翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Laos at the 2013 Southeast Asian Games
・ Laos at the 2013 World Aquatics Championships
・ Laos at the 2013 World Championships in Athletics
・ Laos at the 2014 Asian Beach Games
・ Laos at the 2014 Asian Games
・ Laos at the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics
・ Laos at the 2015 Southeast Asian Games
・ Laos at the 2015 World Aquatics Championships
・ Laos at the 2015 World Championships in Athletics
・ Laos at the Asian Games
・ Laos at the Olympics
・ Laos at the Paralympics
・ Laos F.C.
・ Laos knobby newt
・ Laos Memorial
Laos Mission
・ Laos national basketball team
・ Laos national beach soccer team
・ Laos national football team
・ Laos national football team results
・ Laos national futsal team
・ Laos national rugby union team
・ Laos National Stadium
・ Laos national under-17 football team
・ Laos national under-21 football team
・ Laos national under-23 football team
・ Laos warty newt
・ Laos women's national football team
・ Laos women's national rugby union team
・ Laosanthus


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Laos Mission : ウィキペディア英語版
Laos Mission

The Laos Mission (also, North Laos Mission, North Siam Mission) was founded in Chiang Mai, northern Thailand by the Rev. Daniel McGilvary and Mrs. Sophia McGilvary in April 1867. It was established as a mission of the Board of Foreign Missions, Presbyterian Church in the United States.
==Mission==
The original vision for the mission came from Dr. Dan Beach Bradley, who himself once proposed starting a mission in the North. The Laos Mission included, at one time or another, six stations in Northern Siam: Chiang Mai (founded 1867); Lampang (founded in 1885 and originally known as the Lakawn Station); Lamphun (founded 1891 and made a sub-station of Chiang Mai in 1897); Phrae (1893): Nan (1895); and Chiang Rai (1896). In addition, the mission founded a station in 1903 to work with the Tai peoples of eastern Burma in Kengtung, which was closed in 1907; and it founded another station, the Chiang Rung Station, in Yunnan Province, southern China in 1917.
The mission founded its first church, Chiang Mai Church, now known simply as First Church, Chiang Mai, in 1868. After a brief period of evangelistic success, the mission underwent a time of persecution in 1869, during which two converts were martyred. The mission did not fully recover until the late 1870s. In 1880, it founded three congregations including the Mae Dok Daeng Church, known today as the Suwanduangrit Church, Ban Dok Daeng.
In 1885, the mission sponsored the founding of the Presbytery of North Laos, officially under the Synod of New York, to give oversight to the churches.
By the 1890s, the mission increasingly emphasized medical and educational institutional work, founding boarding schools, such as Prince Royal's College and Chiang Rai Witthayakhom School, hospitals and dispensaries in each of the stations. The churches, meanwhile, numbered 37 by 1920, the last year of the mission, and communicate membership numbered 6,649 that same year.
The presbytery continued in existence until 1934, when it was incorporated into the Church of Christ in Thailand. Beginning in the 1890s, the majority of the mission's members campaigned for mission expansion into the Shan States of Burma, which brought it into a protracted, time-consuming territorial dispute with the American Baptists in Burma. For a brief period from 1911 to 1914, the mission's church grew rapidly in the wake of malaria and smallpox epidemics in various parts of northern Siam. With improvements in communications between northern and central Siam, the Laos Mission was united with the Siam Mission in 1920-21.〔(From Herb Swanson with permission )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Laos Mission」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.