Ekvall, Robert (1898 - 1983) [sv]

Andre språk: Ekvall, Robert (svensk)

Personer med anknytning till Världskulturmuseerna (Statens museer för världskultur) [sv]

Beskrivelse
Robert Ekvall, svensk-amerikansk missionär, född i Kina. Han var verksam i Kina och Tibet 1924-1941. Gift med Betty. [sv]
Ansvarlig forvalter
Statens museer för världskultur (Myndighet) [sv] forvalter informasjonen på denne siden
Lisens
Ingen rettigheter reservert (CC0) gjelder informasjonen på denne siden og ikke noen verk/objekter opprettet av aktøren
Sist lagret
19.03.2024 21:35:14
Publisert
Status

URI
http://kulturnav.org/e3a5b949-086b-41cf-91f1-8d95ecbc95d0 | RDF/XML | JSON-LD
Navn
Ekvall, Robert
Svensk

Fornavn
Robert
Svensk

Etternavn
Ekvall
Svensk

Alternative navn
Ekval, Robert
Svensk

Tittel
missionär

-Tittel
missionär
Svensk
Beskrivelse
Robert Ekvall, svensk-amerikansk missionär, född i Kina. Han var verksam i Kina och Tibet 1924-1941. Gift med Betty.
Svensk

Fødsel
18.02.1898

-Tidspunkt
18.02.1898
Død
1983

-Tidspunkt
1983
Biografi

Robert Ekvall, svensk-amerikansk missionär, född i Kina. Han var verksam i Kina och Tibet 1924-1941. Gift med Betty.

Svensk

ROBERT B. EKVALL (1898-1978) Born in Minh-sien, Gansu, China February 18, 1898 to his missionary parents, David and Helen Ekvall. His father, David and uncle, William Christie from Scotland, were the first Christian and Missionary Alliance missionaries to visit Tibet. No sooner had the wedding cake been cut, did Bob and Betty Ekvall board a train to New York to attend The Missionary Training Institute in Nyack. With his fourteen year head start in the Chinese language, a Bachelors in English from Wheaton, he returned to China to direct the Bible school that his father David had founded. Soon their mission reluctantly allowed them to enter Tibetan language study at Taochow and to work among the Tibetan nomads. In 1938 they returned to America to write the 50-year history of his mission and a book on mission work in Tibet. During their furlough he studied Sanskrit and cultural anthropology at the University of Chicago focusing upon the Tibetan nomads. Upon their return to Asia in 1939, Betty Ekvall died from a "high fever that defied diagnosis." During the war he experienced two years of internment in Indo-China from 1941-1943 and combat in Burma. In 1953 he served as interpreter for truce negotiations in Korea. He worked with the University of Washington from 1958 and retired in 1974. A Timeline for Robert B. Ekvall: 1898-1911 Robert Ekvall born & raised in China until his father David’s death 1911-1917 Educated at Wilson Academy in Nyack & Wheaton College 1917-1921 Apprentice with Western Electric & writes for Chicago Daily News 1921-1923 Marries Betty Fisher & attends Missionary Training Institution In Nyack 1923-1938 Years of service in Tibet among the nomadic pastoralists 1938-1939 US Furlough writes history of the Alliance & studies sanskrit. 1939-1944 Betty Dies upon Return to Asia & Bob Interned in Indo-China 1951-1953 Helps Norbu, Dalai Lama’s Brother & Interprets for Korean Truce 1958-1978 Works with University of Washington & retires in 1974 (www.worthpoint.com, 2012-09-28)

Engelsk

Virksomhet
, , Kina [sv],

-Stedsreferanse
, , Kina [sv],
--Sted (tekst)
Kina
Svensk
Carlotta-SMVK
2079301

-Id
2079301
-System
Carlotta-SMVK
DigitaltMuseum
021037461184
-Id
021037461184
-System
DigitaltMuseum
Ingen treff.
Uuid
e3a5b949-086b-41cf-91f1-8d95ecbc95d0
ACL (rettigheter)
434bb1b5-eb51-4f56-aec4-5f5a79835b31_SHARED
Status
Publisert
Status Lagret av Tidspunkt
Publisert Magnus Johansson (Statens museer för världskultur[sv]) 21.01.2018 11:39:29
Til vurdering Ulf Bodin (KulturIT) 14.12.2017 15:52:29

Plassholdere
Nei
Opprettet av
admin 01.12.2017 14:32:09
Godkjente forslag
Benyttes av (Primus/Digitalt Museum)
Benyttes av (abonnement)
Deles i mapper
Opprettet av
Opprettet
01.12.2017 14:32:09
Sist lagret av
root
Sist lagret
19.03.2024 21:35:14
Statusendring
Status Lagret av Tidspunkt
Publisert Magnus Johansson (Statens museer för världskultur[sv]) 21.01.2018 11:39:29
Til vurdering Ulf Bodin (KulturIT) 14.12.2017 15:52:29