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  • |Citation = Quiring, Walter. The Colonization of the German Mennonites From Russia in the Paraguayan Chaco [[Category:Paraguay Sources]]
    336 bytes (36 words) - 12:57, 15 July 2010
  • ..., Benjamin. The Background and Causes of the Flight of the Mennonites From Russia in 1929 ...a:Mqr1930oct-Unruh, The Background Causes of the Flight of Mennonites from Russia-.pdf]]
    336 bytes (41 words) - 12:58, 15 July 2010
  • [[Category:Russia Sources]]
    334 bytes (41 words) - 13:16, 15 July 2010
  • ...e of Mennonite Congregations (Allgemeine Mennonitische Bundeskonferenz) in Russia and was elected into the countrywide representation body (landesweite Vertr ...was sentenced to five years of labor camps. He served his term in northern Russia on the shore of Northern Dvina river near Arkhangelsk. His family, declared
    4 KB (650 words) - 15:45, 17 March 2016
  • The village of Suzanovo in Orenburg region of Russia was founded 1911 by Johann Peters as an farmstead outside of the larger Men [[Category:Russia Sources]]
    3 KB (552 words) - 15:46, 17 March 2016
  • ...in, meaning from Belize or Mexico earlier (1920-1940s from Western Canada, Russia 1870s-1920s), and also a few from the English car world. ===Sources===
    4 KB (544 words) - 17:51, 9 May 2022
  • ...ring-.pdf|Quiring, Walter. "The colonization of the German Mennonites from Russia in the Paraguayan Chaco." <i>Mennonite Quartlerly Review</i> 8, no. 2 (Apri ===General Sources===
    13 KB (1,869 words) - 00:55, 16 August 2014
  • ...to thirty thousand Mennonites went to Moscow to obtain permission to leave Russia, but only 6,000 were able to flee, gaining temporary asylum in Germany on N ...m Colony followed the same system of self governance that they had used in Russia. Under this structure, congregational groups united to deal with issues of
    11 KB (1,632 words) - 15:00, 17 March 2016
  • ...cken (1800-1884), founder of the German Baptist movement and missionary to Russia, contributed - along with the struggle for farmland - to the Mennonite spli ...nite descent. (At the outset of WW I, the number of baptised Mennonites in Russia had peaked at 120.000.)
    11 KB (1,617 words) - 13:26, 15 July 2010
  • [[Category:Russia Sources]] [[Category:Ukraine Sources]]
    5 KB (671 words) - 15:01, 17 March 2016
  • ...the same as the Mennonites in Paraguay or Ethiopia or Botswana or Korea or Russia or Switzerland. I guess if I had to explain what a Mennonite is, I’d say ...know how to explain why I do. I’m fully aware of the four epistemological sources Scripture, Tradition, Reason and Experience. But I don’t trust any of the
    6 KB (1,090 words) - 19:13, 7 May 2015
  • ...South America. These conservative Mennonites had immigrated to Canada from Russia in the 1870s and had prospered. During World War I, however, Canada attempt ...ennonite refugees, fleeing religious persecution and economic hardships in Russia, immigrated to the Paraguayan Chaco, forming the [[Fernheim Colony]]. In 1
    20 KB (2,714 words) - 02:31, 6 October 2016
  • [[Category:Russia Sources]] [[Category:Ukraine Sources]]
    6 KB (891 words) - 15:37, 17 March 2016
  • [[Category:Russia Sources]] [[Category:Ukraine Sources]]
    6 KB (839 words) - 15:25, 17 March 2016
  • [[Category:Russia Sources]]
    5 KB (666 words) - 15:35, 17 March 2016
  • ...wife were the first MB missionaries in India. They came down to India from Russia independently in the late 1989. The area that Friesen focused his mission w ...nous church was Baptist and with the discontinuance of the MB Mission from Russia, when World War I broke out in 1914, the whole work was taken over by the B
    22 KB (3,468 words) - 14:38, 13 December 2016
  • [[Category:Russia Sources]] [[Category:Ukraine Sources]]
    6 KB (941 words) - 15:33, 17 March 2016
  • [[Category:Russia Sources]] [[Category:Ukraine Sources]]
    6 KB (930 words) - 15:39, 17 March 2016
  • ...new draft was formulated in the process, approved by Mennonite Brethren in Russia and North America in 1900 and printed at Halbstadt in 1902. It was reprinte [[Category:United States Sources]]
    21 KB (3,295 words) - 19:51, 24 March 2016
  • ...ns of faith and position statements on a variety of issues. These valuable sources can now be found here. A few early confessions of other faith groups are a ..., 1853)|Confession, or Short and Simple Statement of Faith]] (Rudnerweide, Russia, 1853)
    30 KB (3,543 words) - 18:59, 7 February 2022
  • ...martyred by the thousands, but by the nineteenth century had emigrated to Russia, where they lived peacefully until the late 1800s. At that time, their spec [[Category:United States Sources]]
    9 KB (1,577 words) - 19:17, 21 March 2016
  • ...ies after the combined effects of World War I, the Communist Revolution in Russia, and a drought in the Ukraine.<ref>Ibid.</ref> ====Print Sources====
    17 KB (2,463 words) - 15:30, 3 October 2016
  • century Russia welcomed outside Pietistic influence, relaxing The Bubble a luxury, and religion. In all, the shaping of Anabaptist faith by sources
    10 KB (1,637 words) - 19:23, 7 May 2015
  • Again in Russia the Mennonite Brethren Church formed and split from the influenced by outside sources like a record company. And we could remain
    11 KB (1,966 words) - 19:26, 7 May 2015
  • [[Category:Russia Sources]]
    9 KB (1,290 words) - 15:32, 17 March 2016
  • ...ch''', this confession was published by the Church in Rudnerweide in South Russia, Odessa in 1853 and adopted by the Turner, Oregon, congregation in 1878. ...print of the edition published in 1853 by the church of Rudnerweide, South Russia. It was again reprinted at Elkhart in 1893 in Ein Fundamentbuch der Christl
    33 KB (6,117 words) - 18:46, 24 March 2016
  • [[Category:Hungary Sources]] [[Category:Russia Sources]]
    18 KB (3,180 words) - 15:51, 17 March 2016
  • | ''Colloque Sources de l'histoire religieuse de la Belgique. Sources de l'histoire religieuse de la Belgique: Moyen âge et temps modernes. Bron ====Russia/Soviet Union====
    14 KB (1,990 words) - 16:24, 26 July 2012
  • ...in Belize come from Russian Mennonite groups who initially emigrated from Russia and moved to Canada in early 1900s while fleeing the Russian Revolution. In 1948 After living in Canada in order to avoid oppression in Russia, the Mennonites moved to Mexico, despite the unfamiliar climate conditions.
    28 KB (4,372 words) - 13:51, 3 October 2016
  • ...an independent denomination was first founded January 6, 1860, in southern Russia. Historically it claims full connection with the larger body of Mennonites ...form. About the year 1900 the denomination, still strongly represented in Russia, drew up and accepted the confession that was formally adopted by the. "Con
    58 KB (9,271 words) - 18:55, 24 March 2016
  • ...üntzer favored.<ref>See on this insurrection the citations of contemporary sources published by W. Wibbeling in 1925, Martin Luther und der Bauernkrieg (Neuwe ...is influence was that it split several Mennonite churches. For example, in Russia, after 1860 one finds the “Mennonite Brethren” beside the Mennonite “
    60 KB (9,998 words) - 02:48, 31 August 2022
  • ...ly higher level of performance than the average, is fully witnessed by the sources. The early Swiss and South German reformers were keenly aware of this achie ...stance in the course of the nineteenth century. The emigrant Mennonites in Russia and North America have maintained it. The Mennonites of the United States f
    62 KB (9,964 words) - 18:08, 4 October 2016