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A History of the Moravian Church; Hutton, J. E. A History of the Moravian Missions (1922) Jarvis, Dale Gilbert. "The Moravian Dead Houses of Labrador, Canada", Communal Societies 21 (2001): 61–77. Langton; Edward. History of the Moravian Church: The Story of the First International Protestant Church (1956)
The seal of the Moravian Church featuring the Agnus Dei in stained glass at the Rights Chapel of Trinity Moravian Church in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Before finally settling in Pennsylvania, and later founding another settlement in North Carolina, the Moravians initially made an attempt at settlement in Georgia for their mission work. [6]
Rohrer (2001) demonstrates the social history of the community of Wachovia, founded in the North Carolina Piedmont in 1753, illustrates the importance of the beliefs and practices of the Moravians in achieving the integration and acculturation of settlers of different ethnic backgrounds.
[4] [5] The first Moravian ruler known by name, Mojmír I, was baptized in 831 by Reginhar, Bishop of Passau. [6] Due to internal struggles between Moravian rulers, Mojmir was deposed by Rastislav in 846; as Mojmir was aligned with Frankish Catholicism, Rastislav asked for support from the Byzantine Empire and aligned himself with Eastern ...
The Moravian church continued to send missionaries to the Munsee. Under the Dawes Act , the Chippewa-Christian Indian Reservation, as it was known in the 1859 treaty, was allotted to the individual members and descendants of the tribes in separate 160-acre plots.
Two Hundred Years of History of the Moravian Church at Schoeneck 1961: Henry L. Williams: Our Moravian Hymnal and How We Got It 1960: Edwin W. Kortz: The Liturgical Development of the American Moravian Church 1960: John Fliegel: The Influence of Zinzendorf on the Present-Day Moravian Church 1959: Samuel V. Gapp: Philip H. Gapp, Home Missionary ...
History of the Tanzania (Western) Province of the Moravian Church (1 P) Pages in category "History of the Moravian Church" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
The Moravian Church (Unitas Fratrum) came to England in the early eighteenth century and was recognised by Act of Parliament (Acta Fratrum 1749) as an ancient Protestant Episcopal Church descended from the Bohemian Brethren of the fifteenth century.