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  • Contributors

Craig Atwood holds the Charles D. Couch Chair in Moravian Theology and Ministry at Moravian Theological Seminary. He received his PhD in historical theology from Princeton Theological Seminary, and is the author of Theology of the Czech Brethren from Hus to Comenius (2009), Community of the Cross: Moravian Piety in Colonial Bethlehem (2004), and Always Reforming: A History of Christianity Since 1300 (2001).

Catherine Bancroft is a writer and independent scholar. She has an AB from Harvard and an MA in American literature from Princeton University, where she taught literature and writing. She has also taught English and history at the Winsor School, Germantown Friends School, and the Baldwin School. She has written two children's books, several essays, and was a freelance book reviewer for the Philadelphia Inquirer. She originally became interested in the Bethlehem School for Girls upon discovering that her great-great-great-grandmother had taught there in the early 1800s.

Markéta Křížová, Associate Professor of Ibero-American Studies of the Charles University in Prague, has written two books, La ciudad ideal en el desierto: Proyectos misionales de la Compaňía de Jesús y la Iglesia Morava en la América colonial (2002), and "The strength and sinews of this western world . . .": African slavery, American Colonies and the Effort for Reform of European Society in the Early Modern Era (2008). Her research focuses on early modern intellectual history, European overseas expansion, and cultural encounters and competitions taking place in America in the sixteenth to the nineteenth century. [End Page v]

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