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This is a list of missionaries to the South Pacific islands. See also Bible translations into Oceanic languages. Protestant ...
Beeke, Joel, and Randall Pederson, Meet the Puritans: With a Guide to Modern Reprints, (Reformation Heritage Books, 2006) ISBN 978-1-60178-000-3; Cross, Claire, The Puritan Earl, The Life of Henry Hastings, Third Earl of Huntingdon, 1536-1595, New York: St. Martin's Press, 1966.
Born in Stonington in the British Crown Colony of Connecticut to Gilbert and Huldah Fanning, [1] from nearby Groton he went to sea as a cabin boy at the age of 14, and by the age of 24 was captain of a West Indian brig in which he visited the South Pacific for the first time.
Whilst back in London, John Williams published a "Narrative of Missionary Enterprises in the South Sea Islands", making a contribution to English understanding and popularity of the region, before returning to the Polynesian islands in 1837 on the ship Camden under the command of Captain Robert Clark Morgan.
Puritan Family and Community in the English Atlantic World: Being "Much afflicted with conscience", Routledge. Morgan, Edmund S. (1958). The Puritan dilemma: The story of John Winthrop online; Morgan, Edmund S. (1963). Visible saints : The history of a Puritan ideaonline; Morgan, Edmund S. ed. (1965). Puritan political ideas, 1558–1794 online
The Eleutheran Adventurers were a group of English Puritans and religious Independents who left Bermuda to settle on the island of Eleuthera in the Bahamas in the late 1640s. . The small group of Puritan settlers, led by William Sayle, were expelled from Bermuda for their failure to swear allegiance to the Crown and left in search of a place in which they could freely practice their fa
This is a list of missionaries to Hawaii. Before European exploration, the Hawaiian religion was brought from Tahiti by PaŹ»ao according to oral tradition. Notable missionaries with written records below are generally Christian .
In 1964 the South Sea Islands Museum was founded in Cooranbong, in New South Wales, Australia, to display artifacts collected by Seventh-day Adventist missionaries, who entered Australia in 1885 [1] and expanded into New Zealand, [2] Papua New Guinea, [3] Solomon Islands, [4] Gilbert and Ellice Islands, Fiji, [5] Tonga, Kiribati, [6] Samoa, [7] Cook Islands, [8] Tahiti [9] and Pitcairn Islands.