The World's Christians. Douglas Jacobsen

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di Sant’Ignazio di Loyola in Campo Marzio, a Baroque style Catholic church in Rome built in the early 1600s Figure 8.4 Diagram displaying the race‐based hierarchy of social and spiritual status that existed in colonial Latin American society Figure 8.5 João I, the first Christian king of the Congo, who ruled from 1470 to 1509 Figure 8.6 Timeline of some of the religious wars resulting from the Protestant Revolution and of three significant peace agreements Figure 8.7 Global map of the Cold War, c. 1980 Figure 8.8 Changing demographics of the world Christian movement from 1900 to 2050 Figure III.1 Nine cultural‐geographic mega‐regions of the world Figure III.2 Where the world’s Christians live Figure 9.1 The Middle East and North Africa: global location and population information Figure 9.2 Regional map of the Middle East and North Africa Figure 9.3 Map showing overlap of Muslim, Arab, and formerly Ottoman territory in the Middle East and North Africa Figure 9.4 Map showing nineteenth‐ and twentieth‐century European colonization of the Middle East and North Africa Figure 9.5 Christian profile of the Middle East and North Africa Figure 9.6 Icon of the Christian martyrs killed on a beach in Libya in 2015 portrayed as saints Figure 9.7 Coptic Pope Tawadros II appearing in church with Egyptian President al‐Sisi in January 2018 Figure 9.8 Survivors of the Armenian genocide pose with a pyramid of skulls of those who died Figure 10.1 Eastern Europe: global location and population information Figure 10.2 Regional map of Eastern Europe Figure 10.3 Christian profile of Eastern Europe, showing approximate percentage of the region’s total Christian population in each of the four Christian mega‐traditions Figure 10.4 Three religious sub‐regions in Eastern Europe Figure 10.5 The Church of St. Sava dwarfs nearby buildings in Belgrade, Serbia Figure 10.6 Icon of the Black Madonna of Czestochowa Figure 10.7 The Lord’s Ark Catholic Church (Nowa Huta, Poland) Figure 10.8 Map of Poland showing area of main support for the Law and Justice Party and areas voting to be “LGBT‐free” zones Figure 10.9 Cathedral of Christ the Savior being demolished by Stalin in December 1931 and reconstructed in 2000 Figure 10.10 Current cultural and political map of Ukraine showing areas of Russian control and influence Figure 11.1 Central and South Asia: global location and population information Figure 11.2 Regional map of Central and South Asia Figure 11.3 Christian profile of Central and South Asia showing approximate percentage of the region’s Christian population in each of the four Christian mega‐traditions Figure 11.4 Map showing areas in Central and South Asia where Christians are more densely clustered Figure 11.5 Map of the seven eastern states of India showing percentage of the population that is Christian Figure 11.6 Protesters in Pakistan in 2018 after the acquittal of Aasia Bibi, a Christian woman who had been accused of breaking the nation’s law against blasphemy Figure 11.7 Chart showing divisions of the original St. Thomas Christian community of India into the seven currently existing denominations that claim this heritage Figure 11.8 Inside of Mother Teresa’s Home for the Dying in Kolkata, India Figure 12.1 Western Europe: global location and population information Figure 12.2 Regional map of Western Europe Figure 12.3 Christian profile of Western Europe showing approximate percentage of the region’s total Christian population represented by each of the four Christian mega‐traditions Figure 12.4 Distribution of Christian populations in Western Europe Figure 12.5 Anticlerical Republicans “execute” a statue of the Sacred Heart of Jesus at Cerro de los Angeles during the Spanish Civil War Figure 12.6

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