Shinto in History: Ways of the KamiJohn Breen, Mark Teeuwen University of Hawaiʻi Press, 2000 - 368 Seiten The essays in this volume cover a wide range of topics on Shinto and kami in history, including the profound formative influence of Taoism on Shinto in early Japan; the relationship between shrine cults and nature; and the role of shrine and temple ritual in the Japanese state of the Heian period. |
Inhalt
Chapter | 1 |
Chapter | 13 |
Chapter Three | 32 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Amaterasu ancestors ancient appears Atsutane Atsutane's Bonshun Buddha Buddhist bureaucrats century ceremony Chinese cult daimyō Daimyōjin Dainichi deification deities disciples divine domain Edo period emperor Engi esoteric example festivals Fujiwara Fukuba gods gomiso Grapard Hachiman Harukazu Heaven Heian period Hirata Atsutane Hirata school Hirosaki Home Ministry Ieyasu imperial Ina valley Inoue Inoue Tetsujirō institutions Ise shrines itako Iwaki Iwaki-san Japan Japanese Jingiin Jingikan Jinja kaji Kamei kami Kanetane Kanetomo kanjō Kasuga Kojiki Kokugaku Kūkai Kuroda kyōdōshoku Kyoto land lineages Meiji period monks mountain mudra Myōbō yōshū Nakatomi National Morality nativist Nihon shoki non-religious offerings official oracles organised Orikuchi Orikuchi Shinobu performed political practice Prefecture purification realm refers religion religious reverence rites ritual sacred Sakamoto sanja takusen scholars scroll sect Shingon Shinshū Shinto Shintōgaku shogun shrine priests spirit Tanaka Yoshitō Taoism teachings Tenkai term Tokugawa Tokyo tradition Tsugaru Tsuwano village worship Yoshida Shinto