Abstract
There were only a few women among the first Protestant missionaries to settle in China, and most were married, yet by the end of the nineteenth century, the majority of missionaries were women, many of them single. This article focusses on British women missionaries, discussing their motivation for going so far at a time when women were supposed to be confined to the world of home and the family. It looks at their lives in China, the role models they presented to Chinese women, and their own rather conservative views of what their influence should be. © 1992 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Davin, D. (1992). British Women Missionaries in Nineteenth‐Century China. Women’s History Review, 1(2), 257–271. https://doi.org/10.1080/0961202920010204
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