Results 301 to 310 of about 1,386,332 (363)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Shakespeare and Religious Change
2009Acknowledgments Note on Spelling Conventions Notes on Contributors Introduction: K.J.E.Graham PART I: SHAKESPEARE AND SOCIAL HISTORY: RELIGION AND THE SECULAR Sanctifying the Bourgeoisie: The Cultural Work of The Comedy of Errors R.Strier 'In a Christian Climate': Religion and Honor in Richard II D.Shuger PART II: DRAMATIC CONTINUITIES AND RELIGIOUS ...
openaire +1 more source
Religion, 1988
Riarata Smith Kipp and Susan Rodgers (eds), Indonesian Religions in Transition, University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 1987, x + 304 pp.
openaire +1 more source
Riarata Smith Kipp and Susan Rodgers (eds), Indonesian Religions in Transition, University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 1987, x + 304 pp.
openaire +1 more source
2006
Abstract The press was an integral part of the religious revival that swept through early modern Ireland but the different doctrinal, political, and pastoral priorities that separated the reforming agencies, Catholic and Protestant, ensured that the book functioned in confessionally distinctive ways.
openaire +1 more source
Abstract The press was an integral part of the religious revival that swept through early modern Ireland but the different doctrinal, political, and pastoral priorities that separated the reforming agencies, Catholic and Protestant, ensured that the book functioned in confessionally distinctive ways.
openaire +1 more source
Religious Change in Yorubaland
Africa, 1967Opening ParagraphThe process by which African peoples come to forsake their traditional religions for Islam or Christianity is among the most significant and the least-studied features of social change in Africa. It is, furthermore, a field to which scholars of different backgrounds, historians and social scientists, may contribute.
openaire +1 more source
1996
People in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were grappling with beliefs about the nature of this world and the existence of a life after death, the purpose of human life and the requirements of a Creator. This was a universal phenomenon but the effects of wide communal interactions in towns gave it a particular momentum. The Christian church from
openaire +1 more source
People in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were grappling with beliefs about the nature of this world and the existence of a life after death, the purpose of human life and the requirements of a Creator. This was a universal phenomenon but the effects of wide communal interactions in towns gave it a particular momentum. The Christian church from
openaire +1 more source

