Products & Servicescrack
Alphabetical Listing
Forms and Documents
Interactive
Resources & Training
Church Health
Leadership Development
Reaching Out
Finance
Kindred Productions
Publications
Theology
Tools for the local church
Christian Press
Centre for Mennonite Brethren Studies
Mennonitische Rundschau Index
Canadian Conference of MB Churches
General Conference of MB Churches
John A. Toews Library
Katie Peters Genealogical Collection
MB Provincial Conferences and Churches
Periodicals and newspapers
Other Mennonite and MB Organizations
About the Centre for MB Studies
Links to Related Sites
Archival Holdings
Theological Resources
Text To Terabyte Project
Mennonite Mirror
Festival Quarterly
Odessaer Zeitung
Mennonite Reporter
PrintShareText Size:Small TextMedium TextLarge Text
 

Abraham Unger (1825–1880)

[ca. 1880], [194-?],[ca. 1990],1996.
1 folder of textual records and two black and white photographs.

Biographical sketch

Abraham Unger was born January 6, 1825 to Heinrich Peter Unger (1786–1855) and his second wife Margaretha Sawatzky (1795-1871). Abraham Unger was elected elder of the Einlage Mennonite congregation in the Chortitza colony, south Russia in 1859/1860. He was at the forefront of the movement which led to the formation of the Mennonite Brethren church. On March 4, 1862 he was baptised by immersion which set a precedent for all others wanting to join the church. He was in dialogue with J.G. Oncken, a Baptist preacher in Hamburg. Under Unger’s influence immersion became the only acceptable mode of baptism for the Mennonite Brethren church. Communion was extended only to those who had been baptised in this fashion.

Abraham Unger married Katharina Martens (ca. 1862- ) and they had four children together.

His leadership in the church was not without controversy. There always was tension between him and other leaders in the congregation. He retired from his position as elder in 1876, but remained one of the most influential people of the congregation.

Scope and content

The material in this collection consists of photographs of Abraham Unger and his family, genealogical charts and a report from Unger published in 1870.

Custodial history

This collection was begun by the Centre as various people deposited items related to Abraham Unger. The photographs were lent to the centre by Wendy Dueck and her daughter Naomi of Kleefeld, Manitoba in 1992, to make copies. A photocopy was taken of the larger picture of the sons of Abraham Unger. The portraits of Unger and his wife were photographed and placed in the photograph collection. The genealogical charts were originally made by Irmgard Schroeder and Richard Thiessen and deposited in 1992. The most recent item added to the collection came from James Urry of New Zealand consisting of an 1870 report by Unger which was transcribed and published in an 1996 journal article.

Notes


File list

Volume 1078

  1. Photocopy of a photograph of Abraham Unger’s sons, Einlage Russia. – [ca. 1880].
  2. Copy of genealogical chart of Abraham Unger by Irmgard Schroeder. – [194-?].
  3. Copy of genealogical chart of Abraham Unger by Richard Thiessen. – [ca. 1990].
  4. Transcription of: Unger, “Communication from Rev. Unger in S. Russia”, in, The Freeman: A Journal of Religion, Literature, Social Science and Politics, February 25th 1870, pp.147 – 148. – 1996.
  5. Pictures and negatives of Abraham Unger and his wife, originally taken in ca. 1870. – 1996.

CDS.