Johann Grueber or Grüber SJ (28 October 1623 – 30 September 1680) was an Austrian Jesuit missionary who served as an explorer of China and Tibet. He worked as an imperial astronomer in China.

Johann Grueber
Chinese
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinBái Nǎixīn
Wade–GilesPai Nai-hsin

Life

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Grueber was born in Linz on 28 October 1623. He joined the Society of Jesus in 1641 and went to China in 1656, where he was active at the court of Peking as professor of mathematics and assistant to Father Adam Schall von Bell. In 1661 his superiors sent him, together with the Belgian Father Albert Dorville or d'Orville, to Rome in order to defend Schall's work on the Chinese calendar on the charge of having encouraged 'superstitious practices'.

As it was impossible to journey by sea on account of the blockade of Macau by the Dutch, they conceived the daring idea of going overland from Peking to Goa (India) by way of Tibet and Nepal. This led to Grueber's memorable journey (Dorville died on the way), which won him fame as one of the most successful explorers of the seventeenth century (Tonnier). They first travelled to Xining, on the borders of Gansu; thence through the Kukunor territory and Kalmyk Tartary (Desertum Kalnac) to Lhasa. They crossed the difficult mountain passes of the Himalayas, arrived at Kathmandu, Nepal, and thence descended into the basin of the Ganges: Patna and Agra, the former capital of the Mughal Empire. This journey lasted 214 days.

Dorville died at Agra, a victim of the hardships he had undergone. Jesuit Father Heinrich Roth, a Sanskrit scholar, substituted for Dorville and with Grueber carried on the overland journey through Persia and Turkey, reaching Rome on the 2 February 1664. Their journey showed the possibility of a direct overland connection between China and India, and the value and significance of the Himalayan passes.

Biographer Richard Tronnier says: "It is due to Grueber's energy that Europe received the first correct information concerning Thibet and its inhabitants".[1] Although Oderico of Pordenone had traversed Tibet, in 1327, and visited Lhasa, he had not written any account of this journey. Antonio de Andrada and Manuel Marquez had pushed their explorations as far as Tsaparang on the northern Setledj.

Emperor Leopold I requested that Grueber return to China via Russia in order to explore the possibility of another land route through central Asia, but the journey ended at Constantinople as Grueber fell seriously sick. He was obliged to return. Though in poor health Grueber lived another 14 years as preacher and spiritual guide in the Jesuit schools of Trnava (Slovakia) and Sárospatak (Hungary), in the latter of which he died on 30 September 1680.

Works

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Statues of the Fifth Dalai Lama and (apparently) Güshi Khan seen by Grueber in the lobby of Dalai Lama's palace

An account of this first journey through Tibet in modern times by a European was published in 1667 by Athanasius Kircher to whom Grueber had left his journals and charts, which he had supplemented by numerous verbal and written additions. The 1670 French edition of the same work also incorporated an exchange of letters between Grueber and Ferdinand II de' Medici, grand duke of Tuscany.

For other letters of Grueber see "Neue Welt-Bott" (Augsburg and Gratz, 1726), no. 34; Thévenot (whose acquaintance Grueber had made in Constantinople), "Divers voyages curieux" (Paris, 1666, 1672, 1692), II; extracts in Ritter, "Asien" (Berlin, 1833), II, 173; III, 453; IV, 88, 183; Anzi, "II genio vagante" (Parma, 1692), III, 331-399.

See also

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References

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Citations

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  1. ^ Sir Norman Lockyer (1904). Nature. Macmillan Journals Limited. p. 255.

Bibliography

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  • Ashley, Collection of Voyages (London, 1745–47), Vol. IV, pp. 651 sq.
  • Bogle, George; et al. (1876). C.R. Markham (ed.). Narratives of the Mission of George Bogle to Tibet, and of the Journey of Thomas Manning to Lhasa.
  • Carlieri, Notizie varie dell' Imperio della China (Florence, 1697).
  • Tronnier (1904), "Die Durchquerung Tibets seitens der Jesuiten Joh. Grueber und Albert de Dorville im Jahre 1661", Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft für Erdkunde zu Berlin (in German), Berlin, pp. 328–361{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
  • Von Richthofen, China (Berlin, 1877), 761, etc., with routes and plate, the best monograph
  • Wessels, C., Early Jesuit Travellers in Central Asia, The Hague, 1924, pp. 164–203.
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