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Wer schützt wen? Hachimanismus, Buddhismus und Tennōismus im Altertum |
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Author |
Scheid, Bernhard
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Source |
Asiatische Studien : Zeitschrift der Schweizerischen Gesellschaft für Asienkunde=Etudes asiatiques : revue de la Société Suisse d'études asiatiques
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Volume | v.68 n.1 |
Date | 2014.03.01 |
Pages | 263 - 284 |
Publisher | Swiss Asia Society=Schweizerische Asiengesellschaft |
Publisher Url |
http://www.sagw.ch/asiengesellschaft
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Location | Zurich, Switzerland [蘇黎世, 瑞士] |
Content type | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
Language | 英文=English; 德文=German |
Abstract | The cult of Hachiman or “Hachimanism” is discussed from its inception as a national cult (mid-eighth century) to its firm establishment in the ninth century. Hachimanism was initially part of the politico-religious program of Emperor Shōmu and his daughter Abe, the “last empress”. Their kind of state Buddhism implied a combination of Buddhist ritualism based on the Golden Light Sutra and other state protecting Buddhist texts as well as non-Buddhist ancestor worship. Hachiman functioned according to both systems, since he was both a protector of Buddhism and an imperial ancestral deity. After what I call a Hachiman boom from about 750 to 770, the famous Dōkyō incident (769) must have led to a fundamental doubt in the validity of Hachiman's oracles and therefore to a crisis for Hachimanism. However, in the early Heian period, innovative monks such as Kūkai, Saichō, and Gyōkyō re-established Hachimanism to strengthen their ties to the imperial court. In order to obtain protection by the state they redefined the cult of Hachiman as an explicitly Buddhist state protector. |
Table of contents | 1 Zur Einführung 263 2 Erster Auftritt Hachimans, 749 264 3 Hachiman und die Letzte Kaiserin 269 4 Hachiman als Öjin Tennö 272 5 Der Iwashimizu Hachiman-Schrein 273 6 Hachiman als Mönch 276 7 Schlussfolgerungen 279
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ISSN | 00044717 (P); 22355871 (E) |
DOI | 10.1515/asia-2014-0014 |
Hits | 138 |
Created date | 2017.03.30 |
Modified date | 2020.05.11 |
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