Item Detail
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17197
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5
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8
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English
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Creating the Sacred Space of Zion
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Journal of Mormon History
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Spring 2005
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31
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1
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Salt Lake City, UT
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Mormon History Association
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1-30
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This paper examines the environment of religious communities which historically have characterized the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Distinctive architecture and city planning reflects the values of the religious movement. This paper provides a larger context in which to view the relationships between religion, space, and society in specific LDS communities or in particular architectural undertakings, such as temples.
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A Peculiar People : Anti-Mormonism and the Making of Religion in Nineteenth-Century America
Eternity in the Ether
The Natural World and the Establishment of Zion, 1831-1833
The Sanctification of Mormonism's Historical Geography
The State of Deseret : The Creation of the Mormon Landscape in the Western U.S. -
History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Period II : From the Manuscript History of Brigham Young and Other Original Documents
Homeward to Zion : The Mormon Migration from Scandinavia
Making Space for the Mormons : Ideas of Sacred Geography in Joseph Smith's America
Mormonism : The Story of a New Religious Tradition
Religious Outsiders and the Making of Americans
The Development of the Concept of Zion in Mormon Theology
The Mormon Ideology of Place : Cosmic Symbolism of the City of Zion, 1830-1846
The Perception of Sacred Space : The Case of Utah and Other Sacred Places in Mormondom