In the evening of Friday 4 November, 2011, together with two colleagues from Western Manuscripts I helped to entertain a group of parents from Cherwell School. The pattern was familiar: we had to choose one interesting item in our collections and talk about it for five minutes. I chose the Red Decree, a piece of Chinese ephemera which in recent decades has become less rare, as more copies are being discovered.
We need not dwell on what it is (the copies in both Cambridge and Boston MA have been explained in some detail – follow the links in the list below), but a word of clarification is in order. The Boston website refers to it as the “Red Manifesto”, but actually, it is neither a decree nor a manifesto, but an open letter, written at the height of the “Rites Controversy” that was eventually to bring about the collapse of the entire Jesuit mission to China.
In 1705 Clement XI had forbidden Chinese Christian converts from practising the customary rites to ancestors, and when news of this and other complications reached China, it was considered so egregious that Kangxi sought explicit clarification from the Vatican. He therefore sent Antonio de Barros and Antoine de Beauvollier as envoys to Rome in 1706. They both drowned when their ship capsized near Portugal. In 1708 two further envoys were sent, José Ramón Arxo and Giuseppe Provana, but neither returned as Arxo died in Spain in 1711, and Provana died in 1720 on the return voyage. According to the Decree, while waiting for the return of these envoys, a further communication had been sent overland through the Russians.
In an attempt to discover their fate, this letter was sent to Canton to be given to all foreigners who arrived there, asking for information about them. It is written in Latin, Manchu, and a strange form of Chinese which is a mixture of classical and baihua 白话, perhaps to make it more easily understood by those to whom it was addressed.
It is printed from three wooden blocks, and in its general appearance, it resembles the bill proclaiming the foundation of the Qing Dynasty (Anmin gaoshi 安民告示) in 1644, although this is printed in Chinese only, and in black (see 清代內府刻書圖錄, 4-5).
How did I find the Bodleian copy? The story is worth telling, as it suggests that other copies might be lying unrecognised elsewhere.
When I first began to take stock of our old Chinese books in the late 1970s, I found a single folded sheet, printed in red, and bound in heavy boards under the shelfmark Chin.d.35. It must have been put there in the late 1880s when the sized oriental language collections were established during the Nicholson reclassification. At the time it meant nothing to me, so I replaced it unidentified, as previous generations of librarians had also done.
In 1992, I visited the impressive (and skilfully named) exhibition Impressions de Chine at the Bibliothèque Nationale, where “le Décret rouge” was displayed among other notable products of the Sino-European press. It had been identified by the Library’s Chinese curators, Monique Cohen and Nathalie Monnet. At the time, only three other copies were known, in London, Wolfenbüttel, and Stockholm.
The object reminded me of what I had seen in Oxford some ten years previously, and when I returned, I was able to confirm that a fifth copy had now been found. I immediately had it removed from its boards and fully restored, and assigned it to its current location, Sinica 3762. During the course of the restoration work, the faintly pencilled words “F. Douce” were found on the verso. So our copy of the Red Decree is actually part of the bequest of the antiquary and book collector Francis Douce (1757-1834), and is possibly the last part of this enormous collection to be discovered and identified.
Now, the whereabouts of a further fourteen copies are known, and here is a list of all nineteen:
France: Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale de France
Germany: Berlin, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin Preußischer Kulturbesitz
Germany: Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek
Germany: Wolfenbüttel, Herzog August Bibliothek (copy 1)
Germany: Wolfenbüttel, Herzog August Bibliothek (copy 2)
Italy: Rome, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana
Japan: Tokyo, private collection
Netherlands: Leiden, Sinological Institute
Russia: St Petersburg, The National Library of Russia
Sweden: Stockholm, The National Library of Sweden
UK: Cambridge, Cambridge University Library
UK: Glasgow, University of Glasgow, Hunterian Library
UK: London, British Library
UK: London, Muban Foundation
UK: Maidstone, Kent History and Library Centre, Kent Archives
UK: Oxford, Bodleian Library
USA: Bloomington IN, Lilly Library, Boxer Collection
USA: Boston MA, Boston College, Ricci Institute
USA: Ithaca NY, Cornell University Library, Wason Collection
There are none in China.

6 November 2018 at 15:36
The National Library of Russia in Saint-Petersburg also has one copy of the Red Decree. 🙂
See К. С. Яхонтов. Маньчжурские рукописи и ксилографы Государственной Публичной библиотеки имени М. Е. Салтыкова-Щедрина : систематический каталог. СПб. : Гос. Публ. б-ка им. М. Е. Салтыкова-Щедрина, 1991. p. 49.
6 November 2018 at 19:59
Thanks. I’ll add it to my list. DH.
3 March 2019 at 17:13
There’s also a copy in Glasgow University’s Hunterian Library (MS Hunter B/E9). Described on p. 147 of David Weston’s catalogue of the T. S. Bayer collection (https://www.gla.ac.uk/media/media_586405_en.pdf).
3 March 2019 at 17:31
Thanks. Another one added to the list! DH.
10 November 2023 at 15:39
Hi – I’ve just uncovered another one in the Kent Archives in Maidstone (Kent, UK). It was classified as ‘Eastern Document’ and as such the significance was unknown to the archivists. Until now! Thank you for the blog.
10 November 2023 at 15:44
Thanks for this – I’ll add your copy to the list. David.
8 January 2025 at 17:09
The scanned image of the copy in Cambridge University Library at:
https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/PR-B-02039/1
includes transcriptions of all three texts (including the Manchu text) and a comprehensive bibliography.
8 January 2025 at 21:58
Many thanks for this. I’ve incorporated the link into the text of the blog entry.
13 November 2025 at 14:16
Emperor Kangxi’s Red Manifesto: Qing Dynasty in Globalization (康熙的红票), the best selling history book in 2024 China, starts the book from this decree. The foreword also mentions this blog.
18 November 2025 at 20:42
Many thanks for pointing this out. I’ll have a look at the book and add a note about it to my blog entry.
19 November 2025 at 08:04
For an interesting review pointing out serious problems in both the argument and the use of sources, have a look here:
https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/yHUI6xdVBJ4sEl3b4efTbw