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CHINESE MARTYRS

Dedicated to the courageous Faithful of
China, where the Church has been built on the blood of martyrs.
From the earliest beginnings of the Chinese
people (sometime about the middle of the third millennium before
Christ) religious sentiment towards the Supreme Being and diligent
filial piety towards ancestors were the most conspicuous
characteristics of their culture, which had existed for thousands of
years.
This note of distinct religiousness is found to a greater or
lesser extent in the Chinese people of all centuries up to our own
time, when, under the influence of western atheism, some
intellectuals, especially those educated in foreign countries, wished
to rid themselves of all religious ideas, like some of their western
teachers.
In the fifth century, the Gospel was preached in China, and at
the beginning of the seventh century the first church was built there.
During the T’ang dynasty (618-907) the Christian community
flourished for two centuries. In
the thirteenth, thanks to the understanding of the Chinese people and
culture shown by missionaries like Giovanni da Montecorvino, it became
possible to begin the first Catholic mission in the Middle Kingdom,
with the Episcopal see in Beijing.
It is not surprising, especially in the modern era (that is,
from the sixteenth century, when communications between the east and
west began to be, in a way, more frequent) that there was on the part
of the Catholic Church a longing to take the light of the Gospel to
this people in order to enrich still more their treasure of cultural
and religious traditions, so rich and profound.
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And so, beginning from the last decades of the sixteenth
century, various Catholic missionaries were sent to China:
people like Matteo Ricci and others were chosen with great
care, keeping in mind their cultural abilities and their
qualifications in various fields of science, especially astronomy and
mathematics, in addition to their spirit of faith and love.
In fact, it was thanks to this and to the appreciation that the
missionaries showed for the remarkable spirit of research shown by the
studious Chinese, that it was possible to establish very useful
collaborative relationships in the scientific field. These relationships served in their turn to open many doors,
even that of the Imperial Court, and this led to the development of
very useful relations with various people of great ability.
The quality of the religious life of these missionaries was
such as to lead not a few people at a high level to feel the need to
know better the evangelical spirit that animated them and, then, to be
instructed with regard to the Christian religion. This instruction was carried out in a manner suited to their
cultural characteristics and way of thinking.
At the end of the sixteenth century and the beginning of the
seventeenth, there were numerous people who, having undergone the
necessary preparation, asked for baptism and became fervent
Christians, while always preserving with just pride their Chinese
identity and culture.
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Christianity was seen in that period as a reality that did not
oppose the highest values of the traditions of the Chinese people, nor
place itself above these traditions.
Rather, it was regarded as something that enriched them with a
new light and dimension. Thanks
to the excellent relations that existed between some missionaries and
the Emperor K’ang His himself, and thanks to the services they
rendered towards re-establishing peace between the “Czar” of
Russia and the “Son of Heaven,” namely the Emperor, the latter
issued in 1692 the first decree of religious liberty by virtue of
which all his subjects could follow the Christian religion and all the
missionaries could preach in his vast domains.
In consequence, there were notable developments in missionary
activity and the spread of the Gospel message; and many Chinese
people, attracted by the light of Christ, asked to be able to receive
baptism.
Unfortunately, however, the difficult question of “Chinese
rites,” greatly irritated the Emperor K’ang His and prepared the
persecution. The latter,
strongly influenced by that in nearby Japan, to a greater or lesser
extent, open or insidious, violent or veiled, extended in successive
waves practically from the first decade of the seventeenth century to
about the middle of the nineteenth.
Missionaries and faithful lay people were killed, and many
churches destroyed.
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It was on 15 January 1648 that the Manchu Tartars, having
invaded the region of Fujian and shown themselves hostile to the
Christian religion, killed Blessed FRANCIS FERNANDEZ DE CAPILLAS, a
priest of the Order of Preachers (Dominicans).
After having imprisoned and tortured him, they beheaded him
while he recited with others the Sorrowful Mysteries of the Rosary.
Towards the middle of the following century (the eighteenth)
another five Spanish missionaries, who had carried out their activity
between 1715-1747, were put to death as a result of a new wave of
persecution that started in 1729 and broke out again in 1746.
This was in the epoch of the Emperor Yung-Cheng and of his son,
K’ien-Lung.
-
Blessed
PETER SANS I YORDA, O.P., Bishop, was martyred in 1747, at Fuzou.
All four of the following were killed on 28 October 1748:
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Blessed
FRANCIS SERRANO, O.P., Priest,
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Blessed
JOACHIM ROYO, O.P., Priest,
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Blessed
JOHN ALCOBER, O.P., Priest,
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Blessed
FRANCIS DIAZ, O.P., Priest.
A new period of persecution in regard to the Christian religion
then occurred in the nineteenth century.
While Catholicism had been authorized by some Emperors in the
preceding centuries, Emperor Kia-Kin (1796-1821) published, instead,
numerous and severe decrees against it.
The first was issued in 1805.
Two edicts of 1811 were directed against those among the
Chinese who were studying to receive sacred orders, and against
priests who were propagating the Christian religion. A decree of 1813 exonerated voluntary apostates from every
chastisement, that is, Christians who spontaneously declared that they
would abandon their faith, but all others were to be dealt with harsly.
In this period the following underwent martyrdom:
-
Blessed
PETER WU, a Chinese lay catechist.
Born of a pagan family, he received baptism in 1796 and
passed the rest of his life proclaiming the truth of the Christian
religion. All
attempts to make him apostasize were in vain.
The sentence having been pronounced against him, he was
strangled on 7 November 1814.
Following him in fidelity to Christ was:
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Blessed
JOSEPH ZHANG DAPENG, a lay catechist, and a merchant.
Baptised in 1800, he had become the heart of the mission in
the city of Kony-Yang. He
was imprisoned, and then strangled to death on 12 March 1815.
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In this same year (1815) there came two other decrees, with
which approval was given to the conduct of the Viceroy of Sichuan who
had beheaded Monsignor Dufresse, of the Paris Foreign Missions
Society, and some Chinese Christians.
As a result, there was a worsening of the persecution.
The following martyrs belong to this period:
-
Blessed
JOHN GABRIEL TAURIN DUFRESSE, M.E.P., Bishop.
He was arrested on 18 May 1815, taken to Chengdu, condemned
and executed on 14 September 1815.
-
Blessed
AUGUSTINE ZHAO RONG, a Chinese diocesan priest.
Having first been one of the soldiers who had escorted
Monsignor Dufresse from Chengdu to Beijing, he was moved by his
patience and had then asked to be numbered among the neophytes.
Once baptized, he was sent to the seminary and then
ordained a priest. Arrested,
he had to suffer the most cruel tortures and then died in 1815.
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Blessed
JOHN DA TRIORA, O.F.M., Priest.
Put in prison together with others in the summer of 1815,
he was then condemned to death, and strangled on 7 February 1816.
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Blessed
JOSEPH YUAN, a Chinese diocesan priest.
Having heard Monsignor Dufresse speak of the Christian
Faith, he was overcome by its beauty and became an exemplary
neophyte. Later, he
was ordained a priest and, as such, was dedicated to
evangelisation in various districts.
He was arrested in August 1816, condemned to be strangled,
and was killed in this way on 24 June 1817.
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Blessed
FRANCIS REGIS CLET of the Congregation of the Mission (Vincentians).
After obtaining permission to go to the Missions in China,
he embarked for the Orient in 1791.
Having reached there, for thirty years he spent a life of
missionary sacrifice. Upheld
by an untiring zeal, he evangelized three immense provinces of the
Chinese Empire: Jiangxi,
Hubei, Hunan. Betrayed
by a Christian, he was arrested and thrown into prison where he
underwent atrocious tortures.
Following sentence by the Emperor he was killed by
strangling on 17 February 1820.
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Blessed
THADDEUS LIU, a Chinese diocesan priest.
He refused to apostasize, saying that he was a priest and
wanted to be faithful to the religion that he had preached.
Condemned to death, he was strangled on 30 November 1823.
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Blessed
PETER LIU, a Chinese lay catechist.
He was arrested in 1814 and condemned to exile in Tartary,
where he remained for almost twenty years.
Returning to his homeland he was again arrested, and was
strangled on 17 May 1834.
-
Blessed
JOACHIM HO, a Chinese lay catechist.
He was baptized at the age of about twenty years.
In the great persecution of 1814 he had been taken with
many others of the faithful and subjected to cruel torture.
Sent into exile in Tartary, he remained there for almost
twenty years. Returning
to his homeland he was arrested again and refused to apostasize.
Following that, and the death sentence having been
confirmed by the Emperor, he was strangled on 9 July 1839.
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Blessed
AUGUSTUS CHAPDELAINE, M.E.P., a priest of the diocese of Coutances.
He entered the Seminary of the Paris Foreign Missions
Society, and embarked for China in 1852.
He arrived in Guangxi at the end of 1854.
Arrested in 1856, he was tortured, condemned to death in
prison, and died in February 1856.
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Blessed
LAURENCE BAI XIAOMAN, a Chinese layman, and an unassuming worker.
He joined Blessed Chapdelaine in the refuge that was given
to the missionary and was arrested with him and brought before the
tribunal. Nothing
could make him renounce his religious beliefs.
He was beheaded on 25 February 1856.
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Blessed
AGNES CAO GUIYING, a widow, born into an old Christian family.
Being dedicated to the instruction of young girls who had
recently been converted by Blessed Chapdelaine, she was arrested
and condemned to death in prison.
She was executed on 1 March 1856.
Three catechists, known as the Martyrs of MaoKou (in the
province of Guizhou) were killed on 28 January 1858, by order of the
Mandarin of MaoKou:
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Blessed
JEROME LU TINGMEI,
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Blessed
LAURENCE WANG BING,
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Blessed
AGATHA LIN ZAO.
All three had been called on to renounce the Christian religion
and having refused to do so were condemned to be beheaded.
Two seminarians and two lay people, one of whom was a farmer,
the other a widow who worked as a cook in the seminary, suffered
martyrdom together on 29 July 1861.
They are known as the Martyrs of Qingyanzhen (Guizhou):
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Blessed
JOSEPH ZHANG WENLAN, seminarian,
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Blessed
PAUL CHEN CHANGPIN, seminarian,
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Blessed
JOHN BAPTIST LUO TINGYING, layman,
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Blessed
MARTHA WANG LUO MANDE, laywoman.
In the following year, on 18 and 19 February 1862, another five
people gave their life for Christ.
They are known as the Martyrs Society,
-
Blessed
MARTIN WU XUESHENG, lay catechist,
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Blessed
JOHN ZHANG TIANSHEN, lay catechist,
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Blessed
JOHN CHEN XIANHENG, lay catechist.
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Blessed
LUCY YI ZHENMEI, lay catechist.
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In the meantime, some incidents occurred in the political field
that had notable repercussions on the life of the Christian missions.
In June 1840, the Imperial Commissioner of Guangdong, rightly
wishing to abolish the opium trade that was being conducted by the
British, had more than twenty thousand chests of this drug thrown into
the sea. This had been
the pretext for immediate war, which was won by the British.
When the war came to an end, China had to sign in 1842 the
first international treaty of modern times, followed quickly by others
with America and France. Taking
advantage of this opportunity, France replaced Portugal as the power
protecting the missions. Following
on from this, a twofold decree was issued:
one part in 1844 which permitted the Chinese to follow the
Catholic religion; the other, in 1846, with which the old penalties
against Catholics were abolished.
From then on the Church
could live openly and carry out its missionary activity, developing it
also in the sphere of higher education, in universities and scientific
research.
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With the multiplication of various top-level cultural
Institutes and thanks to their highly valued activity, ever deeper
links were gradually established between the Church and China with its
rich cultural traditions.
This collaboration with the Chinese authorities further
increased the mutual appreciation and sharing of those true values
that must underpin every civilized society.
And so passed an era of expansion in the Christian missions,
with the exception of the period in which they were struck by the
disaster of the uprising by the “Society for Justice and Harmony”
(commonly known as the “Boxers”).
This occurred at the beginning of the twentieth century and
caused the shedding of the blood of many Christians.
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It is known that, mingled in this rebellion, were all the
secret societies and the accumulated and repressed hatred against
foreigners in the last decades of the nineteenth century, because of
the political and social changes following the Opium War and the
imposition of the so-called “unequal treaties” on the part of the
Western Powers.
Very different, however, was the motive for the persecution of
the missionaries, even though they were of European nationality.
Their slaughter was brought about solely on religious grounds.
They were killed for the same reason as the Chinese faithful
who had become Christians. Reliable
historical documents provide evidence of the anti-Christian hatred
which spurred the “Boxers” to massacre the missionaries and the
faithful of the area who had adhered to their teaching.
In this regard, an edict was issued on 1 July 1900 which, in
substance, said that the time of good relations with European
missionaries and their Christians was now past:
that the former must be repatriated at once and the faithful
forced to apostasize, on penalty of death.
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As a result, the martyrdom took place of several missionaries
and many Chinese who can be grouped together as follows:
Martyrs
of Shanxi, killed on 9 July 1900, who were Franciscan Friars Minor:
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Blessed
GREGORY GRASSI, Bishop,
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Blessed
FRANCIS FOGOLLA, Bishop,
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Blessed
ELIAS FACCHINI, Priest,
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Blessed
THEODORIC BALAT, Priest,
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Blessed
ANDREW BAUER, Religious Brother;
Martyrs
of Southern Hunan, who were also Franciscan Friars Minor:
-
Blessed
ANTHONY FANTOSATI, Bishop (martyred on 7 July 1900),
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Blessed
JOSEPH MARY GAMBARO, Priest (martyred on 7 July 1900),
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Blessed
CESIDIO GIACOMANTONIO, Priest (martyred on 4 July 1900).
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To the martyred Franciscans of the First Order were added seven
Franciscan Missionaries of Mary, of whom three were French, two
Italian, one Belgian, and one Dutch:
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Blessed
MARY HERMINA OF JESUS (in saec:
Irma Grivot),
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Blessed
MARY OF PEACE (in saec: Mary
Ann Giuliani),
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Blessed
MARY CLARE (in saec: Clelia
Nanetti),
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Blessed
MARY OF THE HOLY BIRTH (in saec:
Joan Mary Kerguin),
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Blessed
MARY OF SAINT JUSTUS (in saec:
Ann Moreau)
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Blessed
MARY ADOLFINE (in saec: Ann
Dierk),
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Blessed
MARY AMANDINA (in saec: Paula
Jeuris).
Of the martyrs belonging to the Franciscan family, there were
also eleven Secular Franciscans, all Chinese:
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Blessed
JOHN ZHANG HUAN, seminarian,
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Blessed
PATRICK DONG BODI, seminarian,
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Blessed
JOHN WANG RUI, seminarian,
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Blessed
PHILIP ZHANG ZHIHE, seminarian,
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Blessed
JOHN ZHANG JINGGUANG, seminarian,
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Blessed
THOMAS SHEN JIHE, layman and a manservant,
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Blessed
SIMON QIN CUNFU, lay catechist,
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Blessed
PETER WU ANBANG, layman,
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Blessed
FRANCIS ZHANG RONG, layman and a farmer,
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Blessed
MATTHEW FENG DE, layman and neophyte,
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Blessed
PETER ZHANG BANNIU, layman and labourer.
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To these are joined a number of Chinese lay faithful:
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Blessed
JAMES YAN GUODONG, farmer,
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Blessed
JAMES ZHAO QUANXIN, manservant,
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Blessed
PETER WANG ERMAN, cook.
When the uprising of the “Boxers,” which had begun in
Shandong and then spread through Shanxi and Hunan, also reached
South-Eastern Tcheli, which was then the Apostolic Vicariate of
Xianxian, in the care of the Jesuits, the Christians killed could be
counted in thousands.
Among these were four French Jesuit missionaries and at least
52 Chinese lay Christians: men, women and children – the oldest of them being 79 years
old, while the youngest were aged only nine years.
All suffered martyrdom in the month of July 1900.
Many of them were killed in the church in the village of
Tchou-Kia-ho, in which they were taking refuge and where they were in
prayer together with the first two of the missionaries listed below:
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Blessed
LEO MANGIN, S.J., Priest,
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Blessed
PAUL DENN, S.J., Priest,
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Blessed
REMY ISORE, S.J., Priest,
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Blessed
MODESTE ANDLAUER, S.J., Priest.
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The names and ages of the Chinese lay Christians were as
follows:
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Blessed
MARY ZHU born Wu, aged about 50 years,
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Blessed
PETER ZHU RIXIN, aged 19,
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Blessed
JOHN BAPTIST ZHU WURUI, aged 17,
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Blessed
MARY FU GUILIN, aged 37,
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Blessed
BARBARA CUI born LIAN ,
aged 51,
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Blessed
JOSEPH MA TAISHUN, aged 60,
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Blessed
LUCY WANG CHENG, aged 18,
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Blessed
MARY FAN KUN, aged 16,
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Blessed
MARY CHI YU, aged 15,
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Blessed
MARY ZHENG XU, aged 11 years,
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Blessed
MARY DU born ZHAO, aged 51,
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Blessed
MAGDALENE DU FENGJU, aged 19,
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Blessed
MARY DU born TIAN, aged 42,
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Blessed
PAUL WU ANJYU, aged 62,
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Blessed
JOHN BAPTIST WU MANTANG, aged 17,
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Blessed
PAUL WU WANSHU, aged 16,
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Blessed
RAYMOND LI QUANZHEN, AGED 59,
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Blessed
PETER LI QUANHUI, aged 63,
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Blessed
PETER ZHAO MINGZHEN, aged 61,
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Blessed
JOHN BAPTIST ZHAO MINGXI, aged 56,
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Blessed
TERESA CHEN TINJIEH, aged 25,
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Blessed
ROSE CHEN AIJIEH, aged 22,
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Blessed
PETER WANG ZUOLUNG, aged 58,
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Blessed
MARY GUO born LI, aged 65,
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Blessed
JOAN WU WENYIN, aged 50,
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Blessed
ZHANG HUAILU, aged 57,
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Blessed
MARK KI-T’IEN-SIANG, aged 66,
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Blessed
ANN AN born XIN, aged 72,
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Blessed
MARY AN born GUO, aged 64,
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Blessed
ANN AN born JIAO, aged 26,
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Blessed
MARY AN LINGHUA, aged 29,
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Blessed
PAUL LIU JINDE, aged 79,
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Blessed
JOSEPH WANG KUIJU, aged 37,
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Blessed
JOHN WANG KUIXIN, aged 25,
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Blessed
TERESA ZHANG born HE, aged 36,
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Blessed
LANG born YANG, aged 29,
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Blessed
PAUL LANG FU, aged 9,
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Blessed
ELIZABETH QIN born BIAN, aged 54,
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Blessed
SIMON QIN CUNFU, aged 14,
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Blessed
PETER LIU ZEYU, aged 57,
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Blessed
ANN WANG, aged 14,
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Blessed
JOSEPH WANG YUMEI, aged 68,
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Blessed
LUCY WANG born WANG, aged 31,
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Blessed
ANDREW WANG TIANQING, aged 9,
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Blessed
MARY WANG born LI, aged 49,
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Blessed
CHI ZHUZE, aged 18,
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Blessed
MARY ZHAO born GUO, aged 60,
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Blessed
ROSE ZHAO, aged 22,
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Blessed
MARY ZHAO, aged 17,
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Blessed
JOSEPH YUAN GENGYIN, aged 47,
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Blessed
PAUL GE TINGZHU, aged 61,
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Blessed
ROSE FAN HUI, aged 45.
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The fact that this considerable number of Chinese lay faithful
offered their lives for Christ together with the missionaries who had
proclaimed the Gospel to them and had been so devoted to them, is
evidence of the depth of the link that faith in Christ establishes.
It gathers into a single family people of various races and
cultures, strongly uniting them not for political motives but in
virtue of a religion that preaches love, brotherhood, peace and
justice.
Besides all those already mentioned who were killed by the
“Boxers,” it is necessary also to remember:
Some years later, members of the Salesian Soceity of St. John
Bosco were added to the considerable number of martyrs recorded above:
-
Blessed
LOUIS VERSIGLIA, Bishop,
-
Blessed
CALLISTUS CARAVARIO, Priest.
They were killed together on 25 February 1930 at Li-Thau-Tseul.
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St. Michael the Archangel
St.
Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle; be our safeguard against the
wickedness and snares of the devil. May God rebuke him, we humbly pray.
And do you, O prince of the heavenly host, by the power of God, cast
into Hell Satan and all the evil spirits who prowl about the world
seeking the ruin of souls. Amen.
Copyright ©
2002 Saint Michael Center for the Blessed Virgin Mary
.
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