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Introduction

Aerodrome

Campus

City Center

Commercial Hub

Diplomatic Quarter

Encampment

Entertainment Complex

Government Plaza

Harbor

Holy Site

Cathedral

Dar-e Mehr

Gurdwara

Meeting House

Mosque

Pagoda

Prasat

Shrine

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Wat

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Preserve

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Meeting House
Historical Context
In opposition to the magnificent cathedrals and churches of the Catholic Church, the Protestants thought worship should be serious and undistracted by art. Hence some Congregationalists worshipped in meeting houses - plain, unadorned buildings built from local resources (usually wood and stone). In the New World, the social and cultural center for most of the Protestant colonies was the meeting house, which served as both a place of worship and of public discourse for the settlers. For many early Quaker, Mennonite, Unitarian, Puritan, Baptist and other pious types, the meeting house also served as the de facto town hall, where political debates, votes and decisions were conducted. All along the Atlantic coast colonies, the first public building to go up was typically the meeting house. Once the separation of church and state became a widespread principal in the new United States, those meeting houses were all converted into town halls.
PortraitSquare
icon_building_meeting_house

Traits

Unique To
icon_belief_meeting_house
Meeting House
+3 Faith
+2 Production
+1 Citizen slot

Requirements

District
icon_district_holy_site
Holy Site
Building
icon_building_temple
Temple
Production Cost
Base Cost: 190 Production
Purchase Cost
Base Cost: 380 Faith
PortraitSquare
icon_building_meeting_house
Historical Context
In opposition to the magnificent cathedrals and churches of the Catholic Church, the Protestants thought worship should be serious and undistracted by art. Hence some Congregationalists worshipped in meeting houses - plain, unadorned buildings built from local resources (usually wood and stone). In the New World, the social and cultural center for most of the Protestant colonies was the meeting house, which served as both a place of worship and of public discourse for the settlers. For many early Quaker, Mennonite, Unitarian, Puritan, Baptist and other pious types, the meeting house also served as the de facto town hall, where political debates, votes and decisions were conducted. All along the Atlantic coast colonies, the first public building to go up was typically the meeting house. Once the separation of church and state became a widespread principal in the new United States, those meeting houses were all converted into town halls.

Traits

Unique To
icon_belief_meeting_house
Meeting House
+3 Faith
+2 Production
+1 Citizen slot

Requirements

District
icon_district_holy_site
Holy Site
Building
icon_building_temple
Temple
Production Cost
Base Cost: 190 Production
Purchase Cost
Base Cost: 380 Faith
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