Keyword [Missionaries] Result: 161 - 180 | Page: 9 of 10 |
161. | The formation of modern womanhood in East Asia, 1880--1920: American evangelical gender ideology and modern nation-building |
162. | Propaganda fide: Training Franciscan missionaries in New Spain |
163. | American missionaries, Armenian community, and the making of Protestantism in the Ottoman Empire, 1820--1860 |
164. | Africans in the British missionary imagination, 1910--1965 |
165. | Prodigal sons: Indigenous missionaries in the British Atlantic world, 1640--1780 |
166. | Becoming faithful: Christianity, literacy, and female consciousness in northeast China, 1830--1930 |
167. | Anxieties of conversion: Missionaries, state and heterodox communities in the Late Ottoman Empire |
168. | American missionaries in contemporary Japan: Their shared expressive practices |
169. | Prisms of China: Canadian women missionaries in China, 1904--1945 |
170. | Missionaries to the City of God: Christian Citizenship and African Immigrants in Rome, Ital |
171. | Navigating Language Choice as a Mormon Missionar |
172. | A study of the predictive power of identified principles of incarnational ministry on the evangelistic effectiveness of apartment missionaries |
173. | The role of single women missionaries of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, in Korea, 1897--1940 |
174. | Presbyterian missionaries in Southern Manchuria, 1867--1931: Religion, society, and politics |
175. | Anglican women missionaries and the culture of spirituality in Africa, 1865--1930 (Madagascar, Great Britain) |
176. | Progressivism and the mission field: Church of the Brethren women missionaries in Shanxi, China, 1908--1951 |
177. | Negotiating a new religious world: English missionaries and American Indians in colonial southeastern Massachusetts |
178. | A 'peculiarly fitting' institute: The origins of Marie Martin's Medical Missionaries of Mar |
179. | Congregationalist and Anglican missionaries in Ottoman Hakkari and Tur Abdin |
180. | For such a time as this: The impact of Christian missionaries on the birth of reform Judaism in Charleston, South Carolina, 1824-1846 |
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