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Topic: John Joseph Kain


  
  John J. Kain
JOHN JOSEPH KAIN, The Right Reverend John Joseph Kain, D. D., at present, bishop of the diocese of Wheeling, was born at Martinsburg Va., May 1841.
Kain, and on the 23d of the following May, the new bishop was solemly consecrated in the Wheeling cathedral, honored by the presence of a large number of his brother priests and several Right Rev. Bishops from various parts of the country.
Bishop Kain is yet a young man. He is studious, industrious, attentive to his duties, able in pulpit and on platform, ever watchful of the interests of his church, and is highly esteemed by all who knew him.
www.rootsweb.com /~ohjeffer/1890bioindex/jjkain.html   (327 words)

  
  CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Wheeling
John Joseph Kain, D.D., who was consecrated the second Bishop of Wheeling, 23 May, 1875.
In 1893 Bishop Kain was appointed coadjutor to the Archbishop of St. Louis, Missouri, and became archbishop of that see, 21 May, 1895.
During the eighteen years of Bishop Kain's administration, the work, so well begun by his able predecessor, was continued and made rapid progress.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/15608a.htm   (726 words)

  
 John Joseph Kain
KAIN, John Joseph, R. archbishop, born in Martinsburg, Berkeley County, West Virginia, 31 May, 1841; died 13 October 1903.
He was graduated at the Preparatory seminary of St. Charles, Catonsville MD, went through a course of theology and philosophy in St. Mary's College (later Seminary and University), Baltimore, and was ordained by Archbishop Spalding, 2 July, 1866.
KAIN, John Joseph, R. bishop, born in Martinsburg, Berkeley County, West Virginia, 31 May, 1841.
famousamericans.net /johnjosephkain   (659 words)

  
 Spirituality & Health: Community
Hi, John- I'm very interested in learning more about Native American shamanism.
Although the “teachings” of Black Elk—the great Lakota-Dakota-Nakota medicine man ("Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux" by John G. Neihardt) have been adopted by many tribes as a primary source for Indian spirituality.
I would also recommend anything from Vine Deloria, Jr., particularly "God is Red: A Native View of Religion." Also, "The North American Indians" by the photographer Edward Curtis with text by Joseph Epes Brown is a great resource.
www.spiritualityhealth.com /NMagazine/community/ttahome.php?event=2   (781 words)

  
 John Joseph Kain
KAIN, John Joseph, R. archbishop, born in Martinsburg, Berkeley County, West Virginia, 31 May, 1841; died 13 October 1903.
He was graduated at the Preparatory seminary of St. Charles, Catonsville MD, went through a course of theology and philosophy in St. Mary's College (later Seminary and University), Baltimore, and was ordained by Archbishop Spalding, 2 July, 1866.
KAIN, John Joseph, R. bishop, born in Martinsburg, Berkeley County, West Virginia, 31 May, 1841.
www.famousamericans.net /johnjosephkain   (658 words)

  
 GFP BUNNY
Soon after her birth, Joseph Chasing Horse, traditional leader of the Lakota nation, visited the site of Miracle's birth and conducted a Pipe ceremony there, while telling the story of White Buffalo Calf Woman, a legendary figure who brought the first Pipe to the Lakota people.
Joseph Chasing Horse explained in a newspaper interview that 2,000 years ago a young woman who first appeared in the shape of a white buffalo gave the Lakota's ancestors a sacred pipe and sacred ceremonies and made them guardians of the Black Hills.
By means of the difference between ideas of sensation and ideas of reflection, Locke distinguished man from animals: animals had certain sensory ideas and a degree of reason but no general ideas (i.e., abstraction ability) and as a result no language for their manifestation.
www.ekac.org /gfpbunny.html   (8823 words)

  
 GENUKI/Devon: Devon - Genealogy
John Lerwill is providing a growing set of articles on Devon history.
Kain, R.J.P., Oliver, R.R., Historic Parishes of England and Wales: an Electronic Map of Boundaries before 1850 with a Gazetteer and Metadata [computer file].
Kain and W. Ravenhill, pp.240-245, Exeter, University of Exeter Press, (1999).
genuki.cs.ncl.ac.uk /DEV/index.html   (11512 words)

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