Difference between revisions of "Baraga Homestead"
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− | The [[Baraga Collection]] is dedicated to bishop, missionary, and linguist [[Friderik Irenej Baraga]] (1797–1868), and is arranged in two rooms of his birthplace, a manor in Mala vas near Trebnje. The collection consists of the Baraga memorial room, which exhibits personal belongings, and a room presenting his missionary activities among the native peoples of North America. The collection is managed by the Archbishop's Ordinariate in Ljubljana. Part of his collection, however, is on display at the [[Slovene Ethnographic Museum]] and represents the oldest non-European contribution to the museum (donated by the missionary in 1837). | + | The [[Baraga Collection]] is dedicated to bishop, missionary, and linguist [[Friderik Irenej Baraga]] (1797–1868), and is arranged in two rooms of his birthplace, a manor in Mala vas, a village near [[Trebnje Municipality|Trebnje]] in the Dolenjska region. The collection consists of the Baraga memorial room, which exhibits personal belongings, and a room presenting his missionary activities among the native peoples of North America. The collection is managed by the Archbishop's Ordinariate in Ljubljana. Part of his collection, however, is on display at the [[Slovene Ethnographic Museum]] and represents the oldest non-European contribution to the museum (donated by the missionary in 1837). |
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− | 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 its grammar and dictionary (still in use today). A county and a town in Michigan (USA) have been named after the bishop. | + | 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== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 12:15, 14 May 2010
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.