North Germany to North America

North Germany to North America

Author: Robert Lee Stockman

Publisher: Plattduutsch Press

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 702

ISBN-13:

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"The 19th century is important in northern Germany because ... many of its citizens felt it necessary to leave their homeland, emigrating to North America and many other parts of the world. Along wiith them ... went their history, their language, their memories, their hopes and their culture."--Page 1.


Pietism in Germany and North America 1680-1820

Pietism in Germany and North America 1680-1820

Author: Jonathan Strom

Publisher: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 310

ISBN-13: 9780754664017

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This collection explores different approaches to contextualizing and conceptualizing the history of Pietism, particularly German-speaking Pietistic groups who migrated to the British colonies in North America during the long eighteenth century. Emerging in the seventeenth century, Pietism was closely related to Puritanism, sharing similar evangelical and heterogeneous characteristics. The importance of Pietism in shaping Protestant society and culture in Europe and North America has long been recognized, but as a topic of scholarly inquiry, it has until now received little interdisciplinary attention. Offering essays by leading scholars from a range of fields this volume provides the first overview of the subject, helping to situate Pietism in the broader Atlantic context, and making an important contribution to understanding religious life in Europe and colonial North America during the eighteenth century.


The German Church on the American Frontier

The German Church on the American Frontier

Author: Carl E. Schneider

Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers

Published: 2009-03-02

Total Pages: 653

ISBN-13: 1606082183

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Since its original release in 1939, Carl Schneider's The German Church on the American Frontier has been the premier published resource on the unique "Evangelischer Kirchenverein des Westens" (Evangelical Church Society of the West), 1840-66, which later assumed a wider denominational identity as the German Evangelical Synod of North America, the church of the Niebuhr family. Known eventually as the Evangelical Synod of North America, the group's ecumenical and irenic heritage contributed to mergers that resulted in the Evangelical and Reformed Church, 1934-1957, and thereafter in the United Church of Christ.