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The Norwegian Lutheran Memorial Church of Minneapolis (Norwegian Den Norske Lutherske Mindekirke), better known as Mindekirken, is a Lutheran church in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. It is one of two American churches still using Norwegian as a primary liturgical language, the other being Minnekirken in Chicago. [1]
Norwegian Lutheran Memorial Church (Norwegian: Den Norske Lutherske Minnekirke), also known as Minnekirken, is a Lutheran church in Chicago, Illinois. It is one of two American churches still using Norwegian as a primary liturgical language, the other being Mindekirken in Minneapolis, Minnesota .
The United Norwegian Lutheran Church of America was the result of the union formed in 1890 between the Norwegian Augustana Synod, the Conference of the Norwegian-Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church of America, and the Anti-Missourian Brotherhood which had dated from 1887. Altar at Mindekirken in Minneapolis
Norway Lutheran Church, ( Saint Paul, Minnesota) Zion Lutheran Church (Shelly, Minnesota) Norwegian Methodist Episcopal Church (Brooklyn, New York) Norwegian Seamen's Church, New York, (Manhattan, New York) Norway Lutheran Church and Cemetery, (Denbigh, North Dakota) Odalen Lutherske Kirke, (Edinburg, North Dakota) Viking Lutheran Church ...
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All These Lutherans (Minneapolis, MN: Augburg Publishing House, 1986) Nelson, E. Clifford, and Fevold, Eugene L. The Lutheran Church among Norwegian-Americans: a history of the Evangelical Lutheran Church (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1960) Wolf, Edmund Jacob.
First Congregational Church (Minneapolis, Minnesota) G. Gethsemane Episcopal Church (Minneapolis, Minnesota) ... Norwegian Lutheran Memorial Church (Minneapolis) R ...
Norsemen left the area that is now the modern state of Norway during the Viking Age expansion, with results including the settlement of Iceland and the conquest of Normandy. [1] In the 1500s and 1600s there was a small scattering of Norwegian people and culture as Norwegian tradesmen moved along the routes of the timber trade. [2]