Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Korean_shamanism> ?p ?o }
- Korean_shamanism abstract "Korean shamanism, also known as Muism (Korean: 무교 Mugyo "mu [shaman] religion") or Sinism (신교 Singyo "religion of the shin (hanja: 神 ) [gods]", is the ethnic religion of Korea and the Koreans. Although used synonymously, the two terms aren't identical: Jung Young Lee describes Muism as a form of Sinism - the shamanic tradition within the religion. Other names for the religion are Sindo (traditional Chinese: 神道; ; Korean: 신도 "Way of the Gods"), Sindoism (traditional Chinese: 神道敎; ; Korean: 신도교 Sindogyo "religion of the Way of the Gods"), Gosindo (traditional Chinese: 古神道; ; Korean: 고신도 "Way of the Ancestral Gods"), and Pungwoldo (hanja: 風月道 "Way of Brightness"). It has approximately 5-15 million followers.In contemporary Korean language the shaman-priest or mu (hanja: 巫 ) is known as a mudang (hangul: 무당 hanja: 巫堂 ) if female or baksu if male, although other names and locutions are used. Korean mu "shaman" is synonymous with Chinese wu, which defines priests both male and female. The role of the mudang is to act as intermediary between the spirits or gods, and the human plain, through gut (rituals), seeking to resolve problems in the patterns of development of human life.Central to the faith is the belief in Haneullim or Hwanin, meaning "source of all being", and of all gods of nature, the utmost god or the supreme mind. The mu are mythically described as descendants of the "Heavenly King", son of the "Holy Mother [of the Heavenly King]", with investiture often passed down through female princely lineage. However, other myths link the heritage of the traditional faith to Dangun, male son of the Heavenly King and initiator of the Korean nation.Korean Muism has similarities with Chinese Wuism, Japanese Shinto, and with the Siberian, Mongolian, and Manchurian religious traditions. As highlighted by anthropological studies, the Korean ancestral god Dangun is related to the Ural-Altaic Tengri "Heaven", the shaman and the prince. In some provinces of Korea the shaman is still called dangul dangul-ari. The mudang is similar to the Japanese miko and the Ryukyuan yuta. Muism has exerted an influence on some Korean new religions, such as Cheondoism and Jeung San Do. According to various sociological studies, many Christian churches in Korea make use of practices rooted in shamanism.".
- Korean_shamanism thumbnail Male_mudang.jpg?width=300.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageExternalLink AK_EN_1_4_8_4.jsp.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageExternalLink The%20Emergence%20of%20National%20Religions%20in%20Korea.pdf.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageExternalLink view.jsp?BRD_NO=738360&m=50024&P_NUM=1&BRD_NO=738361.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageID "324122".
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageLength "32052".
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageOutDegree "189".
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageRevisionID "677892118".
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Absolute_(philosophy).
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Agriculture.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Ainu_people.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Ancestor_worship.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Apotheosis.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Axis_mundi.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Bear.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Bocheonism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Buddhism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Asian_shamanism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Korean_shamanism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Cheondoism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Cheonmin.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink China.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_characters.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_culture.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_folk_religion.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_language.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_shamanism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Choe_Chiwon.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Christian.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Christian_denomination.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Christianity.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Chungcheong.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Chungcheong_Province.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Confucianism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Daejongism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Daesun_Jinrihoe.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Dangun.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Dangunism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Deification.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Deity.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Demonic_possession.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Demonisation.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Demonization.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Disease.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Divine.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Divine_presence.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Divinity.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Division_of_Korea.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Dragon_King.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Ecstasy_(philosophy).
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Ethnic_religion.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Etymology.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink File:Male_mudang.jpg.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink God.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Gods.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Goryeo.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Gut_(ritual).
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Hallucination.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Han_River_(Korea).
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Haneullim.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Heaven.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink History_of_North_Korea.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink History_of_South_Korea.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Holism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Holy_tree.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink House_of_Yi.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Hwanin.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Hwanung.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Illness.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Jeju_Island.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Jejudo.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Jeung_San_Do.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Jeungsanism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Joseon.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Korea.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Korea_under_Japanese_rule.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Korean_Buddhism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Korean_Peninsula.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Korean_language.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Korean_peninsula.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Koreans.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Later_Silla.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Manchu_shamanism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Miko.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Mircea_Eliade.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Misin_tapa_undong.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Mongolian_shamanism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Mother_goddess.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Mu_(shaman).
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Myth.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Mythology.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Neo-Confucianism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink North_Korea.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Park_Chung-hee.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Philology.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Prayer.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Priest.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Protestantism.
- Korean_shamanism wikiPageWikiLink Psychosis.