Spelling suggestions: "subject:"catholics"" "subject:"atholics""
71 |
Imperial government and Catholic missions in China during the years 1784-1785Willeke, Bernward Henry, January 1948 (has links)
Issued also as thesis, Columbia University. / Bibliography: p. 196-213.
|
72 |
Black Catholics of the Archdiocese of Chicago a diverse context for pastoral practice : implications for ministry and leadership formation /McQuaid, Thomas. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Catholic Theological Union at Chicago, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves [119-123]).
|
73 |
Evangelization towards an effective methodology for an economically depressed African-American context /Gordon, Robert J., January 1989 (has links)
Thesis (M.T.S.)--Catholic Theological Union at Chicago, 1989. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 86-89).
|
74 |
The Layburnes and their world, circa 1620-1720: the English Catholic community and the House of StuartWright, F. Alison January 2002 (has links)
This thesis concerns Catholics in north-western England in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, in particular the Layburne family of Cunswick, Cumbria. It examines their role in local society and at the courts of the Stuart queens in London and St Germains. It traces their growing commitment to the Jacobite cause and their hopes of thereby regaining positions of influence at court and in the country. The north-western Tory gentry's sympathy with their Catholic counterparts is contrasted with the treatment given to the Quakers in the same area. The latter were regarded as a danger to the fabric of society, representing an economic and political threat to the government. As an example of how integrated the Catholics were, the services in Kendal parish church were more Papist than non-conformist, even under the Protectorate. At the Restoration the Catholics continued to contribute to the upkeep of the church and were well-regarded in the area. The Layburnes occupied positions during the reign of James II, both in the north-west and at court. Bishop John Laybume acted as James II's Catholic bishop, and had also been involved in the Secret Treaty of Dover in 1670, under Charles II. during James II's reign bishop Layburne had organised the funding of Catholic chapels, clergy and education. This activity was discovered and used in the prosecution of Catholic gentry in the trials following the Lancashire Plot (1694). On acquittal, the Jacobites vigorously renewed their plotting in Lancashire. Planning for a Jacobite invasion reached its culmination in the 1715 Rising, only to end with the siege of Preston. Despite some executions and the forfeiture of estates, many Catholic Jacobite families survived the 1715 rising. Few rose in 1745 and many Catholic families, with the exception of the Layburnes, prospered and continue to this day.
|
75 |
Confessional mobility, English Catholics, and the southern Netherlands, c.1660-1720Corens, Liesbeth January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
|
76 |
Popular Catholicism in nineteenth-century GermanySperber, Jonathan January 1900 (has links)
Texte remanié de : Dissertation : Ph. : University of Chicago : 1980. / Index. Bibliogr. p. [299]-310. Index.
|
77 |
Catholics in Elizabethan WarwickshireVerner, Laura Anne. January 2011 (has links)
This dissertation examines the Catholic community of Warwickshire during the reign of Elizabeth I (1558--?1603). While local studies of post—Reformation Catholics have been attempted in other English counties, no substantial body of work has been produced for Warwickshire. The research therefore draws heavily on both the primary sources for Warwickshire and the more general secondary works on post--?Reformation Catholicism. The approach has been to identify the Catholics and recusants through the primary sources, such as recusant rolls, commissioners’ reports and State Papers, and endeavour to understand the causes and consequences of recusancy and how this affected the identity of the Catholic individual and community. The principal findings and discoveries demonstrate that the Catholic community of Warwickshire was, in general, detached from its medieval predecessor. Unable to worship freely, they resorted to clandestine and surreptitious practices and proved to be eclectic and fluid with regard to religious doctrine when the occasion demanded. After heightened persecution in the 1580s, the steadfast members of the community tried to avoid detection through several means, including church papism, frequently moving between parishes or counties, and the (often false) promise of conformity when caught.
This dissertation is arranged into six thematic chapters. This method allowed several key aspects of the continuation of Catholicism in Warwickshire to be analysed separately. Chapter 1 introduces the themes explored in the dissertation. Chapter 2 examines the geographical features of Warwickshire and its jurisdictional subdivision and argues that these features protected pockets of Catholic communities from close supervision by the state and church. Chapter 3 investigates the clergy within the county and their effect on Catholics and recusants. The higher and lower reformed clergy, the remaining Marian priests and the missionaries who came to England from 1574 onwards are considered. Chapter 4 looks at the members of the Catholic community themselves, focusing on the gentry and non-gentry. Chapter 5 focuses on the government’s use of monetary fines to deter conservatives from recusancy from 1581 onwards. The reasons for Catholics to choose either recusancy or church papism over conformity are complex and, in the face of fierce persecution, at times inexplicable. Chapter 6 considers the themes of persecution and toleration within the county, and analyses in detail the circumstances of the Somerville Plot of 1583. The understanding of such a community, combined with a comparative analysis of Catholic communities in other counties, offers an original contribution to the study of post-Reformation England. / published_or_final_version / History / Master / Master of Philosophy
|
78 |
Shakespeare's attitude towards the Catholic church in "King John" ...Greenewald, Gerard M., January 1938 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Catholic University of America. / At head of title: The Catholic university of America. Appendix: p. 183-186; Bibliography: p. 187-192.
|
79 |
The concept of love in the French Catholic literary revival (literary history of a motif).Riordan, Francis Ellen, January 1952 (has links)
Thesis--Catholic University of America.
|
80 |
Representations of Catholicism in American literature, 1820-1920Rygiel, Mary Ann. Hitchcock, Bert, January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Auburn University, 2009. / Abstract. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 372-388).
|
Page generated in 0.0273 seconds