From 1706 to 1805, the ban on Catholicism by
the Chinese government remained effective for about 100 years, which is called
in history A century ban on Catholicism.
During that period, missionaries were
expelled from China and their churches were changed into Buddhist temples,
government offices, storehouses, schools and so on. Some missionaries were
involved in court conflicts and official affairs, evoking the emperors' hatred
toward them. During the reign of Emperor Yongzheng, many missionaries were put
into prison.
During the reign of Emperor Qianlong, the
successor to Yongzheng, missionaries were set free and some of the learned
missionaries could serve in the imperial court. But he did not change the policy
thoroughly. During his reign, there were still some cases in which Catholics
were persecuted. During the reign of Emperor Jiaqing (1795-1820), the government
carried on the policy of ban on Catholicism. During this period, the Society of
Jesus was dismissed in Europe. Many missionaries went back to Europe, and those
remained in China were no longer put in an important position. The missionaries
in charge of calendar were replaced by Chinese. Most of the churches in Beijing
were damaged, and the most important ones were destroyed. Thus, the activities
of Catholicism suffered a heavy blow.