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Church and medicine : the role of medical missionaries in Malawi 1875-1914Rennick, Agnes January 2003 (has links)
This is the first systematic account of early mission medical activities in the Malawi Region (comprising present day Malawi, north eastern Zambia and the eastern shore of Lake Malawi). It compares the policies and practices of three missions - Livingstonia, Blantyre and the UMCA - between 1875 and 1914, from pioneering medical provision through to the establishment of hospitals and participation in largescale public health campaigns. The study acknowledges Megan Vaughan's important analysis of the discourse of missionary medicine, but suggests the need to reflect the different religious and professional influences informing the practice of individual mission doctors. The study further suggests that the organisation and professionalising of medicine within the three missions, from 1900, was dependent upon the activities of those doctors who prioritised their professional rather than their evangelising roles. The study also considers the important contribution of missionary nursing personnel and African medical assistants in delivering both hospital and out-patient services, and identifies the professional, gender and racial factors which influenced their status and roles. The study also considers, as far as sources allow, the African patient's experience of missionary medical services. In particular, it identifies the key role of referring agents, such as African medical assistants and European employers, in directing African patients to mission medical services. It suggests that, in contrast to the conflict in belief systems presented by the mission medical discourse, Western medicine was incorporated alongside indigenous treatments within a plurality of healing systems. Finally, the study assesses the impact of missionary medical provision within the Malawi region up to 1914. It demonstrates that, during the period of this study, the Blantyre, UMCA and Livingstonia missions remained the principal sources of both curative and palliative Western medicine for the African sick, contributing towards the wider development of the missions and the European settler economy.
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Influence of the Church of Scotland on the Dutch Reformed Church of South AfricaSass, Frederick William January 1956 (has links)
The Cape of Good Hope was discovered by Ba.rtholomew Diaz, a Portuguese navigator, in 1487, but it did not occur to any European nation to make a settlement there until one hundred and sixty.years after that date. On the 6th April, 1652, Jan van Riebeeck founded the earliest settlement at the foot of Tab1e Mountain. Holland was at that time at the height of her political and commercial prosperity. The Dutch East India Company, founded in 1602, had acquired a practica~ monopoly of the sea-borne traffic with India and the East, and it was in order to provide a port of call for the outgoing and returning vessels of this Company that a tawnship was established and a castle built at the Cape of Good Hope in 1666, under the nsme and title of "the frontier fortress of India".
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British women missionaries in India, c.1917-1950Pass, Andrea Rose January 2011 (has links)
Although by 1900, over 60% of the British missionary workforce in South Asia was female, women’s role in mission has often been overlooked. This thesis focuses upon women of the two leading Anglican societies – the high-Church Society for the Propagation of the Gospel (SPG) and the evangelical Church Missionary Society (CMS) – during a particularly underexplored and eventful period in mission history. It uses primary material from the archives of SPG at Rhodes House, Oxford, CMS at the University of Birmingham, St Stephen’s Community, Delhi, and the United Theological College, Bangalore, to extend previous research on the beginnings of women’s service in the late-nineteenth century, exploring the ways in which women missionaries responded to unprecedented upheaval in Britain, India, and the worldwide Anglican Communion in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s. In so doing, it contributes to multiple overlapping historiographies: not simply to the history of Church and mission, but also to that of gender, the British Empire, Indian nationalism, and decolonisation. Women missionaries were products of the expansion of female education, professional opportunities, and philanthropic activity in late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century Britain. Their vocation was tested by living conditions in India, as well as by contradictory calls to marriage, career advancement, familial duties, or the Religious Life. Their educational, medical, and evangelistic work altered considerably between 1917 and 1950 owing to ‘Indianisation’ and ‘Diocesanisation,’ which sought to establish a self-governing ‘native’ Church. Women’s absorption in local affairs meant they were usually uninterested in imperial, nationalist, and Anglican politics, and sometimes became estranged from the home Church. Their service was far more than an attempt to ‘colonise’ Indian hearts and minds and propagate Western ideology. In reality, women missionaries’ engagement with India and Indians had a far more profound impact upon them than upon the Indians they came to serve.
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Bulgarische Evangelische Gesellschaft, 1875-1958 : die Geschichte der ersten organisierten evangelistischen Eigeninitiative bulgarischer evangelischer Christen / The Bulgarian Evangelical Society, 1875-1958 : the history of the first organized evangelistic initiative of Bulgarian evangelical ChristiansFlad, Simone, 1971- 02 1900 (has links)
German text / Die Bulgarische Evangelische Gesellschaft (BEG) ist die erste organisierte Eigeninitiative
bulgarischer evangelischer Christen, die dem Ziel verpflichtet war, zur Evangelisation der
Bulgaren beizutragen. Neben der Literaturarbeit und der finanziellen Unterstützung von Predigern
und Pastoren gehörte die Förderung von Einheit unter den evangelischen Christen zu
den wichtigsten Arbeitsbereichen der BEG. Letzteres wurde vor allem auch in den Jahresversammlungen
verwirklicht, die allgemein eine wichtige Plattform für die verschiedenen
Arbeitszweige darstellten.
1875 in einer äußerst unsicheren Zeit gegründet, überstand die BEG mehrere Kriege wie
auch interne Probleme, bis sie (wie andere Vereine) 1958 vom kommunistischen Regime aufgelöst
wurde. Ihre Geschichte spiegelt in weiten Teilen die Entwicklung der bulgarischen
evangelischen Bewegung wider – deren Beschaffenheit und Besonderheiten, deren Erfolge
sowie interne und externe Herausforderungen. Als interdenominationelle Organisation und
mit der breiten Unterstützung durch einen Großteil der evangelischen Leiter wie auch durch
viele Gemeindemitglieder nahm die BEG in der sich entwickelnden protestantischen Landschaft
Bulgariens eine prägende Rolle ein.
Bis dato ist die frühe protestantische Geschichte Bulgariens hauptsächlich aus dem
Blickwinkel der Missionsarbeit der amerikanischen Missionen behandelt worden. Anhand der
neu aufgefundenen Jahresberichte der BEG und anderer Primärquellen kann nun das Augenmerk
auf diese heute fast vergessene Eigeninitiative der noch jungen evangelischen Bewegung
Bulgariens gerichtet werden. Diese Studie leistet einen Beitrag zur evangelischen Kirchen-
und Missionsgeschichtsschreibung in Bulgarien. / The Bulgarian Evangelical Society (BES) was the first organized initiative by Bulgarian evangelical
Christians to evangelize Bulgarian people. In addition to publishing Christian literature
and providing financial help for preachers and pastors, one of its major activities was to work
towards unity among evangelical Christians. This was mostly realized at the annual meetings
of the membership of the BES, which provided an important platform for the society's different
ministries.
Founded in 1875 in a very insecure time for the Bulgarian people, the BES managed to
survive several wars and various internal problems until it was dissolved in 1958 by the Communist
Regime, along with other non-governmental organizations. The history of the BES to a
large extent reflects the development of the Bulgarian evangelical movement as a whole in its
qualities and characteristics, its successes and in its internal and external challenges. As an
interdenominational organisation and because it had the broad support of a large part of the
evangelical leaders as well as many church members, the BES played an important role in the
development of Protestantism in Bulgaria.
In the past, the early Protestant history of Bulgaria frequently has been portrayed as the
missionary work of American missionaries. With the newly rediscovered annual reports of the
BES and other primary sources it has now become possible to uncover the significant role of
this almost forgotten initiative of the early Bulgarian evangelical movement. In doing so, this
study contributes both to history of missions and to the history of the Protestant Church in
Bulgaria. / Christian Spirituality, Church History & Missiology / D. Th. (Missiology)
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Bulgarische Evangelische Gesellschaft, 1875-1958 : die Geschichte der ersten organisierten evangelistischen Eigeninitiative bulgarischer evangelischer Christen / The Bulgarian Evangelical Society, 1875-1958 : the history of the first organized evangelistic initiative of Bulgarian evangelical ChristiansFlad, Simone, 1971- 02 1900 (has links)
German text / Die Bulgarische Evangelische Gesellschaft (BEG) ist die erste organisierte Eigeninitiative
bulgarischer evangelischer Christen, die dem Ziel verpflichtet war, zur Evangelisation der
Bulgaren beizutragen. Neben der Literaturarbeit und der finanziellen Unterstützung von Predigern
und Pastoren gehörte die Förderung von Einheit unter den evangelischen Christen zu
den wichtigsten Arbeitsbereichen der BEG. Letzteres wurde vor allem auch in den Jahresversammlungen
verwirklicht, die allgemein eine wichtige Plattform für die verschiedenen
Arbeitszweige darstellten.
1875 in einer äußerst unsicheren Zeit gegründet, überstand die BEG mehrere Kriege wie
auch interne Probleme, bis sie (wie andere Vereine) 1958 vom kommunistischen Regime aufgelöst
wurde. Ihre Geschichte spiegelt in weiten Teilen die Entwicklung der bulgarischen
evangelischen Bewegung wider – deren Beschaffenheit und Besonderheiten, deren Erfolge
sowie interne und externe Herausforderungen. Als interdenominationelle Organisation und
mit der breiten Unterstützung durch einen Großteil der evangelischen Leiter wie auch durch
viele Gemeindemitglieder nahm die BEG in der sich entwickelnden protestantischen Landschaft
Bulgariens eine prägende Rolle ein.
Bis dato ist die frühe protestantische Geschichte Bulgariens hauptsächlich aus dem
Blickwinkel der Missionsarbeit der amerikanischen Missionen behandelt worden. Anhand der
neu aufgefundenen Jahresberichte der BEG und anderer Primärquellen kann nun das Augenmerk
auf diese heute fast vergessene Eigeninitiative der noch jungen evangelischen Bewegung
Bulgariens gerichtet werden. Diese Studie leistet einen Beitrag zur evangelischen Kirchen-
und Missionsgeschichtsschreibung in Bulgarien. / The Bulgarian Evangelical Society (BES) was the first organized initiative by Bulgarian evangelical
Christians to evangelize Bulgarian people. In addition to publishing Christian literature
and providing financial help for preachers and pastors, one of its major activities was to work
towards unity among evangelical Christians. This was mostly realized at the annual meetings
of the membership of the BES, which provided an important platform for the society's different
ministries.
Founded in 1875 in a very insecure time for the Bulgarian people, the BES managed to
survive several wars and various internal problems until it was dissolved in 1958 by the Communist
Regime, along with other non-governmental organizations. The history of the BES to a
large extent reflects the development of the Bulgarian evangelical movement as a whole in its
qualities and characteristics, its successes and in its internal and external challenges. As an
interdenominational organisation and because it had the broad support of a large part of the
evangelical leaders as well as many church members, the BES played an important role in the
development of Protestantism in Bulgaria.
In the past, the early Protestant history of Bulgaria frequently has been portrayed as the
missionary work of American missionaries. With the newly rediscovered annual reports of the
BES and other primary sources it has now become possible to uncover the significant role of
this almost forgotten initiative of the early Bulgarian evangelical movement. In doing so, this
study contributes both to history of missions and to the history of the Protestant Church in
Bulgaria. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D. Th. (Missiology)
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