Adrien Greslon

French Jesuit missionary


title: "Adrien Greslon" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1618-births", "1697-deaths", "17th-century-french-jesuits", "french-roman-catholic-missionaries", "history-of-jiangxi", "french-sinologists", "jesuit-missionaries-in-china", "french-missionaries-in-china"] description: "French Jesuit missionary" topic_path: "history" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adrien_Greslon" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary French Jesuit missionary ::

Adrien Greslon (1618 at Périgueux – 1697) was a French Jesuit missionary to China.

Life

He entered the Society of Jesus at Bordeaux, 5 November 1635. Fr. Greslon travelled to New France and Huronia where in December of 1649 he recovered the body of Charles Garnier, a fellow Jesuit slain in an Iroquois attack on the Huron village of Etharita. He returned to Quebec in 1650 with the Hurons following the collapse of that nation due to the onslaught of Iroquois attacks of 1649. Because there was a surplus of priests he returned to France. He then taught literature and theology in various houses of his order until 1655, when he was sent as a missionary to China.

In China, he claimed to have met a Huron woman that he had known in Huronia. The woman had been sold into slavery all the way to China and they chanced to meet again.

Arriving in 1657, and after mastering the Chinese and Manchu languages went to the Province of Jiangxi, which he described as a veritable Garden of Eden. Here he remained, engaged in his missionary labours, until 1670, when he returned to France.

Works

Greslon wrote two books: Les vies des saints patriarches de l'Ancien Testament, with reflections in Chinese; and Histoire de la Chine sous la domination des Tartares ... depuis l'année 16 ... jusqu'en 1669 (Paris, 1671).

References

;Attribution

  • The entry cites:
  • Moreri, Grand Dictionaire historique

References

  1. Bailey, John Reed (1899). ''Mackinac, formerly Michilimackinac'' Lansing, MI: The R. Smith printing company.

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1618-births1697-deaths17th-century-french-jesuitsfrench-roman-catholic-missionarieshistory-of-jiangxifrench-sinologistsjesuit-missionaries-in-chinafrench-missionaries-in-china