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Rev. Dr Walter Henry Medhurst (Chinese: 麥都思, April 29, 1796 - 1857), English Congregationalist missionary to China, born in London and educated at St Paul's School, was one of the early translators of the Bible into Chinese language editions.
As a young man Walter Medhurst learned the business of a printer and typesetter. Becoming interested in Christian missions he sailed in 1816 to join the London Missionary Society's station at Malacca, which was intended to be a great printing centre. He became proficient in Malay, in a knowledge of the written characters of Chinese, and in the colloquial use of more than one of its dialects.
Walter Medhurst was ordained at Malacca in 1819, and engaged in missionary labours, first at Penang, then at Batavia - and finally, when peace was concluded with China in 1842, at Shanghai where he founded the London Missionary Society Press (墨海書館) together with William Muirhead, Joseph Edkins, and William Charles Milne. There he continued till 1856, laying the foundations of a successful mission.
Rev Medhurst's principal labour for several years, as one of a committee of delegates, was in the revision of existing Chinese versions of the Bible. In 1840, a group of four people (Walter Henry Medhurst, Charles Gutzlaff, Elijah Coleman Bridgman, and John Robert Morrison) cooperated to translate the Bible into Chinese.
The translation of the Hebrew part was done mostly by Gutzlaff from the Netherlands Missionary Society, with the exception that the Pentateuch and the book of Joshua were done by the group collectively.
This translation, completed in 1847 is very famous due to its adoption by the revolutionary peasant leader Hong Xiuquan of the Taipingtianguo movement (Taiping Rebellion) as some of the reputed early doctrines of the organization.
This Bible translation was a version (in High Wen-li, Traditional Chinese: 深文理) marvellously correct and faithful to the original. With John Stronach, and the assistance of Wang Tao, Medhurst later translated the New Testament into the Mandarin dialect of Nanking.
His Chinese-English and English-Chinese dictionaries (each in 2 vols.) are still valuable, and to him the British public owed its understanding of the teaching of Hung-Sew-Tseuen, the leader of the Tai-ping rising (1851-64).
Walter Medhurst was a prolific writer, translator, and editor. The list below is incomplete.In recognition of these learned books, in 1843 the University of New York conferred upon him the honorary degree of D.D.
Rev. Dr. Medhurst left Shanghai in 1856 in failing health.
He died two days after reaching London, on the 24th of January 1857 and was buried at the Congregationalists' non-denominational Abney Park Cemetery where his white stone obelisk monument can still be seen today.
His son, Sir Walter Henry Medhurst (1822-1885), was British consul at Hankow and afterwards at Shanghai. His obituary was published in the Illustrated London News of 9th January 1886.
Published Books
See Also
(W)alter Henry Medhurst