The Orchard Learning Resources Centre in the University of Birmingham possesses a rubbing of this famous monument of Chinese Christian history which was made directly from the stele in the 1920s. This is a composite photograph of this rubbing made in 2008. This limestone stele (about ten feet high) was discovered in the sixteenth century after it had been buried and lost for about 800 years. Today the monument is housed in the "Forest of Tablets" in Shaanxi Provincial Museum (formerly a Confucian Temple) in Xi'an. The monument was erected in 781 C.E. to commemorate the first coming of Christianity to China in the year 635 C.E. Arriving through the 5,000-mile Silk Road that linked ancient Antioch and metropolitan Changan (today Xi’...
To study the religious sculpted-image stelae of China between the 490s and the 550s, I begin by revi...
Founded on the fact of otherwise deep connections of Nestorianism to the Aristotelian philosophy, th...
Less than a half century after Augustine of Canterbury began his work of Christianizing the Anglo-Sa...
This article proposes a new reading of the Nestorian stele of Chang’an, a Christian monument from th...
A commemorative medal in the Hunterian, University of Glasgow, marks Danish journalist and adventure...
The manuscript of Xu ting mishisuo jing 序聽迷詩所經 (the Record of Hearing the Sutra of the Intercessor) ...
Major: Theology and Philosophy Faculty Mentor: Dr. Arthur Urbano, Theology This project explored the...
Nestorian Christianity as a distinguished Christian group came into existence after the Christologic...
While previous works on the history of Christianity in China have largely centered on the scientific...
In 1950s, two fourteenth-century tombstones with Latin inscriptions were discovered in Yangzhou, Chi...
The paper focuses on the integration between Western and Eastern people, namely dealing with the Chr...
At the turn of the twenty-first century, Xiamen’s pursuit of World Heritage Site designation from UN...
The calligraphy of the Nestorian Stele in Tang China is excellent for its flowing beauty in brush te...
Christianity takes another stride in China: a group of Chinese and foreign scholars prepare the text...
This lecture, "From Buddhism to Nestorian Christianity: The importance of the Silk Roads in the move...
To study the religious sculpted-image stelae of China between the 490s and the 550s, I begin by revi...
Founded on the fact of otherwise deep connections of Nestorianism to the Aristotelian philosophy, th...
Less than a half century after Augustine of Canterbury began his work of Christianizing the Anglo-Sa...
This article proposes a new reading of the Nestorian stele of Chang’an, a Christian monument from th...
A commemorative medal in the Hunterian, University of Glasgow, marks Danish journalist and adventure...
The manuscript of Xu ting mishisuo jing 序聽迷詩所經 (the Record of Hearing the Sutra of the Intercessor) ...
Major: Theology and Philosophy Faculty Mentor: Dr. Arthur Urbano, Theology This project explored the...
Nestorian Christianity as a distinguished Christian group came into existence after the Christologic...
While previous works on the history of Christianity in China have largely centered on the scientific...
In 1950s, two fourteenth-century tombstones with Latin inscriptions were discovered in Yangzhou, Chi...
The paper focuses on the integration between Western and Eastern people, namely dealing with the Chr...
At the turn of the twenty-first century, Xiamen’s pursuit of World Heritage Site designation from UN...
The calligraphy of the Nestorian Stele in Tang China is excellent for its flowing beauty in brush te...
Christianity takes another stride in China: a group of Chinese and foreign scholars prepare the text...
This lecture, "From Buddhism to Nestorian Christianity: The importance of the Silk Roads in the move...
To study the religious sculpted-image stelae of China between the 490s and the 550s, I begin by revi...
Founded on the fact of otherwise deep connections of Nestorianism to the Aristotelian philosophy, th...
Less than a half century after Augustine of Canterbury began his work of Christianizing the Anglo-Sa...