Originally prior to the 18th century the inhabitants belonged to the Assyrian Church of the East, but gradually converted to Catholicism.
Perhaps the imbalance was caused by the inhabitants collecting and converting dark matter for their own use.
After a visit by George Fox in 1657, many inhabitants of Dolgellau converted to Quakerism.
It is around this time that the inhabitants of the large and isolated village of Sāţ converted to the Catholicism in their entirety.
At this time, the inhabitants of Maiuma converted to Christianity en masse.
It was a Jewish village whose inhabitants probably converted to Islam by the end of the early Islamic Arab period (7th-10th centuries) in Palestine.
A Janissary who was taken from the village as a boy is sent to force the reluctant inhabitants to convert.
Because the inhabitants converted to Christianity, it cannot be determined whether or not the residents were of Subanen heritage.
It appears that many Christian Albanian inhabitants converted directly to Islam, rather than being replaced by Muslims from outside Kosovo.
He built a chapel of bark in 1698, and despite reservations from medicine men, converted most inhabitants to the Roman Catholic religion.