The changes in the understanding of childhood and children in colonial New England marked a swift and profound departure from English family norms prior to 1630. Casting off the intellectual baggage of childhood and the family mores that had accompanied the Puritans across the Atlantic, New Englanders reconceptualized children as central to the mission in the wilderness. In this thesis, I argue that New Englanders connected, both implicitly and explicitly, the well being of the colony\u27s children directly with the future health of New England and sought to capitalize on this connection in unique, at times self-serving, ways. To best serve their own visions of the future New England commonwealth, religious authorities, secular authorities,...
One of the best known strategies deployed to demean and dehumanize oppressed peoples is to cast thos...
This article utilises the four letters of Richard Frethorne, a child indentured servant sent to Virg...
Most of the attention directed at the churches of New England in the seventeenth and eighteenth cent...
The changes in the understanding of childhood and children in colonial New England marked a swift an...
The New-England Primer is one of the most influential children’s books in America and it was used as...
The Puritans famously emigrated to New England in part so that they could raise their families accor...
The Puritans were the first family settlement in America that attempted to structure a perfect socie...
The author’s attention in the present article is focused on the attitude of Puritan colonists in sev...
Puritanism, as an attitude of mind, a moral force, and ultimately a movement, grew out of man's reco...
The religious and political conditions characterizing the daily lives of individuals comprising the ...
This dissertation advances the study of New England\u27s religious history by exploring the complex ...
This dissertation advances the study of New England\u27s religious history by exploring the complex ...
Marten adds to the growing body of literature on the history of family life with this rich collectio...
By the early seventeenth century, English dissenters had developed a vital tradition of voluntary re...
John Sommerville has written a fascinating book that scholars from a number of interests and backgro...
One of the best known strategies deployed to demean and dehumanize oppressed peoples is to cast thos...
This article utilises the four letters of Richard Frethorne, a child indentured servant sent to Virg...
Most of the attention directed at the churches of New England in the seventeenth and eighteenth cent...
The changes in the understanding of childhood and children in colonial New England marked a swift an...
The New-England Primer is one of the most influential children’s books in America and it was used as...
The Puritans famously emigrated to New England in part so that they could raise their families accor...
The Puritans were the first family settlement in America that attempted to structure a perfect socie...
The author’s attention in the present article is focused on the attitude of Puritan colonists in sev...
Puritanism, as an attitude of mind, a moral force, and ultimately a movement, grew out of man's reco...
The religious and political conditions characterizing the daily lives of individuals comprising the ...
This dissertation advances the study of New England\u27s religious history by exploring the complex ...
This dissertation advances the study of New England\u27s religious history by exploring the complex ...
Marten adds to the growing body of literature on the history of family life with this rich collectio...
By the early seventeenth century, English dissenters had developed a vital tradition of voluntary re...
John Sommerville has written a fascinating book that scholars from a number of interests and backgro...
One of the best known strategies deployed to demean and dehumanize oppressed peoples is to cast thos...
This article utilises the four letters of Richard Frethorne, a child indentured servant sent to Virg...
Most of the attention directed at the churches of New England in the seventeenth and eighteenth cent...