Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Patron_and_priest_relationship> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 54 of
54
with 100 triples per page.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship abstract "The patron and priest relationship, also simply written as priest-patron or cho-yon (Tibetan: མཆོད་ཡོན་, Wylie: mchod yon; Chinese: 檀越关系; pinyin: Tányuè Guānxì) is a term that refers to the symbolic relationship between a religious figure and a lay patron in the Tibetan ideology or political theory. \"chöyön\" is an abbreviation of two words: chöney, \"that which is worthy of being given gifts and alms\" (for example, a lama or a deity), and yöndag, \"he who gives gifts to that which is worthy\" (a patron).This concept has been used by for example the 13th Dalai Lama to describe the relationship between Tibetan lamas and Mongol khans or Chinese emperors of the Qing dynasty. According to this concept, in the case of Yuan rule of Tibet in the 13th and 14th centuries, Tibetan Lamas provided religious instruction; performed rites, divination and astrology, and offered the khan flattering religious titles like \"protector of religion\" or \"religious king\"; the khan (Kublai and his successors), in turn, protected and advanced the interests of the \"priest\" (\"lama\"). The lamas also made effective regents through whom the Mongols ruled Tibet. Also in the case of Qing rule of Tibet, for those who espouse the idea, the Dalai Lama and the Chinese emperor stood respectively as spiritual teacher and lay patron rather than subject and lord. Nevertheless, according to Elliot Sperling, an expert on the history of Tibet and Tibetan-Chinese relations at Indiana University, the Tibetan concept of a \"priest-patron\" religious relationship governing Sino-Tibetan relations to the exclusion of concrete political subordination is itself a rather recent construction. He writes that the patron and priest relationship coexisted with Tibet's political subordination to the Yuan and Qing dynasties. During the 1913 Simla Conference, the 13th Dalai Lama's negotiators used the \"priest and patron relationship\" as a rhetorical device to explain the lack of any clearly demarcated boundary between Tibet and the rest of China (as a religious benefactor, the Qing did not need to be hedged against).".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship thumbnail Yuan_dynasty_and_Tibet.jpg?width=300.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageID "45688332".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageLength "4148".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageOutDegree "20".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageRevisionID "692116077".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink 13th_Dalai_Lama.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Tibet.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tibetan_independence_movement.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Elliot_Sperling.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Tibet.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Indiana_University.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Kublai_Khan.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Lama.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Mongol_conquest_of_Tibet.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Qing_dynasty.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Simla_Accord_(1914).
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Sino-Tibetan_relations_during_the_Ming_dynasty.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Tibet.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Tibet_under_Qing_rule.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Tibet_under_Yuan_rule.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Tibetan_sovereignty_debate.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink Yuan_dynasty.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink File:Qing_dynasty_and_Tibet.jpg.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLink File:Yuan_dynasty_and_Tibet.jpg.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLinkText "Patron and priest relationship".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLinkText "patron and priest relationship".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLinkText "patron and priest".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLinkText "priest-patron concept".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLinkText "priest-patron relationship".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageWikiLinkText "priest-patron".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship p "Tányuè Guānxì".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship s "檀越关系".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship t "མཆོད་ཡོན་".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship w "mchod yon".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Asia-hist-stub.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Bo.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Tibet_topics.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Zh.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship subject Category:History_of_Tibet.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship subject Category:Tibetan_independence_movement.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship hypernym Term.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship comment "The patron and priest relationship, also simply written as priest-patron or cho-yon (Tibetan: མཆོད་ཡོན་, Wylie: mchod yon; Chinese: 檀越关系; pinyin: Tányuè Guānxì) is a term that refers to the symbolic relationship between a religious figure and a lay patron in the Tibetan ideology or political theory.".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship label "Patron and priest relationship".
- Patron_and_priest_relationship sameAs Q2120548.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship sameAs Chö-yon.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship sameAs Patroon-priesterrelatie.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship sameAs m.0130fbjm.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship sameAs Q2120548.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship wasDerivedFrom Patron_and_priest_relationship?oldid=692116077.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship depiction Yuan_dynasty_and_Tibet.jpg.
- Patron_and_priest_relationship isPrimaryTopicOf Patron_and_priest_relationship.