1897 — 1930
Gansu area pioneer Chinese doctor-evangelist.
1834 — 1919
An early well-known minister of the American Episcopal Church in China, who made a major contribution to his church and to the contextualization of Christianity in China.
1899 — 1986
Noted Chinese legal scholar and writer; translator of the Psalms and the New Testament.
1870 — 1944
Leading Chinese theologian in the early 20th century and Chancellor of Yenching University.
1920 — 1997
Itinerant evangelist; Presbyterian pastor; suffered 23 years in prison for not joining the Three-Self Patriotic Movement; taught biblical languages at Yanjing Seminary.
1926 — 2002
Protestant evangelist who would rather die than surrender for the sake of the faith, Christian conscience and dignity; life in prison for twenty years made him into a “Chinese Epaphras.”
1893 — 1985
Wu became China's first woman university president, at Jinling Women's College in Nanjing. Wu was the only woman in China's delegation at the founding of the United Nations.
Pastor and secretary for Guangdong youth work for the Church of Christ in China.
1924
Author of The History of Christianity in Dali. Physician in the local hospital, which had been started by missionaries. Elder in Dali Old City Protestant Church.
1632 — 1718
First Chinese priest of the Society of Jesus in Jiangnan, China, and well-known landscape artist in the Qing dynasty.
1815 — 1887
British missionary and publisher in China.
1835 — 1896
Chinese evangelist, pastor, hymn composer, and founder of opium refuges.