David Livingstone - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David Livingstone (19 March 1813–1 May 1873) was a Scottish Congregationalist pioneer medical missionary with the London Missionary Society and explorer in Africa. He was the first European to see th...
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His eyes were fastened upon the speaker, Robert Moffatt, with his flowing white beard and his vehement concern for Africa's perishing millions. The depths of his soul rose up to meet the challenge of the missionary, especially that contained in one sentence of twenty words.
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David Livingstone (1813-1873), Scottish missionary and explorer in Africa, was born on the 19th of March 1813, at the village of Blantyre Works, in Lanarkshire, Scotland. David was the second child of his parents, Neil Livingston (for so he spelled his name;
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Missionary work in Africa ... The two explorers finally met on November 10, 1871 in Ujiji in the present-day Tanzania. As the story goes, Stanley's first words, when approaching the only other white man in this part of Africa, was: "Dr. Livingstone, I presume?
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During the European exploration and colonization of Africa during the 19th century many explorers became celebrities. One in particular, Dr. David Livingstone, became synonymous with the ... Another pattern she notes is how Livingstone's missionary and exploratory work was subsumed behind a Boys Own adventure narrative.
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Amazon.com: Dr. Livingstone, I Presume?: Missionaries, Journalists,
Price:  $22.95
Clare Pettitt's vivid account of the search for the British missionary, Dr. David Livingstone and the encounter deep in the heart of Africa with the journalist Henry Stanley is a splendid piece of historical reconstruction.
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Dr. David Livingstone, the most famous Scottish explorer, who revealed Africa to nineteenth-century Europe, was also a missionary forerunner of modern Christianity in Africa.
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Perhaps the greatest missionary of the last 500 years--undoubtedly the best known--is a man who has been known as the "apostle of Africa," David Livingstone. ... His favorite was about Dr. Charles Gutzlaff, a missionary to China who became David's boyhood hero. As he grew older, he discovered that Gutzlaff, himself,
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BY DAVID LIVINGSTONE: Three books highlight his voluminous writings:; Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa. ... Campbell, R. J., Livingstone. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1929. Carruthers, Vincent, The Wildlife of Southern Africa. PB; Casada, James A., Dr. David Livingstone and Sir...
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The opium war prevented Livingstone from going to China, and meeting Dr. Robert Moffat, the South African missionary, ... On 31 July 1841 he arrived by wagon at Kuruman, in the Bechuana country, the most northerly station of the society in South Africa, and the usual residence of Dr. Moffat, who was still absent in England;
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