Handbook of the history of religions in china ii : from the liao dynasty until the republican era /
Váldodahkki: | |
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Searvvušdahkki: | |
Eará dahkkit: | |
Materiálatiipa: | Licensed eBooks |
Giella: | eaŋgalasgiella |
Almmustuhtton: |
[S.l.] :
Ibidem Press,
2020.
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Liŋkkat: | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=2751062 |
Sisdoallologahallan:
- Intro
- Preface
- About the authors
- About the translator
- Major Dynasties in Chinese History
- Chapter Six. Religions in Liao, Song and Jin Dynasties and Western Xia (the Tangut Empire)
- An Overview
- Primitive Religions and Flourishing Buddhism in Liao
- 1) Traditional Khitan beliefs and the tendency of Sinicization
- 2) The prevalence of Buddhism and its characteristics
- Religions in Song Dynasties: Syncretism and Evolution
- 1) Revising and perfecting the sacrificial codes applicable to the state religion
- 2) The equal importance of meditation and doctrine in Buddhist practice and the syncretism of Buddhism and Confucianism
- 3) Thriving Daoism
- 4) Manichaeism, Islam, Judaism and Zoroastrianism
- Religions in Jin dynasty
- 1) Conventional customs of the Jurchen people and the creation of institutions with respect to the Jurchen state religion
- 2) The growing popularity of Buddhism
- 3) The emergence and growth of new Daoist schools in areas north of the Yellow River
- Religions in the Western Xia Dynasty
- 1) Primitive sorcery and the cult of spirits
- 2) The introduction and growth of Buddhism
- 3) The Tangut Tripitaka and its significance
- The second diffusion of Buddhism in Tibet and the formation of Buddhist sects
- 1) Well-known Buddhist figures and their contributions in the Houhong (Second Diffusion) Period
- 2) Sects of Tibetan Buddhism and their theories
- Chapter Seven. Religions in Yuan Dynasty: A Boom in Faith
- An Overview
- The Reconstruction and Characteristics of Official Religious Rituals
- 1) The grand ceremony of offering sacrifices to Heaven
- 2) The (Royal) Ancestral Temple
- 3) The Imperial shrine for Earth and Grain gods
- 4) The Imperial ceremony advocating the Kingship of Confucius
- 5) Offering sacrifices to gods of mountain, river and sea
- 6) Traditional Mongol customs
- The development of Chinese and Tibetan Buddhism and the practice of the "Imperial Preceptor"
- 1) The Mongol aristocrats' adoration of Buddhism
- 2) The development and administration of Buddhism in Yuan
- 3) The unique practice of the Imperial Preceptor in Yuan
- 4) The growth of Buddhist sects in the Central Plains
- 5) Buddhism and Yuan culture
- The Introduction and Growth of Theravada Buddhism in Yunnan
- 1) The introduction of Theravada Buddhism into Yunnan
- 2) Theories and sutras of Theravada Buddhism
- 3) The sects, monastic hierarchy and monasteries in Theravada Buddhism
- 4) Theravada Buddhism and the Dai society
- The Prevalence and Popularity of All Truth Daoism in the Lower Reaches of Yangtze River
- 1) Qiu Chuji and the rise and fall of All Truth Daoism
- 2) The flourishing Way of Orthodox Unity in the lower reaches of Yangtze River