Bahai Library Online

The list below may be incomplete, as many older documents are
incompletely tagged. Please see the list and email us to help.

Tag: "Fanny Knobloch"

tag name Fanny Knobloch type: People
web link bahai-library.com/tags/Fanny_Knobloch
bahaidata.org Q2021   ·   Links to Bahá'í wikis (bahai9, bahaipedia, etc.)

"Fanny Knobloch" has been tagged in:

5 results from the Main Catalog

3 results from the Chronology

from the main catalog (5 results; collapse)

sorted by  
  1. 1995. Knobloch, Fanny. Robert Stockman. Encyclopedia.
  2. 1989. Pictorial History of the Bahá'í Faith in South Africa, 1911 to 1989, A. Various, Lowell Johnson, Susan Ford, Peter Goodman. Documents the growth of the South African Bahá’í community, highlighting its multiracial community life and efforts to promote unity and peace during the apartheid era up to 1989. Books.
  3. 1952. In Memoriam. Author unknown. Fannie Lesch, Walter Olitzki, Fanny Knobloch, Marta Brauns-Forel, Fred Mortensen, Haj Taha El-Hamamsi, Friedrich Schweizer, John David Bosch, Ali Saboor, Orcella Rexford, Abu'l-Fetouh Battah, Ali Said Eddin, Mumammad-Taqi Isfahini, Haji Mahmud Qassabchi. Biographies.
  4. 1908-11. Flowers Culled from the Rose Garden of Acca. Ida A. Finch, Fanny Alma Knobloch, Alma S. Knobloch. Lengthy notes of talks with three visitors, taken November 7-13, 1908. Pilgrims.
  5. 1898-1958. Pilgrim Accounts Collection: Compilation of 253 Pilgrims Notes. Various. Adaptation of an archive of 253 accounts. Most of these are already online at this site, in either older or newer versions. None of the md/pdf files have been changed from the github version (only file-names edited), but some HTML files have been edited. Pilgrims.

from the Chronology (3 results; collapse)

  1. 1920-00-00 — Fanny Knobloch arrived in Mozambique, the first Bahá'í to visit this country. She gave some `drawing room talks' at the mansion of the Portuguese Governor-General and spoke at various clubs. [BW2p40]
  2. 1920-07-00
      Fanny Knobloch, the first Bahá'í teacher in South Africa, arrived in Cape Town. She pioneered to South Africa from 1920 to 1929 and was assisted occasionally by her sister, Pauling Hannen and, Martha Root in late 1924. .
    • In her first week she met Miss Busby who within a very short time is the first person to become a Bahá'í in South Africa. [BW2:40; PHBF8; Progress of the Bahá'í Faith in South Africa since 1911; MR197]
  3. 1925-00-00 — Fanny Knobloch and her sister Pauline Hannen were the first Bahá'ís to visit Southern Rhodesia.
 
  • search for parts of tags or alterate spellings
  • 2 characters minimum, parts separated by spaces
  • multiple keywords allowed, e.g. "Madrid Paris Seattle"
  • see also multiple tag search

Overview & core concepts

Principles, teachings
Central Figures
Institute process
Practices
Terminology
Virtues

Comparative religion

Prophets, Manifestations
Religion, general
Religions, Asian
Religions, Middle Eastern
Religions, other

Texts & interpretation

Writings: general
Writings of Bahá'u'lláh
Writings of the Báb
Writings of Abdu'l-Bahá
Metaphors and allegories
Words and phrases

Society & knowledge

Arts
Philosophy
Science

Other

Administration
BWC institutions
Calendar
Conferences
Dates
Film
Geographic locations
Hands of the Cause
Holy places, sites
Mashriqu'l-Adhkár
Miscellaneous
Organizations, Bahá'í

Other

Organizations, Other
People
Persecution
Plans
Publications
Publishing
Rulers
Schools, education
Shoghi Effendi
Translation, languages
Universal House of Justice
Universities

All tags Wiki tags Inventory tags and subjects
home divider sitemap divider series divider chronology
search:   author divider title divider date divider tags
adv. search divider languages divider inventory
bibliography divider abbreviations divider links
about divider contact divider RSS divider new
smaller fontbigger font