Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Historical Dictionary of Shinto

View through CrossRef
One of Japan's major religions, Shinto has no doctrines and there are no sacred texts from which religious authority can be derived. It does not have an identifiable historical founder, and it has survived the vicissitudes of history through rituals and symbols rather than through continuity of doctrine. Shinto is primarily a religion of nature, centered on the cultivation of rice, the basis of a culture with which the western world is not familiar in terms of either its annual cycle or the kind of lifestyle it generates. The roots of the Shinto tradition probably precede this and reflect an awareness of the natural order. The oldest shrines came to be located in places that inspired awe and wonder in their observers, such as the great Fall of Nachi in Kumano, or in mountains that conveyed a sense of power. The expanded second edition of the Historical Dictionary of Shinto relates the history of Shinto through a chronology, an introductory essay, an extensive bibliography, and over 800 cross-referenced dictionary entries on Shinto concepts, significant figures, places, activities, and periods. Scholars and students will find the overviews and sources for further research provided by this book to be enormously helpful.
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Title: Historical Dictionary of Shinto
Description:
One of Japan's major religions, Shinto has no doctrines and there are no sacred texts from which religious authority can be derived.
It does not have an identifiable historical founder, and it has survived the vicissitudes of history through rituals and symbols rather than through continuity of doctrine.
Shinto is primarily a religion of nature, centered on the cultivation of rice, the basis of a culture with which the western world is not familiar in terms of either its annual cycle or the kind of lifestyle it generates.
The roots of the Shinto tradition probably precede this and reflect an awareness of the natural order.
The oldest shrines came to be located in places that inspired awe and wonder in their observers, such as the great Fall of Nachi in Kumano, or in mountains that conveyed a sense of power.
The expanded second edition of the Historical Dictionary of Shinto relates the history of Shinto through a chronology, an introductory essay, an extensive bibliography, and over 800 cross-referenced dictionary entries on Shinto concepts, significant figures, places, activities, and periods.
Scholars and students will find the overviews and sources for further research provided by this book to be enormously helpful.

Related Results

Kami Worship in a Globalized World: Challenges and Adaptations of Shintō Practices
Kami Worship in a Globalized World: Challenges and Adaptations of Shintō Practices
The veneration of kami has been the core part of Japanese culture and religion for a millennium. This paper discusses the transformation in the worship of Shintō kami due to global...
Analisis SWOT Mobile Dictionary Pleco dan Hanping Lite
Analisis SWOT Mobile Dictionary Pleco dan Hanping Lite
Penelitian berjudul “Analisis SWOT Mobile Dictionary Pleco dan Hanping Lite” dirancang sebagai pedoman pengguna untuk menentukan Mobile Dictionary yang sesuai dengan kebutuhan ...
Homa: Tantric Fire Ritual
Homa: Tantric Fire Ritual
The homa is a votive offering involving the construction of a fire in a hearth-altar, and the immolation of offerings in the fire. The altar is homologized with a mandala, and as w...
Meiji Government Policy, Sect Shinto and Fusokyo
Meiji Government Policy, Sect Shinto and Fusokyo
This paper is authored by the administrative head, sixth in line since the first generation, of the Shinto sect known as Shintō Fusōkyō神道扶桑教.This was recognized as a specially esta...
A. N. KARPOV'S BEEKEEPING DICTIONARY
A. N. KARPOV'S BEEKEEPING DICTIONARY
The article deals with the study of A. N. Karpov's beekeeping dictionary. The main meth-od of research is description. In the course of the study, the author determines that the vo...
Thomas Bowrey (1701) 17th Century Description of Malay
Thomas Bowrey (1701) 17th Century Description of Malay
Thomas Bowrey, who was an employee of the British colonial government, visited the Malay-speaking region at the end of the 17th century and published a dictionary of Malay (1701) w...
Dictionaries
Dictionaries
By 1832 most modern lexicographic conventions were already well established. Numbered sense-divisions in dictionary entries, as well as illustrative quotations or examples, were fa...
Vocabulary of Ukrainian letters of the 14th Century in the “Dictionary of the Old Russian Language (11th–14th Centuries)”
Vocabulary of Ukrainian letters of the 14th Century in the “Dictionary of the Old Russian Language (11th–14th Centuries)”
The article examines the vocabulary of fourteenth-century Ukrainian charters that were incorporated into the source base of the Dictionary of the Old East Slavic Language of the 11...

Back to Top