C. R. Boxer (1904–2000)
Author of The Dutch Seaborne Empire: 1600-1800
About the Author
Image credit: Charles R. Boxer
Series
Works by C. R. Boxer
Women in Iberian Expansion Overseas, 1415-1815: Some Facts, Fancies, and Personalities (1975) 9 copies
Portuguese Merchants and Missionaries in Feudal Japan 1543-1640 (Collected Studies Series 232) (1986) 8 copies
Portuguese Society in the Tropics: Municipal Councils of Goa, Macao, Bahia and Luanda, 1510-1800 (1965) 8 copies
Further selections from The tragic history of the sea, 1559-1565 : narratives of the shipwrecks of the Portuguese East I (1959) 7 copies
From Lisbon to Goa, 1500-1750: Studies in Portuguese Maritime Enterprise (Collected Studies Series, 194) (1984) 6 copies
Seventeenth Century Macau in Contemporary Documents and Illustrations (Asian Studies Series) (1984) 4 copies
Portuguese Conquest and Commerce in Southern Asia, 1500-1750 (Collected Studies Ser. : No. Cs208) (1985) 4 copies
Macau na epoca da restauracao (Macao 300 Years Ago). Vol. II (Portuguese-English side-by-side) (1993) 3 copies
Estudos para a historia de Macau: Seculos XVI a XVIII (Obra completa de Charles Ralph Boxer) (Portuguese Edition) (1991) 3 copies
BOXER, CHARLES RALPH - OPERA MINORA 3 copies
Papers on Portuguese, Dutch, and Jesuit influences in 16th- and 17th-century Japan: Writings of Charles Ralph Boxer (Japan studies) (1979) 3 copies
Catálogo das cartas dirigidas a Manuel de Souza, oficial das Casas da Moeda do Brasil - 1695-1721 2 copies
The Topasses of Timor 2 copies
Um regimento inédito sobre o resgate dos Ameríndios no Estado do Maranhão em 1660. (Separata) 1 copy
Antônio Bocarro and the "Livro do Estado da Índia Oriental". A bio-bibliographical note. (Separata) 1 copy
As primeiras frotas da Companhia do Brasil à luz de três documentos inéditos 1648 - 1652. (Separata) 1 copy
André Furtado de Mendonça 1 copy
O Grande Navio de Amacau 1 copy
Some reflections on the historiography of colonial Brasil, 1950-70 - Colonial Roots of Modern Brazil 1 copy
Jorge de Albuquerque Coelho: Duas Cartas e uma Rectificação à História Trágico-Marítima. (Separata) 1 copy
The tree of life 1 copy
Nuno Álvares Botelho e a sua Armada de Alto Bordo. Relação Contemporânea, inédita.. (Separata) 1 copy
Expedições militares Portuguêsas em auxílio dos Mings contra os Manchus 1621-1647. (Separata) 1 copy
O Senado da Câmara de Macau 1 copy
Associated Works
History : the journal of the Historical Association, February and June 1954 (1954) — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Boxer, C. R.
- Legal name
- Boxer, Charles Ralph
- Other names
- Sir Charles Ralph Boxer FBA GCIH
- Birthdate
- 1904-03-08
- Date of death
- 2000-04-27
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Wellington College, Berkshire, England, UK
Royal Military College, Sandhurst, England, UK - Occupations
- Camões Professor of Portuguese (1947-51)
Professor of history of the Far East (1951-53)
Camões Professor of Portuguese (1953-67)
Professor emeritus, University of London (1968-2008)
Fellow of King's College (1967)
Honorary fellow of School of Oriental and African Studies (1974) (show all 11)
Professor of history of expansion of Europe overseas (1969-72)
Professor emeritus, Yale University (1972-2008)
Visiting research professor, Indianan University (1967-76)
Trustee, National Maritime Museum (1961-68)
Japanese prisoner of war in Hong Kong (1941- 45) - Organizations
- Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences
University of London
Yale University - Awards and honors
- Order of Santiago da Espada (Portugal)
Grand Cross of the Order of the Infante Dom Henrique (Portugal)
Knight of the Order of St. Gregory the Great (1969)
Fellow, British Academy (1957) - Relationships
- Hahn, Emily (wife)
Smeeton, Beryl (sister) - Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Sandown, Isle of Wight, England, UK
- Places of residence
- England, UK
Japan
Hong Kong - Place of death
- St. Albans, Hertfordshire, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
Charles Ralph Boxer is one of the foremost historians of early Portuguese history. I will admit from the start that I only read the Asia-related chapters of this work (although it also covers Portuguese colonies in Africa and the Americas), so my comments are limited to those chapters.
For anyone seeking information on the role of the church in the Portuguese colonies of Asia, this is the first place to turn, especially Chapters III and X ("Converts and Clergy in Monsoon Asia 1500-1600" and show more "The Crown Patronage and the Catholic Missions"), which discusses "the indissoluble union of the Cross and the Crown". As Boxer details it, Portuguese rulers were granted Padroado real (royal patronage of the Church overseas) privileges, which gave them the right to be the patron of the Roman Catholic church overseas in part because the Papacy was preoccupied with the "rising tide of Protestantism" on the one hand, and the "Turkish threat in the Mediterranean" on the other. In short, "God was omnipresent as well as Mammon". No one covers this topic better than Boxer, who details the arrival of the first Portuguese missionaries, the arrival of the Jesuits in Goa in 1542 and their subsequent settlements in Malacca, Macao and Nagasaki, and the Church's activities that reached its peak of insensitivity in 1567 when the most heinous bans and prohibitions were thrust upon local communities to turn them towards conversion to Christianity.
To my mind, one of the more interesting aspects of Portugal's expansion into Asia was (as Boxer so perfectly points out, "despite the cultural myopia"), the role Portuguese men of the cloth played as cultural links between Asia and Europe. The letters and notes of its early missionaries brought news of Asia to Europeans, and influenced Asian art and its culture as can be seen in the ivory carvings of Christian images made in Sri Lanka and Philippines that found their way to Europe, as well as the Chinese porcelains portraying such scenes as the Christian Crucifixion now seen in European museums. The European art Jesuit priests introduced to Akbar's Mughal court can still be seen today in Indian miniatures. Matteo Ricci introduced western science to China.
This excellent work is now out of print but can be found in major university and metropolitan libraries. It is worth seeking out if one is interested in Asian or Portuguese history, art history, or the history of the Catholic Church as a missionary religions. show less
For anyone seeking information on the role of the church in the Portuguese colonies of Asia, this is the first place to turn, especially Chapters III and X ("Converts and Clergy in Monsoon Asia 1500-1600" and show more "The Crown Patronage and the Catholic Missions"), which discusses "the indissoluble union of the Cross and the Crown". As Boxer details it, Portuguese rulers were granted Padroado real (royal patronage of the Church overseas) privileges, which gave them the right to be the patron of the Roman Catholic church overseas in part because the Papacy was preoccupied with the "rising tide of Protestantism" on the one hand, and the "Turkish threat in the Mediterranean" on the other. In short, "God was omnipresent as well as Mammon". No one covers this topic better than Boxer, who details the arrival of the first Portuguese missionaries, the arrival of the Jesuits in Goa in 1542 and their subsequent settlements in Malacca, Macao and Nagasaki, and the Church's activities that reached its peak of insensitivity in 1567 when the most heinous bans and prohibitions were thrust upon local communities to turn them towards conversion to Christianity.
To my mind, one of the more interesting aspects of Portugal's expansion into Asia was (as Boxer so perfectly points out, "despite the cultural myopia"), the role Portuguese men of the cloth played as cultural links between Asia and Europe. The letters and notes of its early missionaries brought news of Asia to Europeans, and influenced Asian art and its culture as can be seen in the ivory carvings of Christian images made in Sri Lanka and Philippines that found their way to Europe, as well as the Chinese porcelains portraying such scenes as the Christian Crucifixion now seen in European museums. The European art Jesuit priests introduced to Akbar's Mughal court can still be seen today in Indian miniatures. Matteo Ricci introduced western science to China.
This excellent work is now out of print but can be found in major university and metropolitan libraries. It is worth seeking out if one is interested in Asian or Portuguese history, art history, or the history of the Catholic Church as a missionary religions. show less
As a history of colonialism it is hard to surpass. Boxer manages to convey the feeling as well as the facts, without ever becoming soft-headed.
In an amazing turn-around, a small group of suppressed water logged people become a great nation of sea-farers, beating many others at their game. The United Provinces of the Netherlands reached an agreement with their Spanish lords to end many years of domination. The union of these provinces, despite tensions, appeared to have diverted the energy and lust for freedom into a strong sence of independence. This book covers the 200 or so years of the Dutch Republic, as it reached into the East show more Indies (Ceylon, India, Formosa (Taiwan), China, Japan, and Indonesia, and into the Americas.
The independence from Spain was strongly linked to their opposition to the Roman Catholic Church, and the relief they found through Calvinism. That they carried out the Calvinist way of life though is another matter. As the author writes, it's as if they believed that the 10 commandments were not for life below the equator. Although the central authorities in the Netherlands expected people to live a Christian life, they appeared to be powerless to control those in far-flug places. Not only did they often mistreat the inhabitants, they also behaved quite badly towards each other.
This book provides lots of information on society at the time, in the Netherlands, and in most of the countried in which they operated. The focus is on the relationships that people had with each other. It is replete with references to sources. The author is very fair, often commenting on sources that are exaggerated.
One note on the index - it is quite poor. Whilst it covers some 10 pages, it is incomplete. For example, Cape Town/Kaapstad or South Africa are not listed, but this settlement is covered well in a whole chapter in the book - the only index references are listed under Cape of Good Hope; German workers according to the index is first found on page 72, although some 20 pages earlier this matter is covered in more detail; Groningen is not listed, although it is mentioned throughout the book. show less
The independence from Spain was strongly linked to their opposition to the Roman Catholic Church, and the relief they found through Calvinism. That they carried out the Calvinist way of life though is another matter. As the author writes, it's as if they believed that the 10 commandments were not for life below the equator. Although the central authorities in the Netherlands expected people to live a Christian life, they appeared to be powerless to control those in far-flug places. Not only did they often mistreat the inhabitants, they also behaved quite badly towards each other.
This book provides lots of information on society at the time, in the Netherlands, and in most of the countried in which they operated. The focus is on the relationships that people had with each other. It is replete with references to sources. The author is very fair, often commenting on sources that are exaggerated.
One note on the index - it is quite poor. Whilst it covers some 10 pages, it is incomplete. For example, Cape Town/Kaapstad or South Africa are not listed, but this settlement is covered well in a whole chapter in the book - the only index references are listed under Cape of Good Hope; German workers according to the index is first found on page 72, although some 20 pages earlier this matter is covered in more detail; Groningen is not listed, although it is mentioned throughout the book. show less
This was a good read about a historical period I knew little about, at least from the Dutch perspective. Largely concentrating on the waxing and waning fortunes of the Dutch East India Company (VOC), it is a useful contrast and comparison with the rise of the Honourable East India Company (EIC). The former had a far greater number of ships and may have carried out more trade in the main, while the EIC had a much greater concentration on the control (conquest) of territory, in pursuit of trade.
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