The Amish are a Christian church that traces its roots to the Protestant Reformation in sixteenth-century Europe. Amish people accept basic Christian beliefs but also have some special interpretations and emphases that have emerged throughout their history.

The Amish migrated from Europe to North America in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Today they live in 638 geographical settlements in 32 states, four Canadian provinces, and the South American country of Bolivia. (None remain in Europe.) Their population (adults and children) totals approximately 384,380. Their unique practices make the Amish one of North America’s most interesting and colorful religious subcultures.

Although all Amish people share certain common beliefs and practices, they are not one homogeneous group. Some forty different Amish affiliations, or tribes, have different names, different types of dress, colors of buggies, rules about technology, and restrictions on participating in American society. Regulations are approved and interpreted by local congregations. This means that there are hundreds of different ways of being Amish.