Church of England Zenana Missionary Society

The zenana missions were made up of female missionaries who could visit Indian women in their own homes with the aim of providing them with medical help and education.

The success of the Baptists in gaining local acceptance would lead to the creation of Anglican zenana missions in 1880, and the adoption of similar tactics in countries which practised segregation of men and women, the society became active in Qing dynasty China in 1884,[3] Japan in 1886, and Sri Lanka (at that time known as Ceylon) in 1889.

[5] Fujian was to be the main focus of society's expansion into China, with its first mission station being established outside the provincial capital of Fuzhou in 1884.

The activities of the society in India were wound up in the years following Indian independence and came to an end in China in 1950 shortly after the establishment of the People's Republic.

Ascertain later that this description, not wholly libellous, applies to full-page photograph of Pamela Pringle [a promiscuous socialite] - wearing enormous feathered headdress, jewelled breast-plates, one garter, and a short guaze skirt - representing Chasitity at recent Pageant of Virtue through the Ages organised by Society Women for the benefit of Zenana Mission'[9]