Who is what is called "civilians". Without sufficient insight and research, you may think that Amish people and Mennonites are essentially exchanging terms for the same group. There is no doubt that this assumption is an erroneous view. It is expressed in very different ways, but both promise nonviolence and a simple life desire. In fact, Amish was separated from the Mennonite and was thought to be too free to support Amish. Although there are many similarities between two different factions, Amish and Mennonite contradict certain beliefs and values of modern technology, clothing, urban civilization, and punishment.
In Europe there is no division between Old Order Amish and Amish Mennonite, like European Amish Mennonite, European Amish was assimilated into the mainstream of Mennonite in the latter part of the 19th century and the first decades of the 20th century . After all, they removed the word "Amish" from the congregation's name and lost Amish's identity and culture. The last European Amish congregation joined the Mennonite in Ikheim in 1937 and today it is part of the Palatinate Zweibrucken.
At the beginning of the 18th century, many Amish and Mennonites emigrated to Pennsylvania for various reasons. Today, Old Order Amish, New Order Amish, Old Beachy Amish will continue to talk about Pennsylvania · German, also known as "Pennsylvania Dutch", but Adam and Allen County in Indiana use two different Alemannic dialects. . As of 2000, more than 165,000 Old Order Amish lived in the United States and around 1,500 lived in Canada. The 2008 survey showed that the number had increased to 227,000 people and in 2010 the population has increased by 10% in the past two years, reaching 249,000 and increasing to the west side . It flows. Most Amish continue to have 6 to 7 children, but in the 20th century the mortality rate of infants and pregnant women decreased sharply. Between 1992 and 2017, the population of Amish increased by 149% and the population of the United States increased by 23%.
Prior to 1800, a community of Amish, Mennonite, Schwarzner brothers and Moravian people was formed and still exists today. Most of the old order amish and old order mennonite speak German dialect including Pennsylvania · Germany, which is still informally known as Pennsylvania Dutch. Amish originally came from South Germany and Switzerland and arrived in Pennsylvania early in the 18th century. Amish immigrants to America peaked from 1727 to 1770. For Amish immigrants to the State of Pennsylvania, freedom of religion may be the most pressing cause, and Pennsylvania is known as a shelter for persecuted religious groups.
The group born of the old order movement in the second half of the nineteenth century shared the Amish and German tradition and often held similar clothing features. These old order groups include Old Order Mennonites, different subgroups of traditional Schwarzenau Brethren, and Old Order River Brethren. Noah Hoover Old Order Mennonite is very similar in appearance to the Old Order Amish (Dress, Beard, Horse, Carriage, Extreme Restriction on Contemporary Technology, Pennsylvania German). Man