Chinese men seeking alms by threatening to kill themselves by self-mutilation}: (left to right) two men hitting their heads against each other; a man kneeling to hit his head against a rock; a man with burning herbs on his head; a standing man hitting his head with a rock. Engraving after J. Nieuhof.

  • Nieuhof, Johannes, 1618-1672.
Date:
[1768]
Reference:
37972i
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Description

Description by Nieuhof: "When we had moored at the afore-said the town (Nanking), various beggars came aboard and indulged in some strange antics. Two of them butted each other’s heads to such an extraordinary degree that those who saw them were shocked. They did not stop until we gave them money; [if we had not done so] they would have battered each other to death, which had happened on various occasions. There was another one who was on his knees and seemed to be talking to himself and then he struck his forehead on a heavy rock. He knocked so hard that the earth trembled. Some of them had dry kindling on their heads which they set fire to and they let it burn down completely and it stank. They made so much noise with their shrieking and moaning that it was impossible not to give them something. Those who were blind went in groups. They hit so mercilessly to the rhythm some words on their bare chest and backs that blood spurted forth. Some of these beggars had been misshapen since childhood; their appearance was so ghastly they looked like devils."—Sun, op. cit. p. 229

Description by Du Halde, loc. cit.: "China swarms with strolling beggars, musicians and fortune tellers. These vagrants travel in companies, sometimes all blind folks; and they are as great impostors as the gypsies of Europe. They practise many austerities to extort alms, as scourging their bodies, laying burning coals on their heads, striking their foreheads against a stone, or one another, till huge lumps arise, or they fall down quite stunned. They will continue inflicting these severities on themselves till they die, unless the spectators give them something to desist. Many of them are cripples, having wry necks and mouths, broken backs, long hooked noses, eyes blind or squinting, and lame arms or legs. …"

Publication/Creation

[London] : [J. Cooke], [1768]

Physical description

1 print : engraving ; image/platemark 18.7 x 25.3 cm

Lettering

Stroling beggers in China laying burning coles on their heads & using other austerities to extort alms. Engraved for Drakes Voyages.

References note

Sun Jing, The illusion of verisimilitude: Johan Nieuhof’s images of China, dissertation, University of Leiden, 2013. pp. 228-231
Jean-Baptiste Du Halde, The general history of China, in John Green (ed.), A new general collection of voyages and travels; London: printed for Thomas Astley, 1747, vol. 4 p. 278

Reference

Wellcome Collection 37972i

Reproduction note

The two figures on the right are after an engraving published in J. Nieuhof, Het gezantschap der Neerlandtsche Oost-Indische Compagnie, Amsterdam 1665, reproduced by Sun, op. cit. p. 276

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