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New Asia College

Coordinates: 22°25′16″N 114°12′31″E / 22.4210605°N 114.2087211°E / 22.4210605; 114.2087211
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

New Asia College
新亞書院
Motto誠明
Motto in English
Sincerity and intelligence
TypePublic
Established1949; 76 years ago (1949)
ChairmanLeung Ying Wai Charles
PresidentHector Sun-on Chan
DeanCheung Kam-siu Kenneth
Location
AffiliationsThe Chinese University of Hong Kong
Websitena.cuhk.edu.hk
New Asia College
Traditional Chinese新亞書院
Simplified Chinese新亚书院
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinXīn Yà Shūyuàn
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationSān'a Syūyuhn
JyutpingSan1aa3 Syu1jyun6*2

New Asia College is a constituent college of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, a public university in New Territories, Hong Kong. The College was founded in 1949 by a group of scholars who left mainland China at the time of the 1949 Communist Revolution. It was located on Farm Road in Kowloon until 1963, when it joined two other colleges to form the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

New Asia College Campus in Ma Liu Shui

Campus

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The college is located on a mount in the university campus with an excellent view to Tide Cove and Ma On Shan. A circular road New Asia Circle (新亞坊) encircles the campus with New Asia Road (新亞路) leading to the central of the university, and United Road to United College, and Cheng Ming Link (誠明徑) to student residences.

Facilities include the New Asia College Ch'ien Mu Library, the Pavillion of Harmony; New Asia Clock Tower, Water Tower, and Amphitheater; busts and statues of Ch'ien Mu and Tang Chun-yi.[1]

History

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New Asia College was founded in 1949 by Chinese scholars Ch'ien Mu (Qian Mu), Tang Junyi (Tang Chun-i), and Zhang Pijie (Tchang Pi-kai), in Hong Kong, then a British dependency, after the Communist victory in mainland China.[2] During its early years, it received substantial support from the American Yale-China Association, and hosted Yale-in-China "Bachelors," recent Yale graduates who taught English and other subjects.[3]

In 1963, the college joined forces with United College and Chung Chi College to form the Chinese University of Hong Kong under a charter granted by the Legislative Council of Hong Kong. The college has since then become a research and educational hub for Confucian philosophy and Chinese studies.[2]

Presidents and Heads

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Presidents and heads of New Asia College:[4]

Presidents (1949–1977)

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1. Prof. Ch'ien Mu (1949–1965)
2. Prof. Ou Tsuin-chen [zh] (1965–1969)
3. Prof. Shen Yi-chen [zh] (1969–1970)
4. Prof. Mei Yi-pao [zh] (1970–1973)
5. Prof. Yu Ying-shih (1973–1975)
6. Prof. Chuan Han-sheng (1975–1977)

College heads (1977–present)

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7. Prof. Ambrose King (1977–1985)
8. Prof. Lin Tzong-biau [zh] (1985–1992)
9. Prof. Leung Ping-chung [zh] (1992–2002)
10. Prof. Henry N. C. Wong [zh] (2002–2010)
11. Prof. Shun Kwong-loi [zh] (2010–2013)
12. Prof. Henry N. C. Wong (2014–2020)
13. Prof. Hector Sun-on Chan (2021–present)

Notable alumni

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See also

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References

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  • Chou, Grace Ai-Ling (2011). Confucianism, Colonialism, and the Cold War: Chinese Cultural Education at Hong Kong's New Asia College, 1949-63. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 9789004217348.
  • "College history", New Asia Online History Archives, 2025

Notes

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22°25′16″N 114°12′31″E / 22.4210605°N 114.2087211°E / 22.4210605; 114.2087211