Title
The letters of Johann Martin Boltzius, Lutheran pastor in Ebenezer, Georgia : German pietism in colonial America, 1733-1765
Files
Description
These letters, most previously unavailable, illustrate the regular correspondence of Johann Martin Boltzius with supporters and benefactors in Europe. The volume will interest scholars of religion, social historians, and cultural studies. In his regular correspondence with supporters and benefactors in Europe, Johann Martin Boltzius, the principal pastor and leader of the Salzburger exiles who settled in the community of Ebenezer in colonial Georgia, provided commentary and insight on religious, economic, political and social matters that extended beyond Ebenezer to include the rest of Georgia, the religious life of other religious communities in the American South and in Pennsylvania. In response to letters from England and Germany, Boltzius also commented on circumstances in Europe, including the Seven Years War and the mission work of the Halle Orphan House, founded by the German Pietist, August Hermann Francke and a primary sponsor of the Boltzius and Ebenezer. These letters report news and impressions concerning a number of leading religious and political figures known to Boltzius in the American colonial context, including James Oglethorpe, John Wesley, Nikolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf, and Henry Meichior Muhlenberg. Boltzius also offers commentary on slavery, mission work among Native Americans, The War of Jenkin's Ear, the French and Indian War, and most significantly, on the particular circumstances of Ebenezer as an immigrant community.
ISBN
978-0773447592
Publication Date
2009
Publisher
Edwin Mellen Press
City
Lewiston, NY
Disciplines
Religion | United States History
Recommended Citation
Kleckley, Russell, "The letters of Johann Martin Boltzius, Lutheran pastor in Ebenezer, Georgia : German pietism in colonial America, 1733-1765" (2009). Faculty Bookshelf. 36.
https://idun.augsburg.edu/monographs/36