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Temples --- Egyptian language --- Administration.
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"This dissertation explores new ways of Buddhist temple construction in modern Japan and puts the ideas and motivations of their architects in contrast to the rather different determinations of this assignment described in Buddhist scholarly teachings. The study contains two surveys, a philological-philosophical analysis of what is argued in Buddhist teachings as the assignment of building a temple, and a historical outline of the architectural development from the 1870's onwards with a specific focus on how these temples were discussed as religious places. In contrast to what most literature on Japanese Buddhist temples suggests, many temple buildings in contemporary Japan are made from concrete. They have glass windows, air conditioning, and electric lights. Some of these buildings look like normal Japanese houses, others imitate the shape of traditional architecture whereas others are designed by world famous star architects. This study gives a detailed chronological overview of this recent architectural development by analyzing hundreds of temple buildings built in non-traditional ways. All these buildings show that not only the architectural appearance but also the idea of what it means to build Buddhist temple has changed over the last 150 years. There may be a lot of reasons for new views on temple construction since the late 19th century, but the most influential cause and indubitable premise of this change can be identified as the adoption of western concepts of art, aesthetics, and architecture in Japan. A fundamental part of these concepts is the idea that building a temple was a task assigned to architects, and these architects were artists by profession. Since that time one can observe a growing common thinking among these new architects, that part of their job was to leave behind traditional (i.e. religious) ideas in favor of realizing new architectural and artistic concepts. The significance of this shift becomes clear with a look on how the assignment of building a temple was described before the late 19th century. In the scholarly Buddhist tradition, building a temple has never been argued as a task for architects or artists but rather as a religious exercise. It demands a preparation of a place for the "three treasures", i.e. a dwelling place for a Buddha, a place for the Buddhist teachings, and a place for a Buddhist convention. Of course, the respective teachings are not construction manuals but mythological and liturgical texts, most of them sūtras or commentaries. But this is just why they discuss reasons why there are temples in Buddhism at all. And interestingly enough, sūtras contain such a place for the three treasures themselves, since in their opening passage there is always a description of a convention around a Buddha dwelling at a certain place and teaching the dharma. These descriptions vary depending on the scholarly tradition. They sometimes use terms like "maṇḍala" or "Pure Land" to describe the setting and occasionally depict the situation very accurately. Consequently conventions like these are one basic idea of the Buddhist liturgy, and especially maṇḍalas and Pure Lands are widely argued as structures that gave shape to Buddhist temples as places where this liturgy is set. Furthermore, and this seems to be much more important with regard to the perception of Buddhist temples as pieces of aesthetic art, especially the sūtras on the prajñā-pāramitā make clear that the greatest challenge is not a matter of building but of seeing the temple. If Buddhist temples were places to show the presence of a Buddha, it means their intention is to make visible what is invisible by definition. A human eye seeing such a dwelling Buddha in the temple does not see a dwelling Buddha in the temple at all, because the Buddha has entered nirvāṇa. But, and this is the crucial point the sūtras are arguing, this is just the way a human eye is actually seeing a Buddha dwelling in the temple. And only because temple architecture - as well as paintings, statues, gardens etc. - shows the presence of the Buddha in this way does it become a religious place where the Buddha is actually present. The final discussion of this study puts these Buddhist teachings in a dialogue with modern aesthetic architectural concepts argued by temple architects. The contrasting points of view make it clear that the explicitly Buddhist idea of Buddhist temple architecture can not be grasped by aesthetics, because its purpose is to show the invisible presence of the Buddha and not to be a sensual (i.e. aesthetic) experience of the visible object itself in the first place. However, aesthetic concepts of art have become common in Japan since the late 19th century. They are the foundation of the described new ways in which temples were built and designed since then. One indication for the impact of aesthetics are Japanese words like shimboru シンボル/shōchō 象徴 (symbol) or fun'iki 雰囲気 (atmosphere) which are used by architects to describe their temple architecture and matters of design. These words were formed around the turn of the century to express European concepts of art and aesthetics, since before that these words and ideas simply did not exist in Japan. And it is only since then, that temples were perceived as aesthetic symbols with various meanings that can be defined by an architect, and that they have a certain atmosphere which should be designed for making visitors feeling comfortable. Now it is the architect himself who gives meaning to its work and who is responsible for a nice spatial experience. But none of these architects is talking about himself becoming Buddha by building a temple. So not only the architectural appearance and construction of Buddhist temples have changed enormously throughout the last 150 years, but also the task of building itself. There has always been change in appearance and construction throughout the history of Buddhism and in the different Buddhist cultures, but the redefinition of the temple as an architectural piece of art is a very recent development in Japan and the actual new idea causing these dramatic architectural changes."
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"Pandian Tamil Journal of Temple Studies aims to bring down Academic Research to promote research support for the academicians and scholars in the field of Temple Studies... The purpose of this peer-reviewed journal is to explore the origins, design, worship, spiritual philosophy, doctrines of the temples, architecture, temple work of the Tamils, charity, music and musical instruments, folk music, temple folk, the spiritual hymns of the sect, Tamil Bhakthi literature, Bhakthi literature in general to Hindu religion from any language of India and Abroad and universal temple art."-- Publisher's website (Pandian Educational Trust).
Hindu temples --- Temples --- Pandyas --- Hindu rock-cut temples --- Tamil (Indic people) --- Religion
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L'Ajitāgama et le Rauravāgama publiés dans cette même collection (ci-dessus n° 24 et 18) par le Pandit N.R. Bhatt sont deux traités śivaïtes sanskrits relevant de l'École Śaivasiddhānta. Comme de nombreux autres āgama de la même école, ils contiennent des exposés importants et détaillés sur l'architecture des temples de Śiva et de leurs annexes. Cet ouvrage analyse ces exposés et en étudie systématiquement la terminologie. Il fournit ainsi une première présentation de la théorie architecturale indienne élaborée en Inde du Sud à partir des viie-viiie siècle sur la base des temples pallava et développée ensuite à l'époque Cola. Un index-glossaire et différents tableaux concernant des ensembles moulurés complètent l'ouvrage. Ajitāgama and Rauravāgama, critically edited in the same series (above N° 24 et 18) by Pandit N.R. Bhatt are two Śaiva treatises pertaining to the Śaivasiddhānta school. Like several other āgamas of the Śaivāsiddhānta they comprise important and much detailed presentation of the architecture of Śiva temples together with that of their pavilions, gopuras, etc. In this book those chapters are analysed and their terminology is systematically studied. Thus the author gives a first tableau of the Indian theory of architecture, elaborated in South India since the 7th-8th c. on the basis of Pallava temples and further on at the Col̠a period.
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Temples --- Cults --- Middle East --- Middle East. --- Antiquities
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Notre intérêt actuel pour les chefs-d’œuvre de la Grèce antique n’est certes pas une nouveauté. Si les ouvrages majeurs de la pensée et de la littérature, qui constituent assurément l’un des fondements de la civilisation occidentale, ont été constamment lus et étudiés, qu’en est-il des chefs d’œuvre architecturaux et artistiques ? Lorenz E. Baumer mène ici une enquête archéologique sur le destin des œuvres monumentales de la Grèce classique, à la fin de l’Antiquité. Il s’interroge notamment sur le devenir des temples païens à l’époque où le christianisme a conquis le Bassin méditerranéen ou sur la réutilisation, dans les derniers siècles de l’Antiquité, d’œuvres datant de la période classique - réutilisation qui traduit par rapport à l’art du passé une attitude radicalement différente de la nôtre mais qui considère ces ouvrages comme des œuvres vivantes et toujours susceptibles de parler. À travers ces interrogations se pose, de manière lancinante, la question de la pertinence religieuse de ces œuvres (païennes) dans un monde de plus en plus christianisé.
Temples --- Shrines --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Sanctuaires --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Greece --- Grèce --- Antiquities. --- Religion. --- Antiquités --- Religion --- Antiquities --- Temples grecs --- Christianisme --- Religion grecque --- Reconversion --- Relations --- Empire byzantin --- Civilisation --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Grèce --- Antiquités --- Reconversion. --- Religion grecque. --- Christianisme. --- E-books --- Sacred space --- Pilgrims and pilgrimages --- Temples, Greek --- Temples - Greece --- Shrines - Greece --- Excavations (Archaeology) - Greece --- Greece - Antiquities --- Greece - Religion --- religion --- antiquité tardive --- grecs --- religion grecque
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"The Hegemony of Heritage makes an original and significant contribution to our understanding of how architectural objects and societies' relationship to the built environment change over time. Using the pairing of two living medieval monuments in Southern Rajasthan--the Ambika Temple in Jagat, Rajasthan, and the Ékalingji Temple Complex in Kailaspuri--the author underscores many aspects of practice and avoids focusing simply on their divergent sectarian affiliations or patronage structures. This book offers new and extremely valuable questions about these important monuments, such as the entangled politics of antiquity and whether a monument's ritual record is affirmed as continuous and hence hoary, or dismissed as discontinuous or reinvented through various strategies. The Hegemony of Heritage engages theoretical constructs with the richness of ethnographic description and asks us to rethink notions such as archive and text through the filter of sculpture and mantra."--Provided by publisher.
Hindu sculpture --- Hindu architecture --- Hindu temples --- Mandiras --- Mandirs --- Temples, Hindu --- Hinduism --- Temples --- Architecture, Hindu --- Religious architecture --- Sculpture, Hindu --- Hindu art --- Sculpture --- ambika temple. --- antiquity. --- architecture. --- archive. --- asian history. --- common practice. --- eklingji temple. --- entangled politics. --- environment. --- ethnographic description. --- history of hinduism. --- important monuments. --- india history. --- jagat. --- kailashpuri. --- mantra. --- medieval. --- monuments. --- patronage structures. --- rajasthan. --- rituals. --- sculpture. --- sectarian affiliations. --- societies. --- theoretical constructs.
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In praise of Prambanan is devoted to the Hindu-Javanese temple complex of Candi Prambanan, also known by its locally more popular name of Candi Loro Jonggrang. The book has two parts. Part One is a general introduction to the temple complex based on an examination of the existing scholarly literature. It offers a detailed state-of-the-art survey of publications on Candi Prambanan as well as of the religious conditions which made its creation possible. Part Two contains a selection of important articles - in English translation - about the temple complex by prominent Dutch scholars all of whom had first-hand knowledge of it: J.W. IJzerman, J.Ph. Vogel, N.J. Krom, F.D.K. Bosch, B. de Haan, W.F. Stutterheim, V.R. van Romondt and A.J. Bernet Kempers. The book is richly illustrated with photographs, drawings and maps. Roy E. Jordaan, currently a private scholar, obtained his PhD in anthropology from Leiden University.
Hindu temples --- Art, Architecture & Applied Arts --- Architecture --- Mandiras --- Mandirs --- Temples, Hindu --- Hinduism --- Temples --- Art, Architecture & Applied Arts. --- Architecture. --- Prambanan. --- Architecture, Western (Western countries) --- Building design --- Buildings --- Construction --- Western architecture (Western countries) --- Art --- Building --- Design and construction --- Architecture, Primitive --- Lara Jonggrang (Temple : Prambanan, Indonesia) --- Caṇḍi Loro Joṅgraṅ (Prambanan, Indonesia) --- Caṇḍi Lara Joṅgraṅ (Prambanan, Indonesia) --- Candi Prambanan --- Prambanan (Indonesia). --- Lara Djonggrang (Temple : Prambanan, Indonesia) --- Candi Çiwi Prambanan --- Candi Siwa Prambanan --- Çiwa Temple of Prambanan --- sculpture --- literature surveys --- archaeology --- hinduism --- history --- indonesia --- jawa tengah --- prambanan --- architecture --- temples --- Buddhism --- Java --- Javanese people --- Poonkunnam Siva Temple --- Rama --- Shiva
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This book argues that women served as leaders in a number of synagogues during the Roman and Byzantine periods. The evidence for this consists of nineteen Greek and Latin inscriptions in which women bear the titles "head of the synagogue," "leader," "elder," "mother of the synagogue" and "priestess." These inscriptions range in date from 27 B.C.E. to perhaps the sixth century C.E. and in provenance from Italy to Asia Minor, Egypt and Palestine. While new discoveries make this a growing corpus of material, a number of the inscriptions have been known to scholars for some time. The book contains a new preface by the author.
Religion. --- Religion, Primitive --- Atheism --- Irreligion --- Religions --- Theology --- Judaism --- Women in Judaism --- Synagogues --- Jews --- History. --- Organization and administration --- History --- Jewish architecture --- Religious institutions --- Temples
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Religious architecture --- Côte-d'Or (Dept.) --- Romans --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Temples, Roman --- Nuits-Saint-Georges Region (France) --- Antiquities, Roman --- Ethnology --- Italic peoples --- Latini (Italic people) --- Roman temples --- Archaeological digs --- Archaeological excavations --- Digs (Archaeology) --- Excavation sites (Archaeology) --- Ruins --- Sites, Excavation (Archaeology) --- Archaeology --- Nuits-Saint-Georges --- sanctuaire --- mobilier
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