Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: List of religious leaders in 1825


  
 A.1.2. WHAT ARE THE ORIGINS OF MUTUALIST ORGANIZATION?
With the repeal of the Combination Acts in 1825, the trade union movement emerged from the underground; at the same time, the lobbying of employers for the Acts' restoration spurred zealous political struggle by the workers' movement.
The latter were addressed by leaders in the national labor movement, who attempted to adapt the basic principles of Owenism in a syndicalist direction.
In 1832 leaders of the London Radical artisans, meeting in the National Union of Working Classes and Others, were discussing the feasibility of a general strike (a "Grand National Holiday") of a month, by which the working classes would seize control of the state and economy.
mutualist.org /id26.html   (7367 words)

  
 Religious Movements Homepage: Christian Identity Movement   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
It was simply a group who believed for religious reasons in the white race as the "direct descendents of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel." This belief of being the chosen people was not new, as the Puritans of the 17th century also held this belief (The Anglo-Israelites:1).
In 1865, the Ku Klux Klan was founded largely to enforce white supremacy and keep the American south "safe." Nativism as a religious belief had slowly changed to a racial one.
Since the Religious Movements Homepage seeks to promote religious tolerance and appreciation of the positive benefits of pluralism and religious diversity in human cultures, we encourage the use of alternative concepts that do not carry implicit negative stereotypes.
religiousmovements.lib.virginia.edu /nrms/SAVED/identity.html   (4555 words)

  
 Unitarianism, Unitarian Christianity
In America the religious liberalism that came to be known as Unitarianism appeared within the congregational churches in Massachusetts as a reaction against the revivalism of the Great Awakening (1740 - 43).
Nature and right reason replaced the NT as the primary sources of religious authority, and what authority the Scriptures retained was the result of their agreement with the findings of reason.
Many members of the American Unitarian Association, founded in 1825, have come to the conclusion that their movement is not a part of the Christian church.
www.mb-soft.com /believe/txc/unitaria.htm   (1100 words)

  
 AEJMC Archives -- September 1997, week 4 (#36)
Kneeland, born in 1774 in Gardner, Mass., experienced periods of religious doubt throughout a young adulthood that included pastorates as a Baptist preacher in Vermont and a Universalist preacher in New Hampshire and Massachusetts.
Shaw interpreted "willfully" as "with a bad purpose."[36] This interpretation meant that the statute was intended not to restrain the profession of any religious sentiments, but to punish acts that would have a "tendency to disturb the public peace."[37] Therefore, in Shaw's view, Kneeland's guilt was based on the tendency of his espoused opinions.
Recognizing the importance that the later American freethought leader Robert Ingersoll attached to these cases in his defense of Charles B. Reynolds for blasphemy, the latter paper analyzes the arguments advanced in the blasphemy trials of George Holyoake and Abner Kneeland.
list.msu.edu /cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind9709d&L=aejmc&F=&S=&P=5321   (5363 words)

  
 [No title]
At the end of the historical sketch, Joseph attached a list summarizing the "faith of the Latter-day Saints," later titled the "Articles of Faith." Barstow never published the Wentworth letter, but it was printed in March 1842 in the church's periodical, the Nauvoo Times and Seasons.
Referring to his list as "its principal articles of faith" Joseph Young wrote: - -------------------------- Subject: D&C 20 notes..."The revelation was at once a formal declaration of belief as well as a written modus operandi for administering the affairs of the divine organization.
Joseph Smith may have taken Lawrence to the hill to look for the plates prior to the required date in 1825, and Chase's account does indicate that Joseph Smith was not happy about the results of their activities on that occasion.
www.xmission.com /pub/lists/gdm/archive/v01.n008   (8013 words)

  
 Religion and the New Republic (Religion and the Founding of the American Republic, Library of Congress Exhibition)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
The principal religious innovation produced by the Kentucky revivals was the camp meeting.
The religious revivals that swept the Kentucky camp meetings were so intense and created such gusts of emotion that their original sponsors, the Presbyterians, as well the Baptists, soon repudiated them.
The American Tract Society, founded in 1825, was one of the most influential of the scores of benevolent societies that flourished in the United States in the first decades of the nineteenth century.
www.loc.gov /exhibits/religion/rel07.html   (2599 words)

  
 Yale University Library: Major Microforms
A notable feature of this collection is a great number of pamphlets issued during the religious wars, the assassinations of Henry III and Henry IV, and the convening of the Estates-General in 1614-1615.
Leaders of the Russian Revolution contains microfilm and microfiche copies of the archives of nine figures important to the early history of Soviet Russia.
Persons listed represent every social rank and many professions, the criterion for inclusion being their contributions to the histories of the several peoples.
www.library.yale.edu /rsc/nmrr/microform/list.html   (12906 words)

  
 The Ultimate Religious leaders by year Dog Breeds Information Guide and Reference
The Ultimate Religious leaders by year Dog Breeds Information Guide and Reference
This is a list of the leaders of major religions in any given year.
1830 - 1829 - 1828 - 1827 - 1826 - 1825 - 1824 - 1823 - 1822 - 1821
www.dogluvers.com /dog_breeds/Religious_leaders_by_year   (641 words)

  
 Universalist leaders
Raised in a Universalist household, their political and religious views were liberal and reformist.
Afterwards, she became a leader of the woman suffrage and temperance movements, and a popular lecturer on social reform.
She was the only missionary sent to Scotland by the Universalist Church, and in 1880 the first woman to be ordained as a minister in the United Kingdom.
www.bright.net /~wbehee/UniversalistLeaders.htm   (3630 words)

  
 WHMC-Columbia--Benecke Family Papers, 1816-1989, n.d. (C3825)--FOLDER LIST
Benecke, an avid anti-prohibitionist, introduced legislation against religious and temperance fanatics, wrote numerous articles and speeches, and authored the Chariton County local option bill, which served as a model for similar legislation throughout the state.
A fl claims section and descriptive list of fl soldiers offer an overview of the fl military experience and fl social history.
Lists of living and deceased members; dates of death.
www.umsystem.edu /whmc/invent/3825list.html   (5219 words)

  
 H-Net Review: David J. Voelker on Orestes A. Brownson: American Religious Weathervane
He charts Brownson's changing positions (religious, philosophical, and political), but he also manages to identify a unifying theme of Brownson's life: "his attempts to create an intellectual as well as a personal synthesis between the drive for freedom and the need for communion" (p.
In 1825, at the age of 22, Brownson undertook a relatively brief apprenticeship in Vermont to become a Universalist minister.
From [Henri Benjamin] Constant he learned that the religious sentiment was a natural and therefore universal and permanent element of humanity that manifested itself historically in a variety of variable and transitory human forms and institutions.
www.h-net.org /reviews/showrev.cgi?path=215921143229430   (3464 words)

  
 List of state leaders in 1825 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Austria - Francis I, Emperor of Austria (1792*-1835) *Note: Leader of Austria held the title of Archduke prior to 1804
Maximilian I, King of Bavaria (1799*-1825) *Note: Leader of Bavaria held title of Elector prior to 1805
Saxony - Frederick Augustus I, King of Saxony 1763*-1827) *Note: Leader of Saxony held the title of Elector prior to 1806
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/List_of_state_leaders_in_1825   (647 words)

  
 Undergraduate Courses History Dept-Maxwell School
Topics to be considered include religious communication, popular culture, censorship, racial and gendered stereotypes, fame and celebrity, the relation between mass media and nationalism, the ethics of journalism, propaganda, and advertising, and the shifting boundaries of privacy and publicity.
The American colonies were experiments in empire, social laboratories in which English religious, communitarian, economic, and political options – the choices of “the century of revolution” – were tested.
A major emphasis is placed on the rise of nationalism as a widely shared social and political agenda in the nineteenth and early twentieth century and the many-faceted fight for independence before and during the period of Gandhi.
www.maxwell.syr.edu /hist/courses/ugcourselistings.htm   (5005 words)

  
 Times & Seasons » Religious Holidays
I picked holidays with significant religious (well, Chinese New Year might not quite apply) meaning because the goal here is to learn about other religions, and not so much about other cultures, although that happens too.
For me, if you are celebrating a religious holiday for the purpose of learning about a different culture and religion it can, and should be done in a tasteful way.
Channukah is actually rather minor in the list of festivals, and has only come into high knowledge due to it’s proximity to Christmas in the Calendar.
www.timesandseasons.org /?p=2749   (3049 words)

  
 Seminary Collections
This is the first edition of a work that was written to defend the Great Awakening in colonial New England (1740s), of which Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758) was a leading figure.
This document, "The Barmen Declaration," was drafted by leaders of Protestant German churches in opposition to the popular movement to accommodate Christianity to National Socialism.
It's principal author, Karl Barth (1886-1968), was a Swiss Reformed pastor and professor who became one of the leading theologians of the twentieth century.
www.scils.rutgers.edu /~source/seminary_list.htm   (707 words)

  
 HIST - History
HIST 208 Leaders of the Twentieth Century 3 Explores lives of men and women who dominated the stage of world events in the mid-20th century: e.g., Churchill, Gandhi, Indira Gandhi, Hirohito, Hitler, Golda Meir, Roosevelt, Stalin, Margaret Thatcher and Mao Tse-tung.
Covers religious beliefs, rituals, death and burial practices of ancient man and construction and use of religious edifices.
HIST 641 Technology and Civilization I 3 The religious, aesthetic, military, political and economic origins of Western technology from prehistoric times to the Renaissance and the interplay of technology and culture.
www.udel.edu /provost/ugradcat/ugradcat94/26/list/45.html   (4994 words)

  
 WHMC-Columbia--Religion--COLLECTION DESCRIPTIONS
List of books, including prayer book, Bible, theological works, grammars, foreign language dictionaries, Greek and Hebrew lexicons, the classics, and poetry; prices of books, clothing, and goods in the 1820s; tuition payments; allowances to children for furniture and sundries; and cash, 1832-1847.
List of subscribers to the school, rules and regulations, membership in each of the schools of the Belleview Society, list of books used, and attendance and achievement records of pupils.
She speaks of the religious conversion to Christ of several of her neighbors which took place "on the mountain." Reference to the conversion of a hundred or more others as well.
www.umsystem.edu /whmc/invent/desc-religion.html   (14030 words)

  
 United States Presidents and the Masonic Power Structure. freemason,jesuit,illuminati,presidents,trilateral ...
Solder and leader in the American Revolution who sent Paul Revere and William Dawes to Lexington and Concord on their famous ride to warn local patriots that British troops were being sent against them.
Story is listed as a member of Philanthropic Lodge in Marblehead, Massachusetts, in 10,000 Famous Freemasons and the MSA 1940s study, but not in Masonic Trivia and Facts.
McLean is listed in 10,000 Famous Freemasons as having been a member of Columbus Lodge #30 in Columbus, Ohio, but he is not listed in Masonic Trivia and Facts or in the The MSA 1940s study.
www.heart7.net /uspresidentasmasons.htm   (8191 words)

  
 The History Guy: The War List
If a conflict can be broken up into one or more component parts, the secondary wars are listed below the primary war and are indented to show they "belong" to it.
Somali tribesmen led by religious leader Muhammad ibn Abd Allah Hasan waged a desert guerrilla war against Britain, Italy and Ethiopia.
Other native leaders and tribes continued resistance to the French invasion.
www.historyguy.com /War_list.html   (3757 words)

  
 NY Times Boycott - Catholic Online   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
ALL Catholic Christians, clergy, religious and faithful are asked to boycott the NEW YORK TIMES, i.e., cancel their subscription and refuse to buy the paper, in response to their heinous decision to attack our Catholic faith.
The epitome of hypocrisy, the NY Times rightfully showed prudence, respect and restraint in not printing the Danish cartoons mocking the Prophet Muhammad which is extremely offensive to any Islamic believer.
Pastors, priests, deacons, religious brothers and sisters, and the lay faithful NEED to say “enough is enough.” Toleration of such sacrilege is not diplomatic, it is cowardly and irresponsible.
www.catholic.org /prwire/headline.php?ID=1825   (758 words)

  
 English
A figure today known as "King Arthur" may have been the leader and his fabled "Knights of the Round Table" may preserve the names of the leaders who fought with him at this battle, as well as in other parts on the island.
One of the king's outstanding leaders was his nephew, Prince Rupert of the Palatinate, a dashing cavalry commander.
The defeat at the Battle of Lostwithiel in Cornwall, however, was a serious reverse for Parliament in the south-west of England.
www.websters-online-dictionary.net /definition/english...   (14524 words)

  
 Johnson's Russia List #5017 - January 10, 2001
Communists rank last on a list of 238 threats to national security.
leader of the Labor Faction in the State Duma.
the official leader of a big country, would be vexed by a restraint on his
www.cdi.org /russia/johnson/5017.html   (6868 words)

  
 History Faculty   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
1825 to 1838," in Elizabeth Eldredge and Fred Morton, eds., Slavery in South Africa: Captive Labor on the Dutch Frontier (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1994).
The aim of the study is to show how a set of conflicts about what sacred subjects could be depicted reveals fundamental political, ideological, ecclesiological and theological themes of Carolingian history.
Adherents of the movement refuse to recognize the Indian state, regularly defy its laws, and claim that their leader, Keshrisinh Dada, is the real government.
www.virginia.edu /~history/info/facultylist.html   (9137 words)

  
 ATS History
To make Jesus Christ known in His redeeming grace and to promote the interests of vital godliness and sound morality, by the circulation of Religious Tracts, calculated to receive the approbation of all Evangelical Christians (from the ATS Statement of Purpose, 1825).
Three trends motivated the founders of American Tract, a diverse group of evangelical religious leaders from various denominations, to form the Society--a spiritual trend, a geographic trend, and a social trend:
By 1825, some Christians thought that consolidation of some of these various groups was needed.
www.atstracts.org /history/history.php   (644 words)

  
 All National Women's History Month Honorees   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
For a decade, Kitashima was a leader in the successful movement to win reparations for Japanese-Americans who had lost their homes and possessions and were forced to live in internment camps during WWII.
After graduating from Stanford Law School in 1952, O'Connor was an Arizona state senator from 1969 to 1974 where she was the first woman to be majority leader of a state senate.
She was a religious, spiritual, and political leader of her tribe.
www.nwhp.org /whm/all-honorees.html   (10878 words)

  
 RMC Online Guides
Diaries and accounts of a markedly religious woman in Mecklenburg, Schuyler County, New York; she describes her concern with the irreligious soul of her husband and the spiritual well-being of her family, buys the drafts of her sons in the Civil War, and otherwise reflects on her life as a Christian woman.
Diary entries (1-5 per year) record activities and opinions as a religious leader in the Methodist Episcopal church; births and deaths of family members and friends; quarter meetings and district conferences attended; sermons heard and prayers for spiritual growth.
Register listing baptisms, marriages, probationers, ministers and members for all three churches (which were charges on one circuit) and class lists for the West Dryden and Asbury societies.
rmc.library.cornell.edu /EAD/browselists/relig.html   (7616 words)

  
 The Child at Home by John S.C. Abbott   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
John Abbott (1805-1877) was the brother of Jacob Abbott and the author of numerous works especially for children and young people.
He was educated at Bowdoin college and Andover theological seminary, graduating from the former in 1825.
He was ordained to the ministry in the Congregational church in 1830, and was settled successively at Worcester, Roxbury, and Nantucket, Mass.
graceandtruthbooks.com /listdetails.asp?ID=1054&RP=/...   (316 words)

  
 Even More Traditional Religion - The Skeptic Tank
If your computer can't handle ZIP files (PKZIP-compressed files) you may select a button toward the end of the page to automatically request that all ZIP files be unzipped before they're sent to you.
Here there are more text files describing the debunking of religious fundamentalist beliefs (such as Creationism) as well as text files covering newspaper accounts of fundamentalist evils of late.
Select this to request that your email address not be on any mailing list in the future.
www.skeptictank.org /flist080.htm   (1442 words)

  
 [No title]
In the evenings, I was to go to the house of a very religious family, a family sympathetic to our cause, and a house that just happened to overlook a British installation.
The criminal dropped the charges against me if I dropped them against him and then the Police drove him home, via MacDonalds where they brought him a meal because he complained he was hungry.
Apparently there was some difficulty sending this out yesterday, and I'm not sure everyone on the list received it.
www.xmission.com /pub/lists/utah-firearms/archive/v02.n043   (5568 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.