Amiot, Joseph Maria
AMIOT (wrongly spelled Amyot), ɑ̄´´mî´´ō´, JOSEPH MARIA: Jesuit missionary; b, at Toulon Feb. 18, 1718; d. at Peking Oct. 8, 1793. He joined the
Jesuits in 1737 and entered China as a missionary
in 1751. The reigning emperor, Kien-Lung, was
hostile to the Christians, but the missionaries were
allowed to proceed to Peking and to work there,
if not in the provinces. Father Amiot devoted
himself assiduously for the rest of his life to the
study of Chinese history, language, and literature
and was one of the first to give Europe accurate
information concerning Eastern Asia. The results
of his work were published for the most part in
the Mémoires concernant les Chinois (15 vols., Paris,
1776-91), in the proceedings of learned societies,
and in the Lettres édifiantes et curieuses (34 vols.,
1717-76). They include a life of Confucius (Mémoires, vol. xii.) and a
Dictionnaire tartare-mantchou-français (ed. Langlès, 3 vols., 1789-90).