Difference between revisions of "Baraga Homestead"
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* [http://www.rutars.net/sr_01_stefan_rutar/sr_2400_kultzadeve/sr_2416_fridbaraga/sr_241604_fibkatolik/index.htm Frederic Baraga: Katolik, Masinakisan (Michigan), 1846], integral digitalised book in Ojibwe language | * [http://www.rutars.net/sr_01_stefan_rutar/sr_2400_kultzadeve/sr_2416_fridbaraga/sr_241604_fibkatolik/index.htm Frederic Baraga: Katolik, Masinakisan (Michigan), 1846], integral digitalised book in Ojibwe language | ||
* [http://www.bishopbaraga.org/ Bishop Baraga Association] | * [http://www.bishopbaraga.org/ Bishop Baraga Association] | ||
+ | *[http://www.mlive.com/news/grand-rapids/index.ssf/2012/07/bishop_baraga_led_a_difficult.html# Sculpture of Frederic Baraga, erected in Grand Rapids] (2012) | ||
[[Category:Museum collections]] | [[Category:Museum collections]] |
Revision as of 07:06, 26 July 2012
Baraga worked among the fur-traders and the Ottawa and, later, Ojibwe Indians from 1831 till his death and wrote a catechism in Ojibwe language as well as guide to its grammar and a dictionary (still in use today). A county and a town in the state of Michigan (USA) have been named after the bishop.
See also
External links
- Dobrnič Cultural and Tourist Association web page
- Friderik Irenej Baraga on Wikipedia
- Baraga's biography on Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
- Frederic Baraga: Katolik, Masinakisan (Michigan), 1846, integral digitalised book in Ojibwe language
- Bishop Baraga Association
- Sculpture of Frederic Baraga, erected in Grand Rapids (2012)