J. Nicoletta
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From humble beginnings, the sect created a total of twenty-two communities beginning in the 1780s, spreading from Maine to Indiana and as far south as Georgia and Florida, though these latter two sites and the one in Indiana were short lived. During periods of religious revivalism in the United States in the late 18th and early19th centuries, the Shakers attracted hundreds of converts who gave up their worldly possessions to live celibate, communal lives. After a peak population of over three thousand in the1840s, the Shakers have dwindled to just three members inhabiting the only surviving living community of Sabbathday Lake, near New Gloucester, Maine. The Shakers’ demographic and economic success over several decades left a legacy of buildings at numerous locations throughout the eastern United States. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

1774年,安·李(Ann Lee)和她的八名追随者从英国来到纽约殖民地,开始着手在后来的美国创建一个模范的社区社会。震教徒的官方名称是“基督再临联合信徒协会”,他们相信基督即将再临。他们对和平主义的支持、男女之间近乎平等的地位(允许女性担任领导角色)以及完美主义使他们与大多数美国人区别开来。在十年内,他们开始通过他们的崇拜、职业道德和有序村庄的建筑和家具建设,在地球上建立一个天堂的王国,旨在加强宗教信仰,塑造和控制行为。从最初的卑微开始,这个教派从18世纪80年代开始创建了总共22个社区,从缅因州到印第安纳州,向南延伸到乔治亚州和佛罗里达州,尽管后两个地点和印第安纳州的一个地点都是短暂的。在美国18世纪末和19世纪初的宗教复兴时期,震动派吸引了数百名皈依者,他们放弃了世俗的财产,过着独身的集体生活。震教徒在19世纪40年代达到3000多人的高峰后,人数减少到只有3人,他们居住在缅因州新格洛斯特附近的安息日湖(Sabbathday Lake)唯一幸存的社区。几十年来,震动派在人口和经济上的成功在美国东部的许多地方留下了建筑的遗产。其中一些村庄已经成为博物馆遗址,最著名的是马萨诸塞州的汉考克;黎巴嫩山,纽约;坎特伯雷,新罕布什尔州;以及肯塔基州的普莱森特山和南联盟。其他震动派建筑仍然是私人住宅,退休社区和州监狱的一部分。在许多方面,震派建筑反映了当代地区的乡土建筑实践,例如康涅狄格州、新罕布什尔州、缅因州、马萨诸塞州和纽约州东部最早的会议室框架中紧密间隔的锚架,以及肯塔基州住宅和受托人办公室中相当宏伟的砖石结构。线性排列的建筑,巨大的体量,男女分开的入口,使震派建筑与外部世界的建筑区别开来,尽管从风格上看,它们与非震派建筑很像。震教徒组织建筑内部,通过许多内置的橱柜和抽屉来有效地利用空间,在墙上安装钉板来存储,并帮助保持地板清洁,并包括单独的楼梯来划分男性和女性区域。这些建筑,尤其是礼拜堂和住宅,提醒了震教徒对他们信仰的承诺和他们独特的生活方式,并鼓励他们“双手工作,心向上帝”,这句话被认为是安·李(Ann Lee)说的。尽管如此,震教徒也不能幸免于外界的影响。他们需要与外界互动,以鼓励他们村庄的经济成功,并吸引皈依者。随着19世纪下半叶人口的减少,他们越来越多地求助于雇人来协助建筑和日常生活的其他方面。震动派还接受了建筑和家具的风格变化;他们19世纪末和20世纪初的建筑反映了这些影响,里里外外都增加了装饰,以及由震动派制造或从非震动派家具制造商那里购买的装饰家具。这些变化并没有削弱人们对震教徒最为人所知的简单风格的欣赏,而是表明该团体始终是务实的,并对主流社会的变化做出了反应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Shakers
Arriving in the colony of New York in 1774 from England, Ann Lee and her eight followers set about creating a model communal society in what would become the United States. Officially known as the United Society of Believers in Christ’s Second Appearing, the Shakers believed in Christ’s imminent return. Their support of pacifism, near equality between the sexes that allowed women to take on leadership roles, and perfectionism set them apart from most Americans. Within a decade, they had begun creating a Kingdom of Heaven on Earth through their worship, work ethic, and construction of orderly villages with buildings and furniture meant to reinforce religious belief and shape and control behavior. From humble beginnings, the sect created a total of twenty-two communities beginning in the 1780s, spreading from Maine to Indiana and as far south as Georgia and Florida, though these latter two sites and the one in Indiana were short lived. During periods of religious revivalism in the United States in the late 18th and early19th centuries, the Shakers attracted hundreds of converts who gave up their worldly possessions to live celibate, communal lives. After a peak population of over three thousand in the1840s, the Shakers have dwindled to just three members inhabiting the only surviving living community of Sabbathday Lake, near New Gloucester, Maine. The Shakers’ demographic and economic success over several decades left a legacy of buildings at numerous locations throughout the eastern United States. Some of these villages have become museum sites, most notably Hancock, Massachusetts; Mount Lebanon, New York; Canterbury, New Hampshire; and Pleasant Hill and South Union, both in Kentucky. Other Shaker buildings remain as private residences and parts of retirement communities and state prisons. In many ways, Shaker architecture reflects contemporary regional vernacular building practices, such as the closely spaced anchor bents in the framing of the earliest meetinghouses in Connecticut, New Hampshire, Maine, Massachusetts, and eastern New York State, and the rather grand masonry structures of the dwelling houses and trustees’ offices in Kentucky. The linear arrangement of buildings, their large size, and separate entrances for men and women distinguished Shaker buildings from those of the outside world, though stylistically they appeared much like non-Shaker buildings. The Shakers organized building interiors to use space efficiently with many built-in cabinets and drawers, installed pegboards on walls for storage and to help keep floors clear for cleaning, and included separate staircases to demarcate men’s and women’s areas. The buildings, especially the meetinghouses and dwelling houses, reminded Shakers of their commitment to their faith and to their distinctive way of living and encouraged them to “put their hands to work and their hearts to God,” a saying attributed to Ann Lee. Nevertheless, the Shakers were not immune from influences from the outside world. They needed to interact with outsiders to encourage the economic success of their villages and to attract converts. As their population shrank in the latter half of the 19th century, they turned increasingly to hired help to assist with building construction and other aspects of daily life. The Shakers also embraced stylistic changes in architecture and furniture; their buildings of the late 19th and early 20th centuries reflect these influences with added ornamentation inside and out, as well as embellished furnishings either made by the Shakers or purchased from non-Shaker furniture makers. Rather than undercut any appreciation of the simple style for which the Shakers are best known, these changes show the group as always practical and responsive to changes in mainstream society.
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