Spatial Expansion, Planning, and Their Influences on the Urban Landscape of Christian Churches in Canton (1582–1732 and 1844–1911)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Spatial Layout and the Landscape Characteristics of Canton
2.1. Urban Functional Zoning and Spatial Layout
2.2. Landscape Features with Horizontal Extension
2.3. The Construction of Canton’s Space Order
3. The First Appearance and the Distribution of Churches in Canton under Dynastic Power (1582–1732)
4. The Planning and Spatial Expansion of Churches and Their Impact on Urban Landscapes under the Weak Situation of the Qing Dynasty, 1844–1911
4.1. The Expansion of Churches from the Pearl River Bank to the New City, the Old City, and the Suburbs
4.2. The Layout Planning Progress of the Churches
4.3. The Influences of Churches on Urban Landscapes
5. Conclusions and Discussion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In 1807, the London Missionary Society sent missionary Robert Morrison to China to preach, becoming the first Protestant missionary to enter Canton. At this time, the Qing government did not lift the maritime ban, and Protestant missionaries used the Thirteen Factories as a major center, engaging in covert missionary activities through serving in foreign commercial institutions in China, or running hospitals, schools, and publishing houses. However, there are no records of churches, so it is not within the scope of this study. (W. Li 1996, p. 234). |
2 | In the fourth year of the Shunzhi reign in the Qing Dynasty (1647), the Governor General presided over the construction of bird-wing city walls, about 7 m high and 5 m wide, at the east and west ends of the south of the New City to protect merchants along the river in the southern suburbs (Z. Zeng 1991, pp. 378–80). |
3 | Representations of the letter numbers in the right figure: a—the Pearl River; b—the foreign factories; c—Mobammedan mosque; d—a native pagoda (Flowery Pagoda); e—five-storied pagoda; f—the Governor’s House (Viceroy Office, 总督衙门); g—the Foo-yuen’ s house (巡抚衙门); h—the house of Tseang-Keun or the Tartar General (将军衙门); i—the house of the Hoppo (the Superintendent Office of Customs, 河泊所); k—the house of the Heo-yuen (literary chancellor of Canton); l—house of the Poo-ching-sze (treasurer of the provincial revenue); m—the house of the Gan-cha-sze (criminal judge of the province); n—the house of the Yen-yun-sze (superintendent of the salt department); o—Kung-yuen (a hall for the reception of literary candidates at the regular examinations, 贡院); p—Yuh-ying-tang (a founding hospital); o—Teen-tsze ma-taou (the execution ground, 天字码头/刑场); The elements depicted in these two pictures are basically identical and should be of the same origin. However, the content of the English map is more simplified. Although there are no place names marked, the red houses, streets, city walls, bunkers, and river ditches on the map are easier to identify. These small red houses represent key facilities such as government offices, schools, temples, and defense. From this, it can be seen that these two pictures are essentially abstract expressions of these key facilities, city walls, and streets from the official perspective of the Qing court. |
4 | The drawer is standing on the rooftop of the British Trading House in Thirteen Factories. The upper picture is looking toward the south to the Pearl River, and the number 5 in the picture is the distant view of the Whampoa Pagoda. The lower picture is looking toward the north toward the western suburbs, the New and the Old cities, and the number 43 in the picture is the Five-Story Tower. |
5 | The photo of Venice was collected and digitally imaged by Heritage Auctions, HA.com. This panorama was mounted on a card in nine sections, and folded into a leather slipcase. |
6 | In 1742 (the seventh year of the Qianlong reign), due to the inability of the nursery houses outside the West Gate to meet the housing needs of women and children, the Canton authorities approved local merchants to build a new nursery in the Dongshan area outside of the East Gate. This new nursery was located in the southeast corner in Figure 2. |
7 | The locations of the churches are confirmed through argumentation in the article. |
8 | A—British churches and restaurant; B—the residence and the school of American Presbyterian; C—the residence and the chapel of Wesleyan Methodist Missionary Society; D—the Chinese Church of London Missionary Society; E—the house and the hospital of American Presbyterian; F—the residence, chapel, and school of Rhenish Missionary Society; G—the Roman Catholic Cathedral (under construction) and the orphanage; H—the residence and the church of Wesleyan Methodist Missionary Society. It should be noted that not all missionary societies had a church or a chapel. |
9 | For the English names and descriptions of the streets in Canton, please refer to (Kerr 1880, p. 25). |
10 | On 16 November 1853, the Holy See appointed M. Guillemin as the Apostolic Vicariate of Guangdong, Guangxi, and Hainan provinces. This appointment was announced to the public in 1855. Quoted in “Guangzhou Shengxin Dajiaotang de Sheji he Jianzao”, written by Mattieu. |
11 | Jean-Paul Wiest highlighted in his research on the history of cathedral construction that “Bishop Guillemin in particular was politically, culturally, and religiously ill prepared to make himself accepted by the Chinese people. He epitomised the mentality so pervasive in the second half of nineteenth-century French Catholicism. He looked down upon almost every aspect of Chinese culture and regarded himself as a pioneer of Catholicism and French civilisation. In his mind, the two were inseparable and his cathedral in Guangzhou was to be the sign of the implantation of both on Chinese soil. Through persuasion, ruse, and diplomacy, he manipulated French civil and military authorities both at home and in China to assist willy-nilly in his project.” (Wiest 2004, p. 250). |
12 | 1a—the Roman Catholic Cathedral; 1b—Bishop’s Administrative Management Center; 1c—seminary; 1d—male school or Roman Catholic Academy; 1e—church houses; 2a—female school; 2b—orphanage; 2c—craft factory; 2d—church houses. |
13 | The tall building with two bell towers in the middle of the screen was the Roman Catholic Cathedral, and the two tower-shaped buildings on the right were the Flowery Pagoda and the Smooth Pagoda. |
14 | A stone chamber, on the surface, means that a church is a house built with stones. In the 19th century, most buildings in Guangzhou used bricks, soil, and wood materials. Quoted in the summary of the building materials that Westerners saw in Guangzhou, In Xifangren Suzao de Guangzhou Jingguan, written by Ni (2007, pp. 53–54). |
15 | The photo shows the north side of the Dongshan Church. The east–west road in the lower middle is the Guangzhou-Kowloon Railway. |
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Li, Y. Spatial Expansion, Planning, and Their Influences on the Urban Landscape of Christian Churches in Canton (1582–1732 and 1844–1911). Religions 2024, 15, 1183. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101183
Li Y. Spatial Expansion, Planning, and Their Influences on the Urban Landscape of Christian Churches in Canton (1582–1732 and 1844–1911). Religions. 2024; 15(10):1183. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101183
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Yonggu. 2024. "Spatial Expansion, Planning, and Their Influences on the Urban Landscape of Christian Churches in Canton (1582–1732 and 1844–1911)" Religions 15, no. 10: 1183. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101183
APA StyleLi, Y. (2024). Spatial Expansion, Planning, and Their Influences on the Urban Landscape of Christian Churches in Canton (1582–1732 and 1844–1911). Religions, 15(10), 1183. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101183