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Corpus Christi College the Pelican Record
CORPUS CHRISTI COLLEGE THE PELICAN RECORD Vol. LI December 2015 CORPUS CHRISTI COLLEGE THE PELICAN RECORD Vol. LI December 2015 i The Pelican Record Editor: Mark Whittow Design and Printing: Lynx DPM Limited Published by Corpus Christi College, Oxford 2015 Website: http://www.ccc.ox.ac.uk Email: [email protected] The editor would like to thank Rachel Pearson, Julian Reid, Sara Watson and David Wilson. Front cover: The Library, by former artist-in-residence Ceri Allen. By kind permission of Nick Thorn Back cover: Stone pelican in Durham Castle, carved during Richard Fox’s tenure as Bishop of Durham. Photograph by Peter Rhodes ii The Pelican Record CONTENTS President’s Report ................................................................................... 3 President’s Seminar: Casting the Audience Peter Nichols ............................................................................................ 11 Bishop Foxe’s Humanistic Library and the Alchemical Pelican Alexandra Marraccini ................................................................................ 17 Remembrance Day Sermon A sermon delivered by the President on 9 November 2014 ....................... 22 Corpuscle Casualties from the Second World War Harriet Fisher ............................................................................................. 27 A Postgraduate at Corpus Michael Baker ............................................................................................. 34 Law at Corpus Lucia Zedner and Liz Fisher .................................................................... -
^ a I N T Life on Earth, Veronica’S Sim Standing of the Church’S Doctrine and Practices Many Convent in Milan Preferred Errors Are Inevitable
( m and Eearn P» 0 . Box 1620, Denver, Colorado UN AfiN-Chrift? Q. In my opinion, everything reiated to UN and UNESCO stinks! They are anti-Christ, Communistic. How can one who beiieves hi God beiieve in the UN? A. Your extreilie aversion to the international bodies is irreconcilable with the mind of the Church, as expressed by Pope and Bishops. That there must be some form of world order to Feast of Holy Family preserve peace is a rigid deduction from the unity of mankind, Avhich it is heresy to deny. The UN is far from satisfying the Catholic ideal of a world government to maintain peace and order Spotlights St. Joseph among nations. Its refusal to recognize God is de plorable, and it can never be an effective world r is no accident that the introduc the husband of Mary was bead of government as long as Communist nations have a rtion of the Feast of the Holy Family, Mary’s family. vote in its assembly. in 1893, coincided with the revival of THERE has never been a father Nevertheless, it could be much worse, and the interest in St. Josephite theology. hood like that of St. Joseph, accord fact that it is no worse than it is owing in no small If Our Lord had a family, then He ing to which Christ was Joseph’s true part to participation by devoted Catholic represen- must have had a father—a virginal fa atives and Pontifical encouragement. ther. but, nonetheless, a real one. Son in the moral order, and not ex Some UN subsidiaries, such a^ the International traneous to him, as is an adopted Father Francis L. -
Curriculum Vitae Joseph J
CURRICULUM VITAE JOSEPH J. BANGURA Email: [email protected] Mobile Phone: 269-615-5043 Education: Ph.D., History, Dalhousie University, 2006 M.A., History, Dalhousie University, 2001 B.A. with Honors in History, University of Sierra Leone, 1993 Academic Positions: Professor of History, Kalamazoo College, 2018- Associate Professor of History, Kalamazoo College, 2011- 2018 Assistant Professor of History, Kalamazoo College, 2005-2011 Graduate Teaching Assistant, Dalhousie University, 2000-2004 Lecturer, Milton Margai College of Education (Sierra Leone), 1995-2000 Part Time Lecturer/Teaching Assistant, Fourah Bay College (Sierra Leone), 1994-2000 Administrative Experience: Chair, Faculty Development Committee, 2019- 2020 Chair, Search Committee, Medieval and Early Modern Mediterranean History, 2017-2018 Chair, Department of History, Kalamazoo College, 2016 – 2020 Director, African Studies Program, Kalamazoo College, 2005-Present Major Service Activity: Member, 2022 Annual Meeting Program Committee, American Historical Association, 2020- Dramaturge, The Hamlet Voyage, 2021- Editorial Service: Series Editor: Anthem Advances in African Cultural Studies, 2018-Present http://www.anthempress.com/anthem-advances-in-african-cultural-studies Editorial Board Member, West African Research Association Conflict and Peacebuilding Review, 2010 – 2011 Member, Atlantic Slave Trade and Sierra Leone Collections Board, University of Illinois, Chicago, 2009-Present 1 Publications Books: The Temne of Sierra Leone: African Agency in the Making of a British Colony. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017 Democratization and Human Security in Sierra Leone. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015 (with Marda Mustapha) Sierra Leone beyond the Lome Peace Accord, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010 (with Marda Mustapha) Refereed Journal Articles and Book Chapters “Freetown (Sierra Leone),” Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History, Oxford University Press (forthcoming) “Cloud on the Horizon: African Migration, Transnationalism, and Social Osmosis,” Insight Turkey, Vol. -
The Holy See
The Holy See PASTORAL JOURNEY TO BENIN, UGANDA AND KHARTOUM (SUDAN) OPENING SESSION OF THE COUNCIL OF THE GENERAL SECRETARIAT OF THE SYNOD OF BISHOPS FOR THE SPECIAL ASSEMBLY FOR AFRICA ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II Cathedral of Rubaga Archdiocese of Kampala (Uganda) Tuesday, 9 February 1993 Dear Brother Bishops, Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, 1. It is with "joi inspired by the Holy Spirit" that we gather in this Cathedral of the Archdiocese of Kampala for the opening session of the Council of the General Secretariat of the Synod of Bishops for the Special Assembly for Africa. This is the seventh meeting of the Council and the third to take place on this Continent. I offer cordial greetings to all its members and to the other Bishops who have joined us. This occasion has profound significance not only for the local Churches in Africa but also for the People of God throughout the world. Through my presence here I wish to support both what has already been accomplished and what will be achieved in the days ahead. Praying Vespers together we give visible expression to the bonds of communion which unite the See of Peter and the particular Churches on this Continent, and the reality of that collegialitas effectiva et affectiva gives intensity to our prayer for the African Bishops as they prepare with their flocks for the Special Synodal Assembly. With deep affection in our Lord Jesus Christ, I wish to greet the representatives of the priests, men 2 and women Religious, and seminarians of the Dioceses of Uganda who are with us this evening. -
The Athens of West Africa
AFRICAN STUDIES HISTORY, POLITICS, ECONOMICS, AND CULTURE Edited by Molefi Kete Asante Temple University A ROUTLEDGE SERIES AFRICAN STUDIES History, Politics, Economics, and Culture MOLEFI KETE ASANTE, General Editor KWAME NKRUMAH’S CONTRIBUTION TO PAN-AFRICANISM An Afrocentric Analysis D.Zizwe Poe NYANSAPO (THE WISDOM KNOT) Toward an African Philosophy of Education Kwadwo A.Okrah THE ATHENS OF WEST AFRICA A History of International Education at Fourah Bay College, Freetown, Sierra Leone Daniel J.Paracka, Jr. Routledge New York & London Published in 2003 by Routledge 29 West 35th Street New York, NY 10001 www.routledge-ny.com Published in Great Britain by Routledge 11 New Fetter Lane London EC4P 4EE www.routledge.co.uk This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005. “To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.” Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group Copyright © 2003 by Taylor & Francis Books, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Paracka, Daniel J. The Athens of West Africa: a history of international education at Fourah Bay College, Freetown, Sierra Leone/by Daniel J.Paracka Jr. p. cm.—(African studies) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-415-94795-2 (Print Edition) 1. -
Foreign Study Program in Comparative Education
Otterbein University Digital Commons @ Otterbein Program Planning and Preparations Sierra Leone / Stauffer Collection 1969 SLSC Course Description for Education 39 Special Problems in Education: Foreign Study Program in Comparative Education Otterbein University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.otterbein.edu/stauffer_plan Part of the Higher Education Commons, History Commons, and the International and Comparative Education Commons Recommended Citation Otterbein University, "SLSC Course Description for Education 39 Special Problems in Education: Foreign Study Program in Comparative Education" (1969). Program Planning and Preparations. 6. https://digitalcommons.otterbein.edu/stauffer_plan/6 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Sierra Leone / Stauffer Collection at Digital Commons @ Otterbein. It has been accepted for inclusion in Program Planning and Preparations by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Otterbein. For more information, please contact [email protected]. COURSE DESCRIPTION Department Education Date September 15, 1969 Name of Course Ed. 39 Special Problems in Education Foreign Study Program in Comparative Education Comparative Survey of Educational Systems - Fall Term - ½course Practicum - Winter Term - 3 course Research in Comparative Education - Spring Term - ½course The major objectives of the Foreign Study Program in Comparative Education are: 1. to provide an opportunity for fifteen students and one professor to spend a term abroad combining professional training with deep inter-cultural experiences; 2. to provide through direct experience an opportunity to develop an understanding of the culture, history, economic conditions, community life, and to help de velop an understanding of other people, to help them understand us as a nation, and to help us see our own country in new perspective; 3. -
Christian Higher Education in Africa Response
YALE DIVINITY SCHOOL LIBRARY Occasional Publication No. 26 To be Agents of a Life-giving Transformation: Christian Higher Education in Africa by Joel A. Carpenter Response by Andrew F. Walls NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT June 2019 1 The Occasional Publications series is produced by the Yale Divinity Library. This Day Lecture was delivered by Dr. Joel A. Carpenter on June 28, 2019 during the annual meeting of the Yale-Edinburgh Group on the History of the Missionary Movement and World Christianity. A Response was given by Dr. Andrew F. Walls. Both talks are included in this publication. The theme of the 2019 meeting was “Diversity and Difference in Custom, Belief, and Practice in the History of Missions and World Christianity.” Joel Carpenter is a professor of history and provost, emeritus, of Calvin University. Until recently he was the director of Calvin's Nagel Institute for the Study of World Christianity. Dr. Carpenter has published extensively in the field of American religious history, most notably Revive Us Again: The Reawakening of American Fundamentalism (Oxford, 1997). More recently he has been studying Christian movements in the global South and East. He has edited or co-edited five books in this field, most recently Christianity in India: Conversion, Community Development, and Religious Freedom (Fortress Press, 2018). Andrew Walls is Honorary Professor at the University of Edinburgh, Professor of the History of Mission at Liverpool Hope University, and Emeritus Professor at the Akrofi-Christaller Institute for Theology, Mission and Culture. Akropong, Ghana. He is also a co-founder of the Yale Edinburgh Group on the History of the Missionary Movement and World Christianity. -
The West Indian Mission to West Africa: the Rio Pongas Mission, 1850-1963
The West Indian Mission to West Africa: The Rio Pongas Mission, 1850-1963 by Bakary Gibba A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Department of History University of Toronto © Copyright by Bakary Gibba (2011) The West Indian Mission to West Africa: The Rio Pongas Mission, 1850-1963 Doctor of Philosophy, 2011 Bakary Gibba Department of History, University of Toronto Abstract This thesis investigates the efforts of the West Indian Church to establish and run a fascinating Mission in an area of West Africa already influenced by Islam or traditional religion. It focuses mainly on the Pongas Mission’s efforts to spread the Gospel but also discusses its missionary hierarchy during the formative years in the Pongas Country between 1855 and 1863, and the period between 1863 and 1873, when efforts were made to consolidate the Mission under black control and supervision. Between 1873 and 1900 when additional Sierra Leonean assistants were hired, relations between them and African-descended West Indian missionaries, as well as between these missionaries and their Eurafrican host chiefs, deteriorated. More efforts were made to consolidate the Pongas Mission amidst greater financial difficulties and increased French influence and restrictive measures against it between 1860 and 1935. These followed an earlier prejudiced policy in the Mission that was strongly influenced by the hierarchical nature of nineteenth-century Barbadian society, which was abandoned only after successive deaths -
Conference on Oral History in Tanzania Institute of African Studies
222 NOTES AND NEWS Origins and concept of Indirect Rule in British imperial policy (Dr. N. N. Egbuonu); The British Colonial Office approach to the Ashanti war of 1900 (S. C. Ukpabi); The background to the amalgamation of Nigeria in 1914 (Dr. A. O. Anjorin); Political awakening in the North: a reinterpretation (Dr. G. O. Olusanya); The early formative stage of Trade Unionism in Nigeria (E. O. Egboh). Conference on Oral History in Tanzania A CONFERENCE on Oral History in Tanzania was held on 8 and 9 November at the University College, Dar es Salaam. This was attended by several members of the college teaching staff and nine scholars currently engaged in field-work or writing-up, including university students from overseas, and local teachers and missionaries, for whom research is a part-time activity. Papers were also received from several scholars who have recently completed field-work in Tanzania. Of special interest were the reports on the history of the Pare (Mr. I. N. Kimambo), Shambala (Mr. S. Feierman), Kimbu (Fr. A. E. M. Shorter), and Hehe (Miss A. Redmayne). Several topics were suggested for future research: for example, the early history of Unyam- wezi and the histories of towns such as Ujiji and Tabora. Professor W. H. Whiteley stressed that oral historians and other field-workers, suitably briefed and armed with tape-recorders, could make valuable additions to knowledge of Bantu languages in Tanzania. The con- ference discussed the creation of' oral archives '; it seemed that these could serve the linguist and the college student, if not the research historian. -
ATTI Uganda INGL
1 2 INDEX Presentation p. 3 The Holy Father’s message to Catholic Action in Africa p. 5 IFCA’s message to the Holy Father p. 7 5th August 2006 Opening Eucharistic Celebration Homily p. 8 + Matthias Ssekamanya Welcoming address to IFCA delegates p. 12 Mr Gideon Obbo Lecture Catholic Action, a gift of the Holy Spirit to the Church p. 15 + Francesco Lambiasi 6th August 2006 The Uganda Martyrs are Christian role models for the laity p. 26 + Matthias Ssekamanya Homily p. 33 + Christophe Pierre IFCA, a place of meeting, exchange, solidarity p. 37 Oana Tuduce 7th August 2006 Homily p. 39 + Evariste Ngoyagoye Lecture The Catholic Laity in Uganda p. 40 Mr Gideon Obbo Lecture The Church cannot abandon man... The Social Teaching of the Church applied to the Great Lakes regions p. 51 Rev. Salvator Niciteretse Homily p. 63 + Francesco Lambiasi Final Statement p. 68 Programme p. 71 List of the participants p. 74 PRESENTATION IFCA’s work in Africa continues. The third step at continental level defi- netly indicates a sign of hope both for those who participated in the meeting, as well as for those who, through this report, share with us this fruitful expe- rience, which was held in Namugongo. Together with the lay martyrs from Uganda, we look forward towards the forthcoming Assembly of the African Synod of Bishops. In his message for the occasion, the Holy Father reminded us of the three key words - contemplation, communion and mission - which John Paul II entrusted to CA at Loreto in 2004. He also referred to the “programme” which Paul VI presented to CA laypeople, precisely in Namugongo in 1969 and which is still relevant today. -
Abstinence-Only HIV/AIDS Programs in Uganda
Human Rights Watch March 2005 Vol. 17, No. 4 (A) The Less They Know, the Better Abstinence-Only HIV/AIDS Programs in Uganda I. Summary ..................................................................................................................................... 1 II. Recommendations ................................................................................................................... 6 To the Government of Uganda.............................................................................................. 6 To the Government of the United States ............................................................................. 8 To the U.S. Congress ........................................................................................................... 8 To the Presidential Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) country team in Uganda ................................................................................................................... 10 To the Office of the Global AIDS coordinator (OGAC) of the U.S. government.......................................................................................................................... 11 To all other donors to Ugandan AIDS programs, including the Global Fund and U.N. agencies ................................................................................................................... 11 III. Methods................................................................................................................................. 12 IV. Background .......................................................................................................................... -
Catholic Church of Uganda
Special Issue October/Nov. 2012 Published by the Communications Department and printed by the Arua Diocese Printing Services, P.O. Box 454, Arua No. 127 CELEBRATING OUR HERITAGE A pastoral letter by the Catholic Bishops of Uganda on the occasion of the golden jubilee of Uganda’s Independence. (Abridged edition) Dear Brothers and Sisters, 1. This is the day the Lord has made; let us rejoice in it and be glad (Ps. 118:24). As believers in the one God Independence who is guiding the history of human- kind, of all nations and of each per- son, we greet you with this joyful ac- clamation from the liturgy of Easter, the day of the Resurrection of Jesus our Saviour. We repeat it with re- newed joy and gratitude, fifty years later, as we celebrate the Golden Ju- bilee of our beloved country, Uganda. We have so many reasons to be grate- ful to God who has walked with us throughout our long journey of histo- ry. 2. The celebration of fifty years of independence should not be simply an event but, rather, an opportunity for us to celebrate the Lord’s deliver- ance and providence (Ex.13:16). 50 Years 3. Through all this time, in the events of our history as a nation, God has led and guided us. in our country. Since independence, formity with a truly God-fearing na- the Church has not only grown in 4. It is in the context of our own Exo- tion. dus as a nation that we, your bishops, number but also in her commitment to the service of the entire country.