Loochoo Naval Mission

Last updated
Founder of the Mission Capt. Herbert Clifford Capt. Herbert John Clifford (1789-1855).png
Founder of the Mission Capt. Herbert Clifford

The Loochoo Naval Mission (1843-1861) was a Church of England mission society to provide Christian outreach to outlying Ryukyu Islands, today part of Japan but a sovereign country during those times.

Contents

The work of the mission was significant both in the history of the Ryukyu Kingdom and as the first recorded Anglican and Protestant mission activity in the Japanese archipelago. [1]

History

Begun in February 1842, by a small group of British Royal Navy officers led by Lieutenant Herbert Clifford and Commander Henry Downes, the fund was operationally independent from established Church of England mission societies such as the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel and the Church Mission Society. Lieutenant Clifford had been a member of Captain Basil Hall's 1816 Royal Navy expedition to the Ryukyu Islands. [2] [3]

The mission's first lay mission leader, medical doctor Bernard Jean Bettelheim, landed in the Ryukyu Islands in on April 30, 1846. [4] accompanied by his wife, his two young children, a tutor named Sarah Speight James, and a Cantonese translator.

Dr. Bettelheim's residence, Loochoo Naval Mission Dr. Bettelheim's residence, Loochoo Naval Mission.png
Dr. Bettelheim's residence, Loochoo Naval Mission

Bettelheim's arrival was not a welcome development for the Ryukyuan authorities or much of the local population; when offered temporary shelter, he promptly took up permanent residence in the Gokoku-ji temple and refused to leave for the next seven years. Bettelheim did provide medical care to local residents and made considerable progress in learning the local language, but was not reported to have made any Christian converts in the years he lived on the island. Bettelheim was eventually succeeded in 1854 by Rev. George Harman Moreton. [5]

The work of the Loochoo mission effectively came to a close in 1861 when the balance of funds were given to the Church Mission Society with the aim of financing further Christian outreach in Japan.

Archive

Records of the Loochoo Naval Mission are held at Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham. [6]

Related Research Articles

This timeline of Christian missions chronicles the global expansion of Christianity through a listing of the most significant missionary outreach events.

Ryukyuan people Japanese ethnic group

The Ryukyuan people, also Lewchewan or Loochooan, are an East Asian ethnic group native to the Ryukyu Islands, which stretch between the islands of Kyushu and Taiwan. Administratively, they live in either the Okinawa Prefecture or the Kagoshima Prefecture within Japan. Their languages make up the Ryukyuan languages, considered to be one of the two branches of the Japonic language family, the other being Japanese and its dialects. Hachijō is sometimes considered to constitute a third branch.

Anglican Church in Japan

The Nippon Sei Ko Kai, abbreviated as NSKK, or sometimes referred to in English as the Anglican Episcopal Church in Japan, is the national Christian church representing the Province of Japan within the Anglican Communion.

History of the Ryukyu Islands

This article is about the history of the Ryukyu Islands southwest of the main islands of Japan.

Ryukyu Kingdom Historical kingdom in parts of present-day Japan

The Ryukyu Kingdom was a kingdom in the Ryukyu Islands from 1429 to 1879.

Basil Hall

Basil Hall was a British naval officer from Scotland, a traveller, and an author. He was the second son of Sir James Hall, 4th Baronet, an eminent man of science.

Henry Baker Tristram

Henry Baker Tristram FRS was an English clergyman, Bible scholar, traveller and ornithologist. As a parson-naturalist he was an early supporter of Darwinism, attempting to reconcile evolution and creation.

<i>Sakoku</i> Japanese isolationist policies in the Tokugawa Shogunate

Sakoku was the isolationist foreign policy of the Japanese Tokugawa shogunate under which, for a period of 214 years, relations and trade between Japan and other countries were severely limited, nearly all foreign nationals were barred from entering Japan and common Japanese people were kept from leaving the country. The policy was enacted by the Tokugawa shogunate under Tokugawa Iemitsu through a number of edicts and policies from 1633 to 1639, and ended after 1853 when the American Black Ships commanded by Matthew Perry forced the opening of Japan to American trade through a series of treaties.

Bernard Jean Bettelheim

Bernát Bettelheim or Bernard Jean Bettelheim was a Hungarian-born Christian missionary to Okinawa, the first Protestant missionary to be active there.

Christianity in Japan

Christianity in Japan is among the nation's minority religions. Between less than 1 percent and 1.5% of the population claims Christian belief or affiliation. Most large Christian denominations, including Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, and Orthodox Christianity, are represented in Japan today. Since the mid-1990s, the majority of Japanese people are of the Shinto or Buddhist faith. The majority of Japanese couples, typically 60-70%, are wed in Christian ceremonies. This makes Christian weddings the most influential aspect of Christianity in contemporary Japan.

Iha Fuyū

Iha Fuyū was the father of Okinawaology and a Japanese scholar who studied various aspects of Japanese and Okinawan culture, customs, linguistics, and lore. His signature was Ifa Fuyu in English, because of the Okinawan pronunciation. Iha studied linguistics in the University of Tokyo and was devoted to the study of Okinawan linguistics, folklore, and history. His most famous book on the subject, Ko Ryūkyū, was published in 1911 and remains one of the best works on Okinawan studies. He devoted much time to the discovery of the origins of Okinawan people to establish their history. He had considerable influence not only on the study of Okinawan folklore but also of Japanese folklore.

United Society Partners in the Gospel (USPG) is a United Kingdom-based charitable organization.

Divie Bethune McCartee

Divie Bethune McCartee (1820–1900) was an American Protestant Christian medical missionary, educator and U.S. diplomat in China and Japan, first appointed by the American Presbyterian Mission in 1843.

Ryukyu Islands Chain of Japanese islands that stretch southwest from Kyushu to Taiwan

The Ryukyu Islands, also known as the Nansei Islands or the Ryukyu Arc, are a chain of Japanese islands that stretch southwest from Kyushu to Taiwan: the Ōsumi, Tokara, Amami, Okinawa, and Sakishima Islands, with Yonaguni the westernmost. The larger are mostly high islands and the smaller mostly coral. The largest is Okinawa Island.

The Church of England Zenana Missionary Society, also known as the Church of England Zenana Mission, was a British Anglican Christian missionary society established to spread Anglicanism in India. It would later expand its missionary work into Japan and Qing Dynasty China. In 1957 it was absorbed into the Church Missionary Society (CMS).

Gokoku-ji (Okinawa)

Gokoku-ji is a Zazen Buddhist temple in Naha, Okinawa. Established in 1367, the temple served as a major national temple for the Okinawan kingdom of Chūzan and the unified Ryūkyū Kingdom which would follow. It is well known for its associations with Christian missionary Bernard Jean Bettelheim and with the 1853-1854 visits by Commodore Matthew Perry to Okinawa.

SEND International

SEND International is an interdenominational Christian mission agency. The organization as it is known today was formed in 1971 through the merger of Far Eastern Gospel Crusade and Central Alaskan Missions.

The 1959 New Year Honours in New Zealand were appointments by Elizabeth II on the advice of the New Zealand government to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by New Zealanders. The awards celebrated the passing of 1958 and the beginning of 1959, and were announced on 1 January 1959.

Herbert Clifford Officer of the British Royal Navy

Captain Herbert John Clifford was an officer in the Royal Navy during the Napoleonic Wars and the founder of the Loochoo Naval Mission (1843). In 1818, he published Vocabulary of the Language Spoken at the Great Loo-Choo Island, in the Japan Sea, which "remained the single most important source on Ryukyuan in the West for decades."

Ryukyu is the name of a former kingdom that existed from 1429 to 1879. It is also the name of the Ryukyu Islands, an archipelago between Kyushu and Taiwan.

References

  1. Ion, Hamish (2009). American Missionaries, Christiam Oyatoi, and Japan 1859-73. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press. p. 9. ISBN   978-0-7748-1647-2.
  2. Hall, Basil (1820). Voyage to Corea and the Island of Loo-Choo (Second ed.). London: John Murray. p. viii.
  3. Herbert Clifford Biography.
  4. Kerr, George (2000). Okinawa: The History of an Island People. Tokyo: Tuttle. p. 279. ISBN   978-0804820875.
  5. Osterkamp, Sven (2015). Heinrich, Patrick (ed.). Handbook of the Rukyuan Languages: History, Structure, and Use. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter Inc. p. 74. ISBN   978-1-5015-1071-7.
  6. "UoB Calmview5: Search results". calmview.bham.ac.uk. Retrieved 2021-01-26.