The principal aim of this article is to analyse the rise of a Latin American Catholic identity during the mid- to late nineteenth century. It examines the institutionalisation of this collective project via the foundation of the Latin American College in Rome in 1858 and the initiatives that led to the Latin American Plenary Council in 1899. This article also explores how this collective religious identity was imagined and how its limits were drawn. In doing so a new insight into how religions contributed to the imagining and defining of geographical spaces is offered
This article offers an interpretation of the actions of the Franciscan Juan de Albuquerque as bishop...
With over 33,000 different denominations within the Catholic and Protestant branches of Christianity...
Lalive d'Epinay Christian. The Church as Political Factor in Latin America. In: Archives de sciences...
The principal aim of this article is to analyse the rise of a Latin American Catholic identity durin...
The Catholic Church in Latin America is—not for the first time in history—undergoing a series of pol...
Scholars in Latin America tend to agree that the religious landscape of the region is undergoing tra...
Delineating an accurate religious map of Latin America and the Caribbean is a challenging task. The ...
This paper describes the growth of the Protestant churches, especially from the Pentecostal backgro...
In this paper, we seek to draw lessons about the roles that religious institutions can play in promo...
Since the French Revolution, and particularly during and after the Industrial Revolu¬tion, it became...
The Catholic tradition in the Latin West grew up on the foundations laid by Rome. It accepted as fac...
The decline of Catholic parties across Latin America appears as an interesting exception to the glob...
This essay addresses the relation between religious change, empowerment, and power in contemporary L...
Because of the Church\u27s prominence in colonial Latin American society, understanding the role of ...
The Holy See begun to take interest in Latin America at the end of the last century. The aim was to ...
This article offers an interpretation of the actions of the Franciscan Juan de Albuquerque as bishop...
With over 33,000 different denominations within the Catholic and Protestant branches of Christianity...
Lalive d'Epinay Christian. The Church as Political Factor in Latin America. In: Archives de sciences...
The principal aim of this article is to analyse the rise of a Latin American Catholic identity durin...
The Catholic Church in Latin America is—not for the first time in history—undergoing a series of pol...
Scholars in Latin America tend to agree that the religious landscape of the region is undergoing tra...
Delineating an accurate religious map of Latin America and the Caribbean is a challenging task. The ...
This paper describes the growth of the Protestant churches, especially from the Pentecostal backgro...
In this paper, we seek to draw lessons about the roles that religious institutions can play in promo...
Since the French Revolution, and particularly during and after the Industrial Revolu¬tion, it became...
The Catholic tradition in the Latin West grew up on the foundations laid by Rome. It accepted as fac...
The decline of Catholic parties across Latin America appears as an interesting exception to the glob...
This essay addresses the relation between religious change, empowerment, and power in contemporary L...
Because of the Church\u27s prominence in colonial Latin American society, understanding the role of ...
The Holy See begun to take interest in Latin America at the end of the last century. The aim was to ...
This article offers an interpretation of the actions of the Franciscan Juan de Albuquerque as bishop...
With over 33,000 different denominations within the Catholic and Protestant branches of Christianity...
Lalive d'Epinay Christian. The Church as Political Factor in Latin America. In: Archives de sciences...