Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q5100947> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 40 of
40
with 100 triples per page.
- Q5100947 subject Q7113098.
- Q5100947 subject Q7153893.
- Q5100947 subject Q8969262.
- Q5100947 abstract "The oldest records of the term Westerners translate as "God", "Most High God", "Greatest Lord" appear to exist in the earliest documents of Chinese literature as Shàngdì (上帝, pinyin: Shàng+dì, literally "Above Emperor"). This representation may be as old as 2000 BCE. However, as Chinese religion changed to incorporate later interpretations of Confucianism, Daoism, & Buddhism, the term seems to have merged, in the views of some philosophers, with an impersonal Tiān, or Heaven, to produce the omnipotent omnipresent identity of Huáng Tiān Shàngdì=Huáng "Emperor"+Tiān+Shàngdì (皇天上帝) or Xuán Tiān Shàngdì=Xuán "Deep"+Tiān+Shàngdì (玄天上帝). The compounds Shàngtiān=Shàng+Tiān and Tiāntáng=Tiān+Táng "hall" have also been used for Heaven. The compounds tiānshén=tiān+shén "god" and tiānxiān=tiān+xiān "immortal" have been used for a deity, in a polytheistic sense. The word Dì by itself has likewise been used for God.In addition to a reuse of some of the traditional titles, transliterations and new constructions became used by the Chinese for "God" in the Abrahamic meaning, rather than for the supreme being of traditional Chinese religion and mythology.".
- Q5100947 wikiPageExternalLink 103830.htm.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q105173.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q1191842.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q1364799.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q13955.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q17790.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q1845.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q2078412.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q210677.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q233340.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q23540.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q245395.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q2714875.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q3959372.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q432.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q525545.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q559754.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q66086.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q698314.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q7113098.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q7153893.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q748.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q766677.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q7800257.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q831783.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q8969262.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q908467.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q9168.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q9581.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q9592.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q9598.
- Q5100947 wikiPageWikiLink Q989799.
- Q5100947 type Thing.
- Q5100947 comment "The oldest records of the term Westerners translate as "God", "Most High God", "Greatest Lord" appear to exist in the earliest documents of Chinese literature as Shàngdì (上帝, pinyin: Shàng+dì, literally "Above Emperor"). This representation may be as old as 2000 BCE.".
- Q5100947 label "Names of God in Chinese language".
- Q5100947 seeAlso Q1335343.