James Legge was born at
Huntly, Aberdeenshire, and educated at
Aberdeen Grammar School and then
Kings College, Aberdeen. After studying at the
Highbury Theological College, London, he went in
1839 as a
missionary to
China, but remained at Malacca three years, in charge of the
Anglo-Chinese College there. The College was subsequently moved to
Hong Kong, where Legge lived for nearly thirty years. A Chinese Christian,
Keuh Agong accompanied Legge when he moved in 1844.
Legge married twice, first to Mary Isabella Morison (1816-1852) and after she died to a widow, Hannah Mary Willetts (d 1881, née Johnstone). Believing in the necessity of missionaries being able to comprehend the ideas and
culture of the Chinese, he began in
1841 a translation in many volumes of the
Chinese classics, a monumental task admirably executed and completed a few years before his death. During his residence in Hong Kong, he translated Chinese classic literature into English with the help of
Wang Tao.
In 1867, Legge returned to
Dollar in
Clackmannanshire, Scotland, where he invited Wang Tao to join him, and received his LLD from the
University of Aberdeen in 1870. He was then pastor at Union Church, Hong Kong, 1870-1873, visited mission stations at
Shanghai, Chefoo (
Yantai) and Peking (
Beijing), and returned to England via Japan and the USA in 1873. In 1875 he was named Fellow of Corpus Christi College Oxford, and in
1876 assumed the new Chair of Chinese Language and Literature at
Oxford, where he attracted few students to his lectures but worked hard for some 20 years in his study at 3, Keble-terrace, over his translations of the Chinese classics. According to an anonymous contemporary obituary in the
Pall Mall Gazette, Legge was in his study every morning at three o'clock, winter and summer, having retired to bed at ten. When he got up in the morning the first thing he did was to make himself a cup of tea over a spirit-lamp. Then he worked away at his translations while all the household slept.
In addition to his other work Legge wrote
The Life and Teaching of Confucius (1867);
The Life and Teaching of Mencius (1875);
The Religions of China (1880); and other books on Chinese literature and religion.
Legge was given an honorary MA, University of Oxford, and LLD,
University of Edinburgh, 1884. Legge died at
Oxford in
1897 and is buried in
Wolvercote Cemetery. Many of his manuscripts and letters are archived at the
School of Oriental and African Studies.