@article{oai:kanagawa-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00013686, author = {山本, 通}, issue = {47}, journal = {経済貿易研究 : 研究所年報, The Studies in Economics and Trade}, month = {Mar}, note = {Primary concern of missionaries overseas was to convert pagan people to Christianity and they did not care the growth of the British Empire. Their attitudes to Empire were various, and they differed widely according to the situations (time and place) they were set. In the early 19th century many missionaries adopted the strategy to evangelize the gospel with the programs of civilizing and educating pagan people. But the missionaries encountered obstructions of white immigrants and resistances of the native chiefs. So, if necessary and available, they resorted to the intervention and help of the government of British Empire. But in time, this strategy had revealed limitations in terms of the number of converts. In the 1860s new waves of missionary movement emerged. These missionaries did not care civilizing or education pagan people and concentrated in the ‘faith mission’ and abstained from relating with the Empire. In the age of Great Scramble of late 19th century and early 20th century we find both of these two contradicting strategies among the missionaries and some of them were explicit anti-imperialists., Departmental Bulletin Paper, 論説}, pages = {83--113}, title = {イギリス帝国とキリスト教宣教 : 1699年~1920年頃}, year = {2021} }