Jean-Louis Taberd

Jean-Louis Taberd (1794–1840)[2] was a French missionary of the Paris Foreign Missions Society, and Bishop of Isauropolis, in partibus infidelium.[3]

Contents

Career

Born in Saint-Étienne, Jean-Louis Taberd was ordained priest in Lyon in 1817. He joined the Paris Foreign Missions Society in 1820, and was appointed to become a missionary in Cochinchina, modern Vietnam. In 1827 he was appointed Vicar Apostolic of Cochinchina, and Bishop of Isauropolis in 1830.[2][3] With the persecutions of the Emperor of Vietnam Minh Mạng, Mgr Taberd was forced to escape the country.

Jean-Louis Taberd first went to Penang and then Calcutta, where, with the help of Lord Auckland and the Asiatic Society he was able to publish his own Latin-Vietnamese dictionary in 1838.[3] He improved upon the previous works of Alexandre de Rhodes and Pigneau de Béhaine, whose 1783 Vietnamese-Latin dictionary he had been handed in manuscript form.[4] He also published Pigneau's dictionary in 1838 under the name Dictionarium Anamitico-Latinum.[1]

In his work The Geography of Cochin China, Taberd reports the Paracel Islands (today a hotly disputed island territory in Southeast Asia) as having been conquered and claimed by Emperor Gia Long in 1816.[5]

Legacy

In the late 19th century, the renowned Catholic Half-breed orphans College "Institut Taberd" was founded in Saigon by the Brothers of the Christian Schools and, since 1943, to educate a Vietnamese elite.[6][7]

Works

References

  1. ^ a b Manteigne, p.67
  2. ^ a b Catholic hierarchy
  3. ^ a b c The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Register, p.195
  4. ^ Wörterbücher: Ein Internationales Handbuch Zur Lexikographie by Franz Josef Hausmann, p.2584 [1]
  5. ^ Sovereignty Over the Paracel and Spratly Islands by Monique Chemillier-Gendreau p.180 [2]
  6. ^ JSTOR: The Vietnamese Elite of French Cochinchina, 1943, RB Smith - 1972 [3]
  7. ^ JSTOR: Conflict in the Classroom: A Case Study from Vietnam, 1918-38 GP Kelly - 1987 [4]