This information is from Dr. Dudink @EUChina
Ye Nong & Shao Jian 葉農,邵建 (點校整理),
Renguo liuhen: Faguo Yesuhui dang’anguan cang Shanghai Yesuhui xiushi mu mubei tapian
人過留痕:法國耶穌會檔案館藏上海耶穌會修士墓墓碑拓片
(Traces As Left: Rubbings of Tombstones of Shanghai Jesuit Brothers in the French Jesuit Archives),
Canton / Macao / Shanghai: 暨南大学澳门研究院、澳门基金会、上海社会科学院历史研究所, 2020 (August), 173 p.,
ISBN 978-99937-1-283-1. With introductions by Jin Guoping 金國平, Xiong Yuezhi 熊月之, Thierry Meynard, and the editors.
For the table of contents, see https://publication.cip.gov.mo/file.ashx?image=image2&itemid=11998&m=1599473613
For these rubbings, see also the article 巴黎耶稣会档案馆藏上海圣墓堂墓碑拓片考释 by Wang Hao 王皓 in Zongjiaoxue yanjiu 宗教学研究 2017:6, pp. 221-227. The oldest tombstone (no. 18) is that of Pamphile Sinoquet SJ (辛斐禄 字 良 佐, 1798-1845) and the youngest (no. 50) that of Paul Beauchef SJ (濮永清 字水湄, 1835-1907).
According to Wang’s article, 136 of the 169 rubbings concern Jesuits, and 23 concern Chinese (diocesan) priests:
墓主身份 | 数 目 |
耶稣会士 | 136 |
不隶会修士 | 23 |
巴黎外方传教会士 | 4 |
圣方济各会士 | 2 |
圣家会士 | 1 |
圣奥斯定会士 | 1 |
圣母圣心会士 | 1 |
天主教主母会修士 | 1 |
总计 | 169 |
So the title of the present publication (2020) is not entirely correct: not all tombstones are of Jesuits (Western or Chinese); moreover, the English translation (‘brother’) of xiushi 修士 (member of a religious order or congregration) possibly suggests that there are only tombstones of ‘brothers’ (not-priests).
At the end (no. 170) there is the text of Xu Guangqi’s famous memorial (辨學章疏, 1616) which in 1676 Couplet had inscribed on a stele on the cemetery, with introduction by Xu’s grandsons 爾覺 and 爾爵 (上海縣城南耶穌會修士墓碑記).
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