Grajan Kraszewski developed the theory of Confederatization to understand how lay Catholics and clergy—bishops, priests, nuns—became invested in the Confederacy, even becoming Confederate heroes
This article explores how Methodist clergy in Virginia tended to the spiritual needs of their congre...
Thousands of Southern Christians enlisted in the rebel armies when the Civil War began, and tens of ...
Written for English 4310, taught by Professor Maureen Konkle, Fall 2011 semester.Includes video pres...
My work—studying Roman Catholics in the South during the American Civil War— is a remedy to a two-di...
A Catholic Communion Forged by War Scholars of U.S. Catholic history have long lamented the absence ...
The Civil War contained many examples of courage and commitment to duty that were inspired by religi...
An Important Review on the Intesection of Religion and War Since the late 1990s Civil War scholars h...
The evangelical generation that fought the Civil War attached significant meaning to the idea that G...
Many works have been written about the Civil War. While many of these books have contributed much to...
IntroductionFormed in Alabama in 1994, the League of the South is a nationalist organization that ad...
Confederate Conscription and the Struggle for Southern Soldiers is thoroughly researched and careful...
Counting clergy Scholars compile largest roster of War chaplains to date Religion is often a taboo...
For Church and Confederacy: The Lynches of South Carolina. Edited by Robert Emmett Curran. Columbia:...
Seeking Heaven in the Face of Hell The rising importance of social history in the study of the C...
This thesis covers the involvement and influence of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South in Virgini...
This article explores how Methodist clergy in Virginia tended to the spiritual needs of their congre...
Thousands of Southern Christians enlisted in the rebel armies when the Civil War began, and tens of ...
Written for English 4310, taught by Professor Maureen Konkle, Fall 2011 semester.Includes video pres...
My work—studying Roman Catholics in the South during the American Civil War— is a remedy to a two-di...
A Catholic Communion Forged by War Scholars of U.S. Catholic history have long lamented the absence ...
The Civil War contained many examples of courage and commitment to duty that were inspired by religi...
An Important Review on the Intesection of Religion and War Since the late 1990s Civil War scholars h...
The evangelical generation that fought the Civil War attached significant meaning to the idea that G...
Many works have been written about the Civil War. While many of these books have contributed much to...
IntroductionFormed in Alabama in 1994, the League of the South is a nationalist organization that ad...
Confederate Conscription and the Struggle for Southern Soldiers is thoroughly researched and careful...
Counting clergy Scholars compile largest roster of War chaplains to date Religion is often a taboo...
For Church and Confederacy: The Lynches of South Carolina. Edited by Robert Emmett Curran. Columbia:...
Seeking Heaven in the Face of Hell The rising importance of social history in the study of the C...
This thesis covers the involvement and influence of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South in Virgini...
This article explores how Methodist clergy in Virginia tended to the spiritual needs of their congre...
Thousands of Southern Christians enlisted in the rebel armies when the Civil War began, and tens of ...
Written for English 4310, taught by Professor Maureen Konkle, Fall 2011 semester.Includes video pres...