Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty> ?p ?o }
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty abstract "Shamanism was the dominant religion of the Jurchen people of northeast Asia and of their descendants, the Manchu people. As early as the Jin dynasty (1111–1234), the Jurchens conducted shamanic ceremonies at shrines called tangse. There were two kinds of shamans: those who entered in a trance and let themselves be possessed by the spirits, and those who conducted regular sacrifices to heaven, to a clan's ancestors, or to the clan's protective spirits.When Nurhaci (1559–1626), the chieftain of the Jianzhou Jurchens, unified the other Jurchen tribes under his own rule in the early seventeenth century, he imposed the protective spirits of his clan, the Aisin Gioro, upon other clans, and often destroyed their shrines. As early as the 1590s, he placed shamanism at the center of his state's ritual, sacrificing to heaven before engaging in military campaigns. His son and successor Hong Taiji (1592–1643), who renamed the Jurchens "Manchu" and officially founded the Qing dynasty (1636–1912), further put shamanistic practices in the service of the state, notably by forbidding others to erect new tangse for ritual purposes. In the 1620s and 1630s, the Qing ruler conducted shamanic sacrifices at the tangse of Mukden, the Qing capital. In 1644, as soon as the Qing seized Beijing to begin their conquest of China, they named it their new capital and erected an official shamanic shrine there. In the Beijing tangse and in the women's quarters of the Forbidden City, Qing emperors and professional shamans (usually women) conducted shamanic ceremonies until the abdication of the dynasty in 1912.Until at least the eighteenth century, shamanism was at the core of Manchu spiritual life and differentiated Manchus from Han Chinese even as Manchu Bannermen garrisoned in various Chinese cities were adopting many aspects of the Chinese lifestyle. In 1747 the Qianlong Emperor (r. 1735–1796) commissioned the publication of a "Shamanic Code" to revive and regulate shamanic practices, which he feared were becoming lost. He had it distributed to Bannermen to guide their practice, but we know very little about the effect of this policy. Mongols and Han Chinese were forbidden to attend shamanic ceremonies. Partly because of their secret aspect, these rituals attracted the curiosity of Beijing dwellers and visitors to the Qing capital. Even after the "Shamanic Code" was translated into Chinese and published in the 1780s, outsiders had little understanding of these practices.During his fieldwork among the Tungusic populations of "Manchuria" in the 1910s, Russian anthropologist S. M. Shirokogoroff found enough surviving practices to build a theory of shamanism that shaped later theoretical debates about shamanism. Since the late 1980s, however, these theories have been criticized for neglecting the relation between shamanism and the state. Historians are now arguing that shamanistic practices in northeast Asia were intimately tied to the establishment of states, an analysis that fits the Qing case very well.".
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageExternalLink 40463470.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageID "37501020".
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageLength "44976".
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageOutDegree "149".
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageRevisionID "675759703".
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Abdication.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Aisin_Gioro.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Altar_of_Heaven.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Amsterdam.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Anthropology.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Antoine_Gaubil.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Apron.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Beijing.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Beijing_Hotel.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Beijing_Legation_Quarter.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Bodhisattva.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Boxer_Rebellion.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Boxer_Uprising.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_China.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Category:Qing_dynasty.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Category:Shamanism_in_China.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Catholicism.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Chakravartin.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Changan_Avenue.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_New_Year.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_classics.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Chinggis_Khan.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Chongzhen_Emperor.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Confucian_Classics.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Cuyen.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Daur_people.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Dodo_(prince).
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Dorgon.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink E._E._Evans-Pritchard.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Eight-Nation_Alliance.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Eight_Banner.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Eight_Banners.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Eight_Nation_Alliance.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_of_China.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Evenks.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Forbidden_City.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Gautama_Buddha.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Genghis_Khan.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Guan_Yu.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Guanyin.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Han_Chinese.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Historian_of_religion.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink History_of_religions.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Hong_Taiji.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Hulun_(alliance).
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Imperial_Household_Department.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Imperial_examination.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Incarnation.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Infection.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Infectious_disease.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Institute_for_Advanced_Studies.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Institute_for_Advanced_Study.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Ioan_Myrddin_Lewis.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink JSTOR.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jean_Joseph_Marie_Amiot.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jesuit_China_missions.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jesuit_missions_in_China.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jianzhou_Jurchens.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jin_dynasty_(1115–1234).
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jiu_Manzhou_Dang.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Joseon.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Joseph-Marie_Amiot.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jurchen_Jin.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jurchen_people.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jurchens.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Kangxi_Emperor.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Khan_(title).
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Legation.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Legitimacy_(political).
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Li_Zicheng.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Manchu_conquest_of_China.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Manchu_language.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Manchu_people.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Manchuria.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Manjushri.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Manjusri.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Mark_Elliott_(historian).
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Ming_dynasty.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Mircea_Eliade.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Mongolia.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Mongols.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Mukden.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Nicola_di_Cosmo.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Northeast_Asia.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Nurhaci.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Old_Manchu_Archives.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Oroqen_people.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Pamela_Crossley.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Pamela_Kyle_Crossley.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Qianlong_Emperor.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Qing_conquest_of_China.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Qing_conquest_of_the_Ming.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Qing_dynasty.
- Shamanism_in_the_Qing_dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Raymond_Firth.