and resigned in 1896.[4] He opposed Britain's part in the Anglo-Chinese First and Second Opium Wars. In March 1874 he was consecrated bishop of the South China diocese of the Anglican Church in Victoria and Hong Kong. Burdon was a translator with Samuel Isaac Joseph Schereschewsky of the Book of Common Prayer.[5] Burdon was a friend and fellow travelling evangelist of the young Hudson Taylor. He married Harriet Ann, whom he lost to illness in 1854 in Shanghai.[6] His second marriage in 1857 was to Burella Hunter Dyer, the daughter of missionary Rev.Samuel Dyer.[7] She died the following year of cholera, also in Shanghai. His third wife also predeceased him. The school, named Tong Wen Guan, was officially opened on 11 June 1862 and Burdon was hired as the first English instructor.[8] He died at Bedford on 5 January 1907, and was buried at Royston. {{sfn|Lee|1912}} FamilyBurdon was married three times: first, to Harriet Anne Forshaw on 30 March 1853, who died at Shanghai on 26 September 1854 ; second, to Burella Hunter Dyer, on 11 November 1857, who died on 16 Aug. 1858; third, to Phoebe Esther, daughter of E. T. Alder, vicar of Bungay on 14 June 1865. She died on 14 June 1898; they had three sons.{{sfn|Lee|1912}} Bibliography
Notes1. ^NPG details 2. ^[https://archive.org/details/JohnShawBurdon-HudsonTaylorsFriendInChina-BishopAndMissionaryIn Archive.Org] 3. ^‘BURDON, Rt Rev. John Shaw’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007 accessed 17 Sept 2013 4. ^Ecclesiastical Intelligence The Times (London, England), Tuesday, Aug 04, 1896; pg. 3; Issue 34960 5. ^{{Citation|last=Wickeri|first=Philip L.|title=Anglicanism in China and East Asia, 1819–1912|date=2017-02-02|url=http://www.oxfordscholarship.com/view/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199699704.001.0001/acprof-9780199699704-chapter-15|work=The Oxford History of Anglicanism, Volume III|pages=318–337|publisher=Oxford University Press|language=en-US|doi=10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199699704.003.0015|isbn=9780199699704|access-date=2018-07-19}} 6. ^Ellison, E. S.; Shantung Road Cemetery 1846-1868. 7. ^"The Gentleman's Magazine" July–December, 1858, p. 646. 8. ^Broomhall (1983), 443 References
| title = Principal of St. Paul's College, Hong Kong | before = Charles Richard Alford | after = Joseph Charles Hoare | years = 1874–1897 }}{{end}}{{Protestant missionaries in Foochow}}{{Protestant missions to China}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Burdon, John Shaw}} 10 : 1826 births|1907 deaths|Anglican missionaries in China|British expatriates in China|English Anglican missionaries|19th-century Anglican bishops|Anglican bishops of Victoria, Hong Kong|Anglican bishops in China|Christian missionaries in Hong Kong|People from Glasgow |
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