Hiram Bingham I (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Hiram Bingham I" in English language version.

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  • "Congregational Necrology". The Congregational quarterly. Vol. 13. American Congregational Association. 1871. pp. 593–596.
  • Lucy Goodale Thurston (1872). Life and Times of Mrs. Lucy G. Thurston: Wife of Rev. Asa Thurston, Pioneer Missionary to the Sandwich Islands. reprinted by Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007. ISBN 978-1-4325-4547-5.
  • Fortune, Kate (January 2000). "History: Religion and Christianity: Missionary biographies". In Lal, Brij V.; Fortune, Kate (eds.). The Pacific Islands: An Encyclopedia. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press (published 2000). p. 188. ISBN 9780824822651. Retrieved 9 May 2022. Bingham was content to accept [the requests for baptism] as a victory for Christianity, and to bear the brunt of the opposition of the foreign community to subsequent royal bans on prostitution, gambling and drunkenness.
  • David Stowe (1999). "Bingham, Hiram". In Gerald H. Anderson (ed.). Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions. William B. Eerdmans Publishing. pp. 63–64. ISBN 978-0-8028-4680-8.
  • Hiram Bingham I (1855) [1848]. A Residence of Twenty-one Years in the Sandwich Islands (Third ed.). H.D. Goodwin.

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  • Compare: Alfred L. Brophy, "How Missionaries Thought: About Property Law, For Instance", Hawaii Law Review (2008) 30: 373-99. - "Not surprisingly, Bingham, because he was a missionary, focused on the goal of conversion to Christianity and 'civilization.' What did that mean? What was the role of property and the 'rule of law' in 'civilization'? In part it meant respect for property rights. There were in Bingham's short recitation of the history of the islands echoes of celebration of property rights. He portrayed land ownership as a feudal system—which in the early nineteenth century was viewed with universal disdain in the United States—and suggested that such patterns of ownership, and lack of the rule of law more generally, left the people without an incentive to develop economically [...]."

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