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In diesem Sammelband teilen elf Autorinnen aus dem DACH-Raum ihre Erfahrungen rund um den unerfüllten Kinderwunsch und Fehlgeburten. Sehr persönlich und bewegend nehmen sie uns mit auf ihre Kinderwunschreise. In der Verletzlichkeit und den Emotionen ihrer Texte sind nicht nur wertvolle Impulse für die eigene Kinderwunschzeit zu finden, sondern es werden am Rande auch Defizite in unseren gesellschaftlichen Systemen sichtbar. Das Buch zeigt, wie wichtig es ist, dass diese Themen aus der Tabuzone rausgeholt werden, damit sich Betroffene nicht mehr so allein fühlen. Elf bewegende Geschichten und drei Interviews über unerfüllten Kinderwunsch, Fehlgeburt und Co., die dir Mut machen sollen, deinen eigenen Weg im Kinderwunsch zu gehen.
This book examines the social, political, and religious relationships between Calvinists and Catholics during Holland's Golden Age. Although Holland, the largest province of the Dutch Republic, was officially Calvinist, its population was one of the most religiously heterogeneous in early modern Europe. The Catholic Church was officially disestablished in the 1570s, yet by the 1620s Catholicism underwent a revival, flourishing in a semi-clandestine private sphere. The book focuses on how Reformed Protestants dealt with this revived Catholicism, arguing that confessional coexistence between Calvinists and Catholics operated within a number of contiguous and overlapping social, political, and cultural spaces. The result was a paradox: a society that was at once Calvinist and pluralist. Christine Kooi maps the daily interactions between people of different faiths and examines how religious boundaries were negotiated during an era of tumultuous religious change.
Richard Wethered (1690-1744) was a native of Hertfordshire, England and son of Samuel Wethered and Dolly Lewin. He immigrated to America in 1720 and settled in Kent County, Maryland. He married Isabella Blay in 1733. Their son, John (1744-1822) married Mary Sykes and lived in Maryland and Delaware.
'If great books encourage you to look at the world in an entirely new way, then Dominion is a very great book indeed . . . Written with terrific learning, enthusiasm and good humour, Holland's book is not just supremely provocative, but often very funny' Sunday Times History Book of the Year Christianity is the most enduring and influential legacy of the ancient world, and its emergence the single most transformative development in Western history. Even the increasing number in the West today who have abandoned the faith of their forebears, and dismiss all religion as pointless superstition, remain recognisably its heirs. Seen close-up, the division between a sceptic and a believer may seem ...
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William Cox was born in Ireland in 1768?. He married Ellen Powell ca. 1800. Children immigrated to Ontario. Descendants live in Canada, primarily Ontario, as well as a few in Michigan, Delaware and elsewhere in the United States.
As Mr. Smith has noted in the Introduction to this work, "There is little so rare in German-American genealogy as a complete emigrant passenger list from Bremen." As most researchers know, the Bremen lists were destroyed during the fire storm of that city during World War II. In the case of this work, however, Mr. Smith was able to recover fourteen Bremen lists because they had been reprinted in the obscure weekly newspaper from Rudolstadt, Thuringia, entitled the "Allgemeine Auswanderungs-Zeitung" (which can be found in the rare-book collection at Yale University). The compiler has transcribed the names of all persons bound for America from each of the fourteen lists. The emigrants, who are arranged alphabetically, are identified by place of origin and sometimes by the number of persons in the passenger's family or the names of traveling companions.
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