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History of the Jews in China - Overview |  | History of the Jews in China - Overview: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in China - Overview |  | China's Jewish communities have been ethnically diverse ranging from the Jews of Kaifeng and other places during the history of Imperial China, who, it is reported came to be more or less totally assimilated into Chinese culture, to 19th and 20th century Baghdadis, to Indians, to Ashkenazi Jews from Europe.
The presence of a community of Jewish immigrants in China is consistent with the history of the Jewish people during the first and second millennia CE, which saw them disperse and settle throughout the Eurasian landmass, with an es ...
See also:History of the Jews in China, History of the Jews in China - Overview, History of the Jews in China - History, History of the Jews in China - Early record, History of the Jews in China - Origins, History of the Jews in China - 19th century, History of the Jews in China - Modern times, History of the Jews in China - World War II, History of the Jews in China - Late 20th century, History of the Jews in China - 21st century, History of the Jews in China - Name, History of the Jews in China - Famous Jews in China, History of the Jews in China - Reference |  | | History of the Jews in China, History of the Jews in China - 19th century, History of the Jews in China - 21st century, History of the Jews in China - Early record, History of the Jews in China - Famous Jews in China, History of the Jews in China - History, History of the Jews in China - Late 20th century, History of the Jews in China - Modern times, History of the Jews in China - Name, History of the Jews in China - Origins, History of the Jews in China - Overview, History of the Jews in China - Reference, History of the Jews in China - World War II, Judaism in Japan, Jewish history timeline, Jewish history, Religion in China, Lost Ten Tribes, Kaifeng Jews, Jewish ethnic divisions, Fugu Plan |  | |
|  |  | History of the Jews in China: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in China - Overview
History of the Jews in China - Overview
China's Jewish communities have been ethnically diverse ranging from the Jews of Kaifeng and other places during the history of Imperial China, who, it is reported came to be more or less totally assimilated into Chinese culture, to 19th and 20th century Baghdadis, to Indians, to Ashkenazi Jews from Europe.
The presence of a community of Jewish immigrants in China is consistent with the history of the Jewish people during the first and second millennia CE, which saw them disperse and settle throughout the Eurasian landmass, with an especial concentration throughout central Asia. By the ninth century, ibn Khordadbeh noted the travels of Jewish merchants called Radhanites, whose trade took them to China by four distinct routes.
During the period of international opening and quasi-colonialism, the first group to settle in China were Jews who arrived in China under British protection following the First Opium War. Many of these Jews were of Indian or Iraqi origin, due to British colonialism in these regions. The second community came in the first decades of the 20th century when many Jews arrived in Hong Kong and Shanghai during those cities' periods of economic expansion.
Many more arrived as refugees from the Russian Revolution of 1917. A surge of Jews and Jewish families was to arrive in the late 1930s and 1940s, for the purpose of seeking refuge from the Nazis in Western Europe and were predominantly of European origin. Shanghai was particularly notable for its volume of Jewish refugees, most of whom left after the war, the rest relocating prior to or immediately after the establishment of the People's Republic of China.
Over the centuries, the Kaifeng community came to be virtually indistinguishable from the Chinese population and is not recognised by the Chinese government as a separate minority. This is as a result of having adopted many Han Chinese mores including patrilineal descent, as well as intermarriage with the local population. Since their religious practices are functionally extinct, they are not eligible to immigrate to Israel unless they explicitly convert.
Today, some descendants of Chinese Jews still live in the Chinese and Hui population. Morever many Chinese, as well as Jews around the world, are beginning to revive their interest in this heritage. This is especially important in modern China because belonging to any minority group includes a variety of benefits including reduced restrictions on the number of children and easier admission into tertiary education. The study of Judaism and Jews in China as an academic subject has been of interest to Westerners from the earliest period of Western knowledge of China and has come to achieve moderate success in Chinese academia in the late 20th century, alongside the study of religion generally.
Other related archives1329, 1354, 13th century, 1489, 1605, 1850, 1930s, 1940, 1940s, 1949, 19th, 19th century, 20th, 20th century, 21st, 76, 7th, 8th century, 9th century, American, Arabian, Ashkenazi, Australia, Austria, Baghdadis, Beijing, Blissymbolics, CE, Canada, Charles K. Bliss, China, Chinese, Chinese writing, Christian, Christian Russians, Esau, Fugu Plan, Genesis, Germany, God, Great Wall of China, Han, Han Chinese, Hangzhou, Hanukkah, Hanyu Pinyin, Harbin, He Fengshan, Hebrew, Hebrew Scripture, Henan, Holocaust, Hong Kong, Hui people, Ibn Batuta, India, Indian, Indians, Iraqi, Israel, Israel Epstein, Italian, Jacob, Jesuit, Jewish, Jewish ethnic divisions, Jewish history, Jewish history timeline, Jewish rituals, Judaism in Japan, Kaifeng, Kaifeng Jews, Kingdom of Israel, Lost Ten Tribes, Manchukuo, Manchuria, Mandarin, Marco Polo, Matteo Ricci, Mongol, Muslims, Nazis, New Zealand, Opium War, People's Republic of China, Poland, Qing Dynasty, Qīngzhēn, Radhanites, Rebecca, Religion in China, Russian, Russian Revolution, Russian Revolution of 1917, Sephardic, Shanghai, Sidney Shapiro, Song, Song dynasty, South Africa, Taiping rebellion, Tang, Titus, West, Western, Western Europe, World War II, Yuan, Yuan Dynasty, Zhou, academia, capital, central Asia, dietary prohibition, dog, east, ibn Khordadbeh, image of Mary with the child Jesus, imperial, massacred, minority, missionaries, monotheistic, patrilineal descent, radical, reduced restrictions on the number of children, refugees, religion, sciatic nerve, sects, seventeenth century, synagogue, tertiary education, traveler
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Overview", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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