Item Detail
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31012
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0
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18
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English
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Missionaries on Imperial Frontlines: Religious Geopolitics and Latter-day Saints during the Samoan Civil Wars
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The Journal of Mormon History
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2019
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45
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3
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Illinois
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University of Illinois Press
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83-110
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The Second Samoan Civil War intensified in 1899, and with this intensity were Latter-day Saint missionaries who traveled, looking to teach people about their Church and beliefs. The three imperial powers - England, Germany, and the United States sought political control of Samoa at this time, and many missionaries saw and lived through this contention.
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Contests over Latter-day Space : Mormonism's Role within Evangelical Geopolitics as seen through Last-dys Novels
'Faithful, Good, Virtuous, True' : Pioneers in the Philippines
God and the People : Theodemocracy in Nineteenth-Century Mormonism
Looking West : Mormonism and the Pacific World
Looking West : Mormonism and the Pacific World
Mamona and the Mau : Latter-day Saints Amidst Resistance in Colonial Samoa
Mormon Beginnings in Samoa : Kimo Belio, Samuela Manoa, and Walter Murray Gibson
Mormonism in Transition : A History of the Latter-day Saints, 1890-1930
Mormonism's Raveling and Unraveling of a Geopolitical Thread
Samoa Apia Mission History, 1888-1983
Sauniatu, Western Samoa : A Special Purpose Village, 1904-1934
Shifting Ground and the Third Transformation of Mormonism
The Expanded Samoan Mission History, 1888-1900, Vol. 1
"The Little Head Stones Became Monuments" : Death in the Early Samoan Mission and the Creation of the Fagali'i Cemetary
The Metamorphosis of the Kingdom of God : Toward a Reinterpretation of Mormon History
The Mormon Church and the Spanish-American War : An End to Selective Pacifism
The Mormon Nation and the American Empire
Unto the Islands of the Sea : A History of the Latter-day Saints in the Pacific