Confucius

Confucius, the Latin form of the name of the great sage of China, Kung Futsze, and the founder of a religion which is based on the worship and practice of morality as exemplified in the lives and teachings of the wise men who have gone before, and who, as he conceived, have made the world what it is, and have left it to posterity to build upon the same basis; while he lived he was held in greater and greater honour by multitudes of disciples, till on his death he became an object of worship, and even his descendants came to be regarded as a kind of sacred caste; he flourished about 550 B.C.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Confessions of St. Augustine * Congé d'élire
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Condillac, Étienne Bonnot
Conditional Immortality
Condorcet, Marquis de
Condottie`ri
Confederate States
Confederation of the Rhine
Conference
Confessions of Faith
Confessions of Rousseau
Confessions of St. Augustine
Confucius
Congé d'élire
Congo
Congo, French
Congo Free State
Congregationalism
Congress
Congress
Congreve, Richard
Congreve, William
Congreve, Sir William