List of Kingdom Baptist settlements

Revision as of 18:41, 11 April 2024 by SMK (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{wip}} This is a '''List of Kingdom Baptist settlements''' that were established and inhabited by members of the Baptist Church of the Kingdom. A series of settlements have been established since the Kingdom Baptists emigrated to Wallenland with 32 settlements founded by the church. These towns and places have been named after places and people in the Bible, the Book of Malaika and the Book of Mwili, after church leaders and prominent clergy, or after elements of th...")
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This is a List of Kingdom Baptist settlements that were established and inhabited by members of the Baptist Church of the Kingdom. A series of settlements have been established since the Kingdom Baptists emigrated to Wallenland with 32 settlements founded by the church. These towns and places have been named after places and people in the Bible, the Book of Malaika and the Book of Mwili, after church leaders and prominent clergy, or after elements of the church's history.

The first settlements of the church were in Unified Sera but the settlers were driven off by the locals. However, the church remained in Unified Sera as Amani Al-Kito believed that the persecution was a test by God for the coming days but after his death and a four year-long succession crisis, Kwame Al-Kito relocated to the outskirts of Fellhaven and began trading with the locals to fund the church's migration, though some resorted to scamming and burglary which resulted in several lynchings, yet funding was successful with the church departing from Fellhaven in December, 1889.

Settlements

Edeni Mpya

Edeni Mpya, South Éklopājápa was founded in 1897 by Paulo Moto and his ward, naming it after the biblical Garden of Eden from the area's idyll and fertile soil.

Kambi ya Kwanza

Kambi ya Kwanza, North Éklopājápa was founded in 1890 as the first settlement of the church following their emigration though it would be abandoned in 1893 after an outbreak of ebola and raids by the local Catholics. The site would remain abandoned until 1900 when Musa Ndegwa's ward sought to preserve the church's first steps in Wallenland and use Kambi ya Kwanza as a missionary's town.

Kambi ya Pili

Kilima cha Haruni

Kisiwa cha Amani

Mahali pa Malaika

Mahali pa Manabii

Mahali pa Nyota

Mkono wa Hasira

Mkono wa Hasira, North Éklopājápa was originally founded in 1873 as abc (In English: ) by a mining expedition. By 1877 had a population of 247, a paper mill, a post office, two saloons, two churches, and three general stores but in 1893, a cohort of three gangs attacked ...