DMcCunney wrote:Louis R wrote:IIRC, Himself has said that there wasn't anybody around to watch. Zion exists because of the Temple.
Hmmm. I missed that. Thanks.
It would remove a potential complication.
The Zion Enclave existed, but that woiuldn't be the same thing, or in the same location.
Louis R wrote:I think it was the same location [again, Himself said something about this], but the inhabitants were all command crew. It wouldn't have been until after Chihiro built the temple that colonists were brought in to run the bureaucracy centred on it. And I'm not sure how much of that was Chihiro implementing Langhorne's original intention early and how much was his own design.
Hmmmm.
Well, okay. According to Safehold legend, the Temple was built on the site where Langhorne's HQ was before Kau Yung nuked it, and the location was in part emphasizing the triumph of the Church over the minions of Shan Wei. ("Her follower Kau Yung destroyed Langhorne's original headquarters, but we have raised something much larger and grander to replace it!"
The Zion Enclave would have been in the same general area, but I don't see colonists and command crew living side by side.
An interesting question would be the rate of population growth. The colonists were encouraged to be fruitful and multiply, so a city founded as essentially an adjunct to the Temple would get residents in reasonably short order.
I have no idea how much of that was Langhorne's original plan and how much was Chihiro's modification either.
I suspect at least some of it was Langhorne. Given winter conditions in Zion, it's a dandy place for angels who won't care about the climate as an Olympus like abode, physically on Safehold but largely inaccessible by mere mortals. But in that case, why have one of the original colonist enclaves where Adams and Eves awoke there at all? If the goal was maximum survival of awakened colonists, you would expect better climate to be a selector on where to put them.
Zion was the original seat of government for the planet, and would remain the spiritual center after the command crew were gone, so I suspect there was an expectation that at some point colonists would need to live there, if only to provide clergy and support services for Mother Church.
But I do sometime wonder precisely where remaining Archangels and Angels actually
lived as colonist population of Zion increased. I don't see command crew and colonists mixing socially.
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Dennis