Théodore Monbeig

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Jean-Théodore Monbeig-Andrieu
Priest
ChurchRoman Catholic
DioceseApostolic Vicariate of Tibet
Installed1900
Term ended1914
Orders
Ordination25 February 1899
Personal details
Born(1875-10-22)22 October 1875
Died12 June 1914(1914-06-12) (aged 38)
Litang, Sichuan, China
DenominationCatholic
OccupationMissionary

Jean-Théodore Monbeig-Andrieu (22 October 1875 in Salies-de-Béarn – 12 June 1914 in Litang) was a French Catholic missionary and botanist who collected plants for the Paris Natural History Museum from northern Yunnan where he was posted. He also collected butterflies for Charles Oberthür.

Career[edit]

Sacred Heart Church, Cizhong [fr]

Monbeig was ordained for the Paris Foreign Missions Society and sent to the Tibetan part of Yunnan in 1899. He assisted Father Jules Dubernard [fr] who was murdered in 1905 in Tse-kou with other colleagues. Father Soulié was also killed by a Lama revolt at that time.

Father Monbeig moved afterwards to more secure Cizhong with his parishioners. He built the church of the village (dedicated to Holy Heart) and founded a convent for young Tibetan women to be village teachers. He devoted his free time to collecting plants from the mountains.

In November 1913, the Apostolic Vicar of Tibet in Tatsienlu, Pierre-Philippe Giraudeau [fr], called Monbeig to Batang, Sichuan to revive the Christian community there. He set to work immediately and baptised some new converts.[1] He was murdered near Litang the next year, while reaching a mission post.[2]

More than 20 species were named after him, such as Deutzia monbeigii W.W.Sm. or Cornus monbeigii Hemsl.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Jean-Théodore MONBEIG". irfa.paris. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  2. ^ "Monbeig, Jean-Théodore (1875-1914)". plants.jstor.org. Retrieved 25 July 2022.

Bibliography[edit]