File proveniente da Wikimedia Commons. Clicca per visitare la pagina originale

File:Folk religious sects' influence by province of China (alternate).png

Da Wikipedia, l'enciclopedia libera.
Vai alla navigazione Vai alla ricerca

File originale(3 096 × 2 157 pixel, dimensione del file: 183 KB, tipo MIME: image/png)

Logo di Commons
Logo di Commons
Questo file e la sua pagina di descrizione (discussione · modifica) si trovano su Wikimedia Commons (?)

Dettagli

Descrizione Analysis of the diffusion of influence of the folk religious sects (民間宗教 mínjiān zōngjiào, 民间教门 mínjiān jiàomén or 民间教派 mínjiān jiàopài), and Confucian churches and jiaohua (transformative teachings) in China, according to different sources including: incomplete data on organised folk religions by province from the World Religion Database represented in a map by Harvard University; contemporary scholars' fieldwork describing the proliferation of Confucian churches in Shandong and other provinces; historical data of the membership of folk sects and Confucian churches in the Japanese-controlled state of Manchuria.
Data
Fonte

Harvard University World Religion Map, based on data from the World Religion Database.

The studies of China's Regional Religious System found "very high activity of popular religion and secret societies and low Buddhist presence in northern regions, while very high Buddhist presence in the southeast" (source).

Integrated with:

Hebei: Fieldwork by Thomas David Dubois (see The Sacred Village: Social Change and Religious Life in Rural North China, University of Hawaii, 2005) testifies the dominance of folk religious sects, specifically the Church of the Heaven and the Earth and the Church of the Highest Supreme, since their "energetic revival since the 1970s" (p. 13), in the religious life of the counties of Hebei. Religious life in rural Hebei is also characterised by a type of organisation called the benevolent churches, and the folk sect known as Zailiism has returned active since the 1990s.

Henan: Thomas Heberer, Sabine Jakobi. Henan - The Model: From Hegemonism to Fragmentism. Portrait of the Political Culture of China's Most Populated Province. Duisburg Working Papers on East Asian Studies, May 2000, n. 32.

As explained in the paper, Henan has been for centuries a hub of folk religious sects, which constitute significant focuses of the religious life of the province:

p. 7: "Early examples include the "Yellow Turbans" (huangjin), a messianist movement of Daoist inspiration in the 2nd century, and the "Red Turbans" (hongjin), a chiliastic movement awaiting the appearance of the Buddha Maitreya (Milefo) in the 14th century. In recent centuries this province was a major focal point of the "Sect of Heavenly Order" (tianlijiao), the White Lotus-sect, (bailianhui), the Nian-movement, the "Heavenly Bamboo-movement" (tianzhujiao), the "Society of Elder Brothers" (gelaohui), the "Green and Red Guild" (qinghongbang), the "Persistent Way" (yiguandao)-movement, the sect "Great King of Red Heaven" and the "Society of the Great Sword" (dadaohui), just to mention the most important ones."

Henan also has a strong Confucian orientation (p. 5).

Northeast China: According to official records by the then-government the Universal Church of the Way and its Virtue or Morality Society had 8 million members in the state of Manchuria, or northeast China, during Japanese occupation, making up about 25% of the total population of the area which at that time also comprehended the easternmost end of contemporary Inner Mongolia (see Ownby, 2008, Sects and Secularism in Reading the Modern Chinese Religious Experience). Folk religious sects of a Confucian nature, or Confucian churches, were indeed very successful in the northeast, gathering a large part of the population.

Shandong: Alex Payette's Local Confucian Revival in China: Ritual Teachings, ‘Confucian’ Learning and Cultural Resistance in Shandong. China Report, February 2016, vol. 52, no. 1, pp. 1-18. doi: 10.1177/0009445515613867.

Shandong is traditionally a stronghold of Confucianism and is the area of origin of many folk religious sects and Confucian churches of the modern period, including the Universal Church of the Way and its Virtue (万国道德会 Wànguó Dàodéhuì), the Way of the Return to the One (皈依道 Guīyīdào), the Way of Unity (一貫道 Yīguàndào), and others.

Although all these religions were driven underground during the Cultural Revolution, and remain unrecognised by the contemporary Chinese government, they began to resurface in the 1980s. According to the Chinese General Social Survey of 2012 (see CFPS 2012, page 13), about 2.2% of the total population of China (around 30 million people) claims membership in the folk religious sects, which have likely maintained their historical dominance in central-northern and northeastern China.
Autore Aethelwolf Emsworth
Licenza
(Riusare questo file)
It is allowed to freely copy and distribute this map.

Licenza

Public domain Io, detentore del copyright su quest'opera, la rilascio nel pubblico dominio. Questa norma si applica in tutto il mondo.
In alcuni paesi questo potrebbe non essere legalmente possibile. In tal caso:
Garantisco a chiunque il diritto di utilizzare quest'opera per qualsiasi scopo, senza alcuna condizione, a meno che tali condizioni siano richieste dalla legge.

Didascalie

Aggiungi una brevissima spiegazione di ciò che questo file rappresenta

Elementi ritratti in questo file

raffigura

image/png

Cronologia del file

Fare clic su un gruppo data/ora per vedere il file come si presentava nel momento indicato.

Data/OraMiniaturaDimensioniUtenteCommento
attuale08:25, 13 mar 2020Miniatura della versione delle 08:25, 13 mar 20203 096 × 2 157 (183 KB)Akira CAshade
02:27, 12 mar 2020Miniatura della versione delle 02:27, 12 mar 20203 096 × 2 157 (182 KB)Akira CAReverted to version as of 03:29, 11 March 2020 (UTC) COM:OVERWRITE COM:NPOV
16:49, 11 mar 2020Miniatura della versione delle 16:49, 11 mar 20203 096 × 2 157 (182 KB)YthlevReverted to version as of 11:19, 7 March 2020 (UTC) It is only used on Wikipedia
05:29, 11 mar 2020Miniatura della versione delle 05:29, 11 mar 20203 096 × 2 157 (182 KB)Akira CAReverted to version as of 21:19, 14 February 2016 (UTC) COM:NPOV Commons is not Wikipedia, and files uploaded here do not necessarily need to comply with the Neutral point of view.
13:19, 7 mar 2020Miniatura della versione delle 13:19, 7 mar 20203 096 × 2 157 (182 KB)YthlevReverted to version as of 15:13, 14 February 2020 (UTC) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/China_and_Chinese-related_articles
05:08, 29 feb 2020Miniatura della versione delle 05:08, 29 feb 20203 096 × 2 157 (182 KB)PE fansReverted to version as of 21:12, 13 February 2020 (UTC)
17:13, 14 feb 2020Miniatura della versione delle 17:13, 14 feb 20203 096 × 2 157 (182 KB)YthlevReverted to version as of 10:04, 11 February 2020 (UTC) Per consensus (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:2019%E2%80%9320_Wuhan_coronavirus_outbreak/Archive_8#RfC_on_map_of_infected_cases consensus)
23:12, 13 feb 2020Miniatura della versione delle 23:12, 13 feb 20203 096 × 2 157 (182 KB)Richard YeI see no reason why "China" cannot contain both the PRC and ROC, both of which have "China" in their names
12:04, 11 feb 2020Miniatura della versione delle 12:04, 11 feb 20203 096 × 2 157 (182 KB)YthlevCorrection
23:19, 14 feb 2016Miniatura della versione delle 23:19, 14 feb 20163 096 × 2 157 (182 KB)Æo{{Information |Description=Analysis of the diffusion of influence of the folk religious sects (民間宗教 ''mínjiān zōngjiào'', 民间教门 ''mínjiān jiàomén'' or 民间教派 ''mínjiān jiàopài''), an...

La seguente pagina usa questo file:

Utilizzo globale del file

Anche i seguenti wiki usano questo file:

Metadati