Manuel Dias the Younger (Latin: Junior) acquired his epithet to distinguish him from Manuel Dias the Elder (c. 1561–1639).[2] He is also known as Emanuel or Emmanuel Diaz. His name was sinified as Yang Manuo (陽瑪諾), and he was also referred to by his courtesy nameYanxi (演西).
Life
Dias arrived in China in 1610, reaching Beijing in 1613. He introduced the telescope into China just a few years after it had been developed in the Netherlands (1608). The telescope was first mentioned in his Tian Wen Lüe (Explicatio Sphaerae Coelestis in Latin or Summary of Astronomy in English) in 1615.[3] In the Tian Wen Lüe he presented the latest European astronomical knowledge in the form of questions and answers. The book was studied and published until the 19th century.
^Esteves Pereira, João Manuel; et al. (1907), Diccionario Historico, Chorographico, Heraldico, Biographico, Bibliographico, Numismatico, e Artistico..., J. Romano Torres. (in Portuguese)
Saraiva, Luís; Jami, Catherine (2008). The Jesuits, the Padroado and East Asian science (1552-1773). Singapore: World Scientific. ISBN978-981-277-126-1. OCLC262555689.
Liam Matthew Brockey, "Journey to the East: the Jesuit mission to China, 1579–1724", Harvard University Press, 2007, ISBN0-674-02448-6
Joseph Needham, "Chinese astronomy and the Jesuit mission: an encounter of cultures", China Society, 1958
Francisco Rodrigues, "Jesuitas portugueses astrónomos na China, 1583–1805", Tipografia Porto Medico, 1925
Joseph Needham, Ling Wang, "Science and Civilisation in China", ISBN978-0-521-05801-8