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Animal sacrifice

Animal sacrifice is the ritual killing and offering of one or more animals, usually as part of a religious ritual or to appease or maintain favour with a deity. Animal sacrifices were common throughout Europe and the Ancient Near East until the spread of Christianity in Late Antiquity, and continue in some cultures or religions today. Human sacrifice, where it existed, was always much rarer.

Sacrifice of a pig in ancient Greece (tondo from an Attic red-figure cup, 510–500 BCE, by the Epidromos Painter, collections of the Louvre)

All or only part of a sacrificial animal may be offered; some cultures, like the ancient and modern Greeks, eat most of the edible parts of the sacrifice in a feast, and burnt the rest as an offering. Others burnt the whole animal offering, called a holocaust. Usually, the best animal or best share of the animal is the one presented for offering.

Animal sacrifice should generally be distinguished from the religiously prescribed methods of ritual slaughter of animals for normal consumption as food.

One of the altars at the Monte d'Accoddi in Sardinia, where animal sacrifice may have occurred.

During the Neolithic Revolution, early humans began to move from hunter-gatherer cultures toward agriculture, leading to the spread of animal domestication. In a theory presented in Homo Necans, mythologist Walter Burkert suggests that the ritual sacrifice of livestock may have developed as a continuation of ancient hunting rituals, as livestock replaced wild game in the food supply.[1]

Prehistory edit

Ancient Egypt was at the forefront of domestication, and some of the earliest archeological evidence suggesting animal sacrifice comes from Egypt. However, animal sacrifice was not a central practice of Egyptian religion, but was rather a peripherical occurrence that happened away from worshippers.[2] The oldest Egyptian burial sites containing animal remains originate from the Badari culture of Upper Egypt, which flourished between 4400 and 4000 BCE.[3] Sheep and goats were found buried in their own graves at one site, while at another site gazelles were found at the feet of several human burials.[3] At a cemetery uncovered at Hierakonpolis and dated to 3000 BCE, the remains of a much wider variety of animals were found, including non-domestic species such as baboons and hippopotami, which may have been sacrificed in honor of powerful former citizens or buried near their former owners.[4] According to Herodotus, later Dynastic Egyptian animal sacrifice became restricted to livestock – sheep, cattle, swine and geese – with sets of rituals and rules to describe each type of sacrifice.[5]

By the end of the Copper Age in 3000 BCE, animal sacrifice had become a common practice across many cultures, and appeared to have become more generally restricted to domestic livestock. At Gath, archeological evidence indicates that the Canaanites imported sacrificial sheep and goats from Egypt rather than selecting from their own livestock.[6] At the Monte d'Accoddi in Sardinia, one of the earliest known sacred centers in Europe, evidence of the sacrifice of sheep, cattle and swine has been uncovered by excavations, and it is indicated that ritual sacrifice may have been common across Italy around 3000 BCE and afterwards.[7] At the Minoan settlement of Phaistos in ancient Crete, excavations have revealed basins for animal sacrifice dating to the period 2000 to 1700 BCE.[8] However, remains of a young goat were found in Cueva de la Dehesilla (es), a cave in Spain, related to a funerary ritual from the Middle Neolithic period, dated to between 4800 and 4000 BCE.[9]

Ancient Near East edit

Animal sacrifice was general among the ancient Near Eastern civilizations of Ancient Mesopotamia, Egypt and Persia, as well as the Hebrews (covered below). Unlike the Greeks, who had worked out a justification for keeping the best edible parts of the sacrifice for the assembled humans to eat, in these cultures the whole animal was normally placed on the fire by the altar and burned, or sometimes it was buried.[10]

Ancient Greece edit

 
A bull is led to the altar of Athena, whose image is at right. Vase, c. 545 BCE.

Worship in ancient Greek religion typically consisted of sacrificing domestic animals at the altar with hymn and prayer. The altar was outside any temple building, and might not be associated with a temple at all. The animal, which should be perfect of its kind, is decorated with garlands and the like, and led in procession to the altar, a girl with a basket on her head containing the concealed knife leading the way. After various rituals the animal is slaughtered over the altar, as it falls all the women present "must cry out in high, shrill tones". Its blood is collected and poured over the altar. It is butchered on the spot and various internal organs, bones and other inedible parts burnt as the deity's portion of the offering, while the meat is removed to be prepared for the participants to eat; the leading figures tasting it on the spot. The temple usually kept the skin, to sell to tanners. The fact that the humans got more use from the sacrifice than the deity had not escaped the Greeks, and is often the subject of humour in Greek comedy.[11]

The animals used are, in order of preference, bull or ox, cow, sheep (the most common), goat, pig (with piglet the cheapest mammal), and poultry (but rarely other birds or fish).[12] Horses and asses are seen on some vases in the Geometric style (900–750 BCE), but are very rarely mentioned in literature; they were relatively late introductions to Greece, and it has been suggested that Greek preferences in this matter go very far back. The Greeks liked to believe that the animal was glad to be sacrificed, and interpreted various behaviours as showing this. Divination by examining parts of the sacrificed animal was much less important than in Roman or Etruscan religion, or Near Eastern religions, but was practiced, especially of the liver, and as part of the cult of Apollo. Generally, the Greeks put more faith in observing the behaviour of birds.[13] For a smaller and simpler offering, a grain of incense could be thrown on the sacred fire,[14] and outside the cities farmers made simple sacrificial gifts of plant produce as the "first fruits" were harvested.[15] Although the grand form of sacrifice called the hecatomb (meaning 100 bulls) might in practice only involve a dozen or so, at large festivals the number of cattle sacrificed could run into the hundreds, and the numbers feasting on them well into the thousands. The enormous Hellenistic structures of the Altar of Hieron and Pergamon Altar were built for such occasions.

 
Sacrifice of a lamb on a Pitsa Panel, Corinth, 540–530 BCE

The evidence of the existence of such practices is clear in some ancient Greek literature, especially in Homer's epics. Throughout the poems, the use of the ritual is apparent at banquets where meat is served, in times of danger or before some important endeavor to gain the favor of the gods. For example, in Homer's Odyssey Eumaeus sacrifices a pig with prayer for his unrecognizable master Odysseus. However, in Homer's Iliad, which partly reflects very early Greek civilization, not every banquet of the princes begins with a sacrifice.[16]

These sacrificial practices, described in these pre-Homeric eras, share commonalities to the 8th century forms of sacrificial rituals. Furthermore, throughout the poem, special banquets are held whenever gods indicated their presence by some sign or success in war. Before setting out for Troy, this type of animal sacrifice is offered. Odysseus offers Zeus a sacrificial ram in vain. The occasions of sacrifice in Homer's epic poems may shed some light onto the view of the gods as members of society, rather than as external entities, indicating social ties. Sacrificial rituals played a major role in forming the relationship between humans and the divine.[17]

It has been suggested that the Chthonic deities, distinguished from Olympic deities by typically being offered the holocaust mode of sacrifice, where the offering is wholly burnt, may be remnants of the native Pre-Hellenic religion and that many of the Olympian deities may come from the Proto-Greeks who overran the southern part of the Balkan Peninsula in the late third millennium BCE.[18]

In the Hellenistic period after the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BCE, several new philosophical movements began to question the ethics of animal sacrifice.[19]

Scythians edit

According to the unique account by the Greek author Herodotus (c. 484 – c. 425 BCE), the Scythians sacrificed various kinds of livestock, though the most prestigious offering was considered to be the horse. The pig, on the other hand, was never offered in sacrifice, and apparently the Scythians were loath to keep swine within their lands.[20] Herodotus describes the Scythian manner of sacrifice as follows:

The victim stands with its fore-feet tied, and the sacrificing priest stands behind the victim, and by pulling the end of the cord he throws the beast down; and as the victim falls, he calls upon the god to whom he is sacrificing, and then at once throws a noose round its neck, and putting a small stick into it he turns it round and so strangles the animal, without either lighting a fire or making any first offering from the victim or pouring any libation over it: and when he has strangled it and flayed off the skin, he proceeds to boil it. [...] Then when the flesh is boiled, the sacrificer takes a first offering of the flesh and of the vital organs and casts it in front of him.[21]

Herodotus goes on to describe the human sacrifice of prisoners, conducted in a different manner.

Ancient Rome edit

 
Procession of the suovetaurilia with the pig, sheep, and bull to be sacrificed, on a panel from Trajan's Column

The most potent offering in Ancient Roman religion was animal sacrifice, typically of domesticated animals such as cattle, sheep and pigs. Each was the best specimen of its kind, cleansed, clad in sacrificial regalia and garlanded; the horns of oxen might be gilded. Sacrifice sought the harmonisation of the earthly and divine, so the victim must seem willing to offer its own life on behalf of the community; it must remain calm and be quickly and cleanly dispatched.[22]

 
Preparation of an animal sacrifice; marble, fragment of an architectural relief, first quarter of the 2nd century AD; from Rome, Italy

Sacrifice to deities of the heavens (di superi, "gods above") was performed in daylight, and under the public gaze. Deities of the upper heavens required white, infertile victims of their own sex: Juno a white heifer (possibly a white cow); Jupiter a white, castrated ox (bos mas) for the annual oath-taking by the consuls. Di superi with strong connections to the earth, such as Mars, Janus, Neptune and various genii – including the Emperor's – were offered fertile victims. After the sacrifice, a banquet was held; in state cults, the images of honoured deities took pride of place on banqueting couches and by means of the sacrificial fire consumed their proper portion (exta, the innards). Rome's officials and priests reclined in order of precedence alongside and ate the meat; lesser citizens may have had to provide their own.[23]

Chthonic gods such as Dis pater, the di inferi ("gods below"), and the collective shades of the departed (di Manes) were given dark, fertile victims in nighttime rituals. Animal sacrifice usually took the form of a holocaust or burnt offering, and there was no shared banquet, as "the living cannot share a meal with the dead".[24] Ceres and other underworld goddesses of fruitfulness were sometimes offered pregnant female animals; Tellus was given a pregnant cow at the Fordicidia festival. Color had a general symbolic value for sacrifices. Demigods and heroes, who belonged to the heavens and the underworld, were sometimes given black-and-white victims. Robigo (or Robigus) was given red dogs and libations of red wine at the Robigalia for the protection of crops from blight and red mildew.[23]

A sacrifice might be made in thanksgiving or as an expiation of a sacrilege or potential sacrilege (piaculum);[25] a piaculum might also be offered as a sort of advance payment; the Arval Brethren, for instance, offered a piaculum before entering their sacred grove with an iron implement, which was forbidden, as well as after.[26] The pig was a common victim for a piaculum.[27]

 
Taurobolium ex voto altar dedicated to the Mother of the Gods on behalf of the emperor's wellbeing, set up by a priest in Roman Gaul (CIL 12.1569

The same divine agencies who caused disease or harm also had the power to avert it, and so might be placated in advance. Divine consideration might be sought to avoid the inconvenient delays of a journey, or encounters with banditry, piracy and shipwreck, with due gratitude to be rendered on safe arrival or return. In times of great crisis, the Senate could decree collective public rites, in which Rome's citizens, including women and children, moved in procession from one temple to the next, supplicating the gods.[28]

Extraordinary circumstances called for extraordinary sacrifice: in one of the many crises of the Second Punic War, Jupiter Capitolinus was promised every animal born that spring (see ver sacrum), to be rendered after five more years of protection from Hannibal and his allies.[29] The "contract" with Jupiter is exceptionally detailed. All due care would be taken of the animals. If any died or were stolen before the scheduled sacrifice, they would count as already sacrificed, since they had already been consecrated. Normally, if the gods failed to keep their side of the bargain, the offered sacrifice would be withheld. In the imperial period, sacrifice was withheld following Trajan's death because the gods had not kept the Emperor safe for the stipulated period.[30] In Pompeii, the Genius of the living emperor was offered a bull: presumably a standard practise in Imperial cult, though minor offerings (incense and wine) were also made.[31]

The exta were the entrails of a sacrificed animal, comprising in Cicero's enumeration the gall bladder (fel), liver (iecur), heart (cor), and lungs (pulmones).[32] The exta were exposed for litatio (divine approval) as part of Roman liturgy, but were "read" in the context of the disciplina Etrusca. As a product of Roman sacrifice, the exta and blood are reserved for the gods, while the meat (viscera) is shared among human beings in a communal meal. The exta of bovine victims were usually stewed in a pot (olla or aula), while those of sheep or pigs were grilled on skewers. When the deity's portion was cooked, it was sprinkled with mola salsa (ritually prepared salted flour) and wine, then placed in the fire on the altar for the offering; the technical verb for this action was porricere.[33]

Celtic peoples edit

There is evidence that ancient Celtic people sacrificed animals, almost always livestock or working animals, as part of ancient Celtic religion.[34] The idea seems to have been that ritually transferring a life-force to the Otherworld pleased the gods and established a channel of communication between the worlds. Animal sacrifices could be acts of thanksgiving, appeasement, to ask for good health and fertility, or as a means of divination. It seems that some animals were offered wholly to the gods (by burying or burning), while some were shared between gods and humans (part eaten and part set aside).[34]

Archaeologists have found evidence of animal sacrifice at some Gaulish and British sanctuaries,[35] and at the Irish site Uisneach.[36] Accounts of Celtic animal sacrifice come from Roman and Greek writers. Julius Caesar and Strabo wrote of the Gauls burning animal sacrifices in a large wickerwork figure, known as a wicker man,[37] while Pliny the Elder wrote of druids performing a 'ritual of oak and mistletoe' which involved sacrificing two white bulls.[38]

Some animal sacrifice or ritual slaughter continued among Celtic peoples long after they converted to Christianity. Until the 19th century, on St. Martin's Day (11 November) in rural Ireland a rooster, goose or sheep would be slaughtered and some of its blood sprinkled on the threshold of the house. It was offered to Saint Martin,[39] and was eaten as part of a feast.[40] Bull sacrifices at the time of the Lughnasa festival were recorded as late as the 18th century at Cois Fharraige in Ireland (where they were offered to Crom Dubh) and at Loch Maree in Scotland (where they were offered to Saint Máel Ruba).[41]

Germanic peoples edit

Animal sacrifice, or blót, was an important ritual in Old Norse religion. The blood was sprinkled on altars, idols and the walls of temples. A blót was made at seasonal festivals as well as at funerals, before battles and perilous journeys, or after the conclusion of business between traders.[42]

In the 11th century, Adam of Bremen wrote that human and animal sacrifices were made at the Temple at Gamla Uppsala in Sweden. He wrote that every ninth year, nine men and nine of every animal were sacrificed and their bodies hung in a sacred grove.[43]

Abrahamic traditions edit

Judaism edit

In Judaism, the qorban is any of a variety of sacrificial offerings described and commanded in the Torah. The most common usages are animal sacrifice (zevah זֶבַח), zevah shelamim (the peace offering) and olah (the "holocaust" or burnt offering). A qorban was an animal sacrifice, such as a bull, sheep, goat, or a dove that underwent shechita (Jewish ritual slaughter). Sacrifices could also consist of grain, meal, wine, or incense.[44][45]

The Hebrew Bible says that Yahweh commanded the Israelites to offer offerings and sacrifices on various altars. The sacrifices were only to be offered by the hands of the Kohanim. Before building the Temple in Jerusalem, when the Israelites were in the desert, sacrifices were offered only in the Tabernacle. After building Solomon's Temple, sacrifices were allowed only there. After the Temple was destroyed, sacrifices was resumed when the Second Temple was built until it was also destroyed in 70 CE. After the destruction of the Second Temple sacrifices were prohibited because there was no longer a Temple, the only place allowed by halakha for sacrifices. Offering of sacrifices was briefly reinstated during the Jewish–Roman wars of the second century CE and was continued in certain communities thereafter.[46][44][47]

The Samaritans, a group historically related to the Jews, practice animal sacrifice in accordance with the Law of Moses.[48]

Christianity edit

 
Matagh of a rooster at the entrance of a monastery church (Alaverdi, Armenia, 2009), with inset of bloody steps.
 
Christmas goat sacrifice in Isla de Margarita, Venezuela

Christianity has long opposed all forms of animal sacrifice, and the practice's "very possibility ... has been generally rejected as unreasonable and hostile to Christian theology".[49] Most Christian denominations believe that the sacrificial death of Jesus Christ permanently abolished animal sacrifice, primarily based on the teaching in the Epistle to the Hebrews that Jesus was the "Lamb of God" to whom all ancient sacrifices pointed.[50] Most Christian sects believe that the "bloodless" sacrifice of the Eucharist, or Lord's Supper, entirely replaces the Old Testament system of sacrifices.[49] Consequently, animal sacrifice is rarely practiced in Christianity.

A handful of rural Christian communities sacrifice animals (which are then consumed in a feast) as part of worship, especially at Easter. The animal may be brought into the church before being taken out again and killed. Some villages in Greece sacrifice animals to Orthodox saints in a practice known as kourbania. Sacrifice of a lamb, or less commonly a rooster, is a common practice in Armenian Church,[10] and the Tewahedo Church of Ethiopia and Eritrea. This tradition, called matagh, is believed to stem from pre-Christian pagan rituals. Additionally, some Mayans following a form of Folk Catholicism in Mexico today still sacrifice animals in conjunction with church practices, a ritual practiced in past religions before the arrival of the Spaniards.[51]

Islam edit

Muslims engaged in the Hajj (pilgrimage) are obliged to sacrifice a lamb or a goat or join others in sacrificing a cow or a camel during the celebration of the Eid al-Adha,[52][53] an Arabic term that means "Feast of Sacrifice", also known as al-Id al-Kabir (Great Feast), or Qurban Bayrami (Sacrifice Feast) in Turkic influenced cultures, Bakar Id (Goat Feast) in Indian subcontinent and Reraya Qurben in Indonesia.[54] Other Muslims not on the Hajj to Mecca also participate in this sacrifice wherever they are, on the 10th day of the 12th lunar month in the Islamic calendar.[54] It is understood as a symbolic re-enactment of Abraham's sacrifice of a ram in place of his son. Meat from this occasion is divided into three parts, one part is kept by the sacrificing family for food, the other gifted to friends and family, and the third given to the poor Muslims. The sacrificed animal is a sheep, goat, cow or camel. The feast follows a communal prayer at a mosque or open air.[54][55]

 
Cattle sacrifice at Eid.

The animal sacrifice during the Hajj is a part of nine step pilgrimage ritual. It is, states Campo, preceded by a statement to intention and body purification, inaugural circumambulation of the Kaaba seven times, running between Marwa and Safa hills, encampment at Mina, standing in Arafat, stoning the three Mina satanic pillars with at least forty nine pebbles. Thereafter, animal sacrifice, and this is followed by farewell circumambulation of the Kaaba.[56][57] The Muslims who are not on Hajj also perform a simplified ritual animal sacrifice. According to Campo, the animal sacrifice at the annual Islamic festival has origins in western Arabia in vogue before Islam.[56] The animal sacrifice, states Philip Stewart, is not required by the Quran, but is based on interpretations of other Islamic texts.[58]

 
Goat sacrifice.

The Eid al-Adha is major annual festival of animal sacrifice in Islam. In Indonesia alone, for example, some 800,000 animals were sacrificed in 2014 by its Muslims on the festival, but the number can be a bit lower or higher depending on the economic conditions.[59] According to Lesley Hazleton, in Turkey about 2,500,000 sheep, cows and goats are sacrificed each year to observe the Islamic festival of animal sacrifice, with a part of the sacrificed animal given to the needy who did not sacrifice an animal.[60] According to The Independent, nearly 10,000,000 animals are sacrificed in Pakistan every year on Eid.[61][62] Countries such as Saudi Arabia transport nearly a million animals every year for sacrifice to Mina (near Mecca). The sacrificed animals at Id al-Adha, states Clarke Brooke, include the four species considered lawful for the Hajj sacrifice: sheep, goats, camels and cattle, and additionally, cow-like animals initialing the water buffalo, domesticated banteng and yaks. Many are brought in from north Africa and parts of Asia.[63]

Other occasions when Muslims perform animal sacrifice include the 'aqiqa, when a child is seven days old, is shaved and given a name. It is believed that the animal sacrifice binds the child to Islam and offers protection to the child from evil.[57]

Killing of animals by dhabihah is ritual slaughter rather than sacrifice.[citation needed]

Hinduism edit

Practices of Hindu animal sacrifice are mostly associated with Shaktism, Shaiva Agamas and in currents of folk Hinduism called Kulamarga strongly rooted in local tribal traditions. Animal sacrifices were carried out in ancient times in India. Some later minor Puranas forbid animal sacrifice[64][65][66][67] though the upapurana, Kalika Purana, describes it in detail.[citation needed]

Shaktism traditions edit

 
A male buffalo calf about to be sacrificed by a priest in the Durga Puja festival. The buffalo sacrifice practice, however, is rare in contemporary India.[68]

Animal sacrifices are performed mainly at temples following the Shakti school of Hinduism where the female nature of Brahman is worshipped in the form of Kali and Durga. These traditions are followed in parts of eastern states of India at Hindu temples in Assam and West Bengal India and Nepal where goats, chickens and sometimes water buffalos are sacrificed.

Animal sacrifice is a part of Durga puja celebrations during the Navratri in eastern states of India. The goddess is offered sacrificial animal in this ritual in the belief that it stimulates her violent vengeance against the buffalo demon.[69] According to Christopher Fuller, the animal sacrifice practice is rare among Hindus during Navratri, or at other times, outside the Shaktism tradition found in the eastern Indian states of West Bengal, Odisha[70] and Assam. Further, even in these states, the festival season is one where significant animal sacrifices are observed.[69] In some Shakta Hindu communities, the slaying of buffalo demon and victory of Durga is observed with a symbolic sacrifice instead of animal sacrifice.[71][72][note 1]

Animal sacrifice en masse occurs during the three-day-long Gadhimai festival in Nepal. In 2009 it was speculated that more than 250,000 animals were killed[75] while 5 million devotees attended the festival.[76] However, this practise was later banned in 2015.[77][78][79]

Rajput traditions edit

The Rajput of Rajasthan worship their weapons and horses on Navratri, and formerly offered a sacrifice of a goat to a goddess revered as Kuldevi – a practice that continues in some places.[80][81] The ritual requires slaying of the animal with a single stroke. In the past this ritual was considered a rite of passage into manhood and readiness as a warrior.[82] The Kuldevi among these Rajput communities is a warrior-pativrata guardian goddess, with local legends tracing reverence for her during Rajput-Muslim wars.[83]

The tradition of animal sacrifice is being substituted with vegetarian offerings to the Goddess in temples and households around Banaras in Northern India.[84]

Folk traditions edit

In some sacred groves of India, particularly in western Maharashtra, animal sacrifice is practiced to pacify female deities that are supposed to rule the groves.[85]

In India, ritual of animal sacrifice is practised in many villages before local deities or certain powerful and terrifying forms of the Devi. In this form of worship, animals, usually goats, are decapitated and the blood is offered to deity often by smearing some of it on a post outside the temple.[86] For instance, Kandhen Budhi is the reigning deity of Kantamal in Boudh district of Orissa, India. Every year, animals like goat and fowl are sacrificed before the deity on the occasion of her annual Yatra/Jatra (festival) held in the month of Aswina (September–October). The main attraction of Kandhen Budhi Yatra is Ghusuri Puja. Ghusuri means a child pig, which is sacrificed to the goddess every three years. Kandhen Budhi is also worshipped at Lather village under Mohangiri GP in Kalahandi district of Orissa, India.[87] (Pasayat, 2009:20–24).[full citation needed]

The religious belief of Tabuh Rah, a form of animal sacrifice of Balinese Hinduism includes a religious cockfight where a rooster is used in religious custom by allowing him to fight against another rooster in a religious and spiritual cockfight, a spiritual appeasement exercise of Tabuh Rah.[88] The spilling of blood is necessary as purification to appease the evil spirits, and ritual fights follow an ancient and complex ritual as set out in the sacred lontar manuscripts.[89]

Tantrik traditions edit

Human sacrifice is also mentioned in Hinduism in the Kalika Purana.[90] Chapters 67 through 78 of the text constitute the Rudhiradhyaya, which discusses bali (animal sacrifice) and of Vamacara Tantrism. The Rudhiradhyaya section is notable for its uncommon discussion of human sacrifice. The text states that a human sacrifice may be performed to please the goddess, but only with the consent of prince before a war or cases of imminent danger.[citation needed] However, it was not until 2014 that the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) started collecting data on human sacrifice. According to the bureau, there were 51 cases of human sacrifice spread across 14 states between 2014 and 2016.[90] An alleged case of human sacrifice was recorded as late as 2020.[91]

East Asian traditions edit

 
Horse sacrifice to Duke Jing of Qi, 5th century BCE, China

Han Chinese edit

Ancient China edit

During Shang and Zhou Dynasty, the nobles used to practice a complicated and hierarchical sacrificial system and only the king could sacrifice to heaven and earth and the four sacred mountains including Mount Tai including his nine temples for his family. The Dukes sacrificed to the altar of land and grain and to the various rivers and streams and mountains in their territory and their family temples. The common person didn't have a temple but sacrificed to their father or grandfather or relevant family in their apartment or house and could only sacrifice to family because of the burden of the luxurious animals. The noble would sacrifice pigs, goats or sheep, cows, mainly oxen, dogs or wild dogs, and other livestock at different times of the year; in bad years the sacrifices were less.[92]


The ancient kings, Confucius and Confucian scholars framed the sacrificing scale of every strata from the Zhou system, not including human sacrifice, in The Book of Rites. The names of the offering scales from honorable to low are 'Tai-lao'(太牢), 'Shao-lao'(少牢), 'Te-sheng'(特牲), 'Te-shi'(特豕), 'Te-tun'(特豚), 'Yu'(魚), 'La'(臘), 'Dou'(豆) and else. The Tai-lao class, now only practiced in the ceremony of worshipping Huang Di or Confucius, use whole cows, whole goats and whole pigs in Taiwan [93]

It is said Hou ji offered a sacrifice with lamb millet and southern wood and black millet whine with fragrant herbs mainly southern wood.

Modern-day China edit

Buddhism prohibits all forms of killing, rituals, sacrifices and worship and Taoism generally prohibit killing of animals.[94][95][96] In Kaohsiung, Taiwan, animal sacrifices are banned in Taoist temples.[97]

 
A sacrificed pig on the altar in the ghost festival.
 
A dummy pig made of packs of noodles.

Some animal offerings, such as fowl, pigs, goats, fish, or other livestock, are accepted in some Taoism sects and beliefs in Chinese folk religion. The offerings would be placed at the altar or the temple after being slaughtered. The amount sacrificed is up to the worshippers, who can eat all of the offerings after the rite. In folk religion some regions believe that high-status deities prefer vegetarian food more, while ghosts, low-status gods, and other unknown supernatural spirits like meat. Therefore, whole pigs, whole goats, whole chickens, and whole ducks will be sacrificed in the ghost festival. Some vegetarian believers make dummy pigs or dummy goats from vegetarian food like bread or rice for sacrifice. [98][99][100]

Japan edit

Before Buddhism came to Japan, some Shinto festivals included bear, deer, horse, and green pheasant sacrifice.[citation needed]Iomante (イオマンテ), sometimes written as Iyomante (イヨマンテ), is an Ainu ceremony in which a brown bear is sacrificed.

Traditional Sub-Saharan and Afro-American religions edit

Animal sacrifice is regularly practiced in traditional African and Afro-American religions.[101][102]

The U.S. Supreme Court's 1993 decision Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye v. City of Hialeah upheld the right of Santería adherents to practice ritual animal sacrifice in the United States of America. Likewise in Texas in 2009, legal and religious issues that related to animal sacrifice, animal rights and freedom of religion were taken to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in the case of Jose Merced, President Templo Yoruba Omo Orisha Texas, Inc., v. City of Euless. The court ruling that the Merced case of the freedom of exercise of religion was meritorious and prevailing and that Merced was entitled under the Texas Religious Freedom and Restoration Act (TRFRA) to an injunction preventing the city of Euless, Texas from enforcing its ordinances that burdened his religious practices relating to the use of animals[103] (see Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 110.005(a)(2)).

Austronesian edit

Utux edit

Atayal, Seediq and Taroko people believe that bad-luck or punishments of 'Utux', which refers to any kind of supernatural spirits or ancestors, would infect the relatives. When a member in relatives has violated a taboo or met with misfortune, a ritual will be held. It must be done in the ritual to sacrifice a pig, which means the misfortune and sin would be washed away by the blood, and apologize to the Utux with gift.[104]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In these cases, Shaktism devotees consider animal sacrifice distasteful, practice alternate means of expressing devotion while respecting the views of others in their tradition.[73] A statue of asura demon made of flour, or equivalent, is immolated and smeared with vermilion to remember the blood that had necessarily been spilled during the war.[71][72] Other substitutes include a vegetal or sweet dish considered equivalent to the animal.[74]

References edit

  1. ^ Homo Necans: The Anthropology of Ancient Greek Sacrificial Ritual and Myth. trans. Peter Bing. Berkeley: University of California. 1983. ISBN 0-520-05875-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. ^ "Egyptian Religion and the Problem of the Category "Sacrifice"". academic.oup.com. Retrieved 2022-12-06.
  3. ^ a b Flores, Diane Victoria (2003). Funerary Sacrifice of Animals in the Egyptian Predynastic Period (PDF).
  4. ^ . National Geographic. 2015. Archived from the original on May 29, 2015.
  5. ^ Herodotus, Histories 2.38, 2.39,2.40,2.41,2.42
  6. ^ Archaeological Institute of America (2016). "Ancient Canaanites Imported Animals from Egypt".
  7. ^ Jones O'Day, Sharyn; Van Neer, Wim; Ervynck, Anton (2004). Behaviour Behind Bones: The Zooarchaeology of Ritual, Religion, Status and Identity. Oxbow Books. pp. 35–41. ISBN 1-84217-113-5.
  8. ^ C.Michael Hogan, Knossos Fieldnotes, The Modern Antiquarian (2007) April 16, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "New funerary and ritual behaviors of the Neolithic Iberian populations discovered". EurekAlert!. 25 September 2020.
  10. ^ a b Burkert (1972), pp. 8–9, google books
  11. ^ Burkert (1985), 2:1:1, 2:1:2. For more exotic local forms of sacrifice, see the Laphria (festival), Xanthika, and Lykaia. The advantageous division of the animal was supposed to go back to Prometheus's trick on Zeus]]
  12. ^ Burkert (1985): 2:1:1; to some extent different animals were thought appropriate for different deities, from bulls for Zeus and Poseidon to doves for Aphrodite, Burkert (1985): 2:1:4
  13. ^ Struck, P.T. (2014). "Animals and Divination", In Campbell, G.L. (Ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Animals in Classical Thought and Life, 2014, Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199589425.013.019, online
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  15. ^ Burkert (1985): 2:1:4
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  23. ^ a b Scheid, in Rüpke (ed), 263–71.
  24. ^ Though the household Lares do just that, and at least some Romans understood them to be ancestral spirits. Sacrifices to the spirits of deceased mortals are discussed below in Funerals and the afterlife.
  25. ^ Jörg Rüpke, Religion of the Romans (Polity Press, 2007, originally published in German 2001), p. 81 online.
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  30. ^ Gradel, 21: but this need not imply sacrifice as a mutual contract, breached in this instance. Evidently the gods had the greater power and freedom of choice in the matter. See Beard, et al., 34: "The gods would accept as sufficient exactly what they were offered – no more, no less." Human error in the previous annual vows and sacrifice remains a possibility.
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Bibliography edit

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  • Insoll, T. 2010. Talensi Animal Sacrifice and its Archaeological Implications. World Archaeology 42: 231–44
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animal, sacrifice, ritual, killing, offering, more, animals, usually, part, religious, ritual, appease, maintain, favour, with, deity, were, common, throughout, europe, ancient, near, east, until, spread, christianity, late, antiquity, continue, some, cultures. Animal sacrifice is the ritual killing and offering of one or more animals usually as part of a religious ritual or to appease or maintain favour with a deity Animal sacrifices were common throughout Europe and the Ancient Near East until the spread of Christianity in Late Antiquity and continue in some cultures or religions today Human sacrifice where it existed was always much rarer Sacrifice of a pig in ancient Greece tondo from an Attic red figure cup 510 500 BCE by the Epidromos Painter collections of the Louvre All or only part of a sacrificial animal may be offered some cultures like the ancient and modern Greeks eat most of the edible parts of the sacrifice in a feast and burnt the rest as an offering Others burnt the whole animal offering called a holocaust Usually the best animal or best share of the animal is the one presented for offering Animal sacrifice should generally be distinguished from the religiously prescribed methods of ritual slaughter of animals for normal consumption as food One of the altars at the Monte d Accoddi in Sardinia where animal sacrifice may have occurred During the Neolithic Revolution early humans began to move from hunter gatherer cultures toward agriculture leading to the spread of animal domestication In a theory presented in Homo Necans mythologist Walter Burkert suggests that the ritual sacrifice of livestock may have developed as a continuation of ancient hunting rituals as livestock replaced wild game in the food supply 1 Contents 1 Prehistory 2 Ancient Near East 3 Ancient Greece 4 Scythians 5 Ancient Rome 6 Celtic peoples 7 Germanic peoples 8 Abrahamic traditions 8 1 Judaism 8 2 Christianity 8 3 Islam 9 Hinduism 9 1 Shaktism traditions 9 2 Rajput traditions 9 3 Folk traditions 9 4 Tantrik traditions 10 East Asian traditions 10 1 Han Chinese 10 1 1 Ancient China 10 1 2 Modern day China 10 2 Japan 11 Traditional Sub Saharan and Afro American religions 12 Austronesian 12 1 Utux 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 15 1 BibliographyPrehistory editAncient Egypt was at the forefront of domestication and some of the earliest archeological evidence suggesting animal sacrifice comes from Egypt However animal sacrifice was not a central practice of Egyptian religion but was rather a peripherical occurrence that happened away from worshippers 2 The oldest Egyptian burial sites containing animal remains originate from the Badari culture of Upper Egypt which flourished between 4400 and 4000 BCE 3 Sheep and goats were found buried in their own graves at one site while at another site gazelles were found at the feet of several human burials 3 At a cemetery uncovered at Hierakonpolis and dated to 3000 BCE the remains of a much wider variety of animals were found including non domestic species such as baboons and hippopotami which may have been sacrificed in honor of powerful former citizens or buried near their former owners 4 According to Herodotus later Dynastic Egyptian animal sacrifice became restricted to livestock sheep cattle swine and geese with sets of rituals and rules to describe each type of sacrifice 5 By the end of the Copper Age in 3000 BCE animal sacrifice had become a common practice across many cultures and appeared to have become more generally restricted to domestic livestock At Gath archeological evidence indicates that the Canaanites imported sacrificial sheep and goats from Egypt rather than selecting from their own livestock 6 At the Monte d Accoddi in Sardinia one of the earliest known sacred centers in Europe evidence of the sacrifice of sheep cattle and swine has been uncovered by excavations and it is indicated that ritual sacrifice may have been common across Italy around 3000 BCE and afterwards 7 At the Minoan settlement of Phaistos in ancient Crete excavations have revealed basins for animal sacrifice dating to the period 2000 to 1700 BCE 8 However remains of a young goat were found in Cueva de la Dehesilla es a cave in Spain related to a funerary ritual from the Middle Neolithic period dated to between 4800 and 4000 BCE 9 Ancient Near East editAnimal sacrifice was general among the ancient Near Eastern civilizations of Ancient Mesopotamia Egypt and Persia as well as the Hebrews covered below Unlike the Greeks who had worked out a justification for keeping the best edible parts of the sacrifice for the assembled humans to eat in these cultures the whole animal was normally placed on the fire by the altar and burned or sometimes it was buried 10 Ancient Greece edit nbsp A bull is led to the altar of Athena whose image is at right Vase c 545 BCE Worship in ancient Greek religion typically consisted of sacrificing domestic animals at the altar with hymn and prayer The altar was outside any temple building and might not be associated with a temple at all The animal which should be perfect of its kind is decorated with garlands and the like and led in procession to the altar a girl with a basket on her head containing the concealed knife leading the way After various rituals the animal is slaughtered over the altar as it falls all the women present must cry out in high shrill tones Its blood is collected and poured over the altar It is butchered on the spot and various internal organs bones and other inedible parts burnt as the deity s portion of the offering while the meat is removed to be prepared for the participants to eat the leading figures tasting it on the spot The temple usually kept the skin to sell to tanners The fact that the humans got more use from the sacrifice than the deity had not escaped the Greeks and is often the subject of humour in Greek comedy 11 The animals used are in order of preference bull or ox cow sheep the most common goat pig with piglet the cheapest mammal and poultry but rarely other birds or fish 12 Horses and asses are seen on some vases in the Geometric style 900 750 BCE but are very rarely mentioned in literature they were relatively late introductions to Greece and it has been suggested that Greek preferences in this matter go very far back The Greeks liked to believe that the animal was glad to be sacrificed and interpreted various behaviours as showing this Divination by examining parts of the sacrificed animal was much less important than in Roman or Etruscan religion or Near Eastern religions but was practiced especially of the liver and as part of the cult of Apollo Generally the Greeks put more faith in observing the behaviour of birds 13 For a smaller and simpler offering a grain of incense could be thrown on the sacred fire 14 and outside the cities farmers made simple sacrificial gifts of plant produce as the first fruits were harvested 15 Although the grand form of sacrifice called the hecatomb meaning 100 bulls might in practice only involve a dozen or so at large festivals the number of cattle sacrificed could run into the hundreds and the numbers feasting on them well into the thousands The enormous Hellenistic structures of the Altar of Hieron and Pergamon Altar were built for such occasions nbsp Sacrifice of a lamb on a Pitsa Panel Corinth 540 530 BCEThe evidence of the existence of such practices is clear in some ancient Greek literature especially in Homer s epics Throughout the poems the use of the ritual is apparent at banquets where meat is served in times of danger or before some important endeavor to gain the favor of the gods For example in Homer s Odyssey Eumaeus sacrifices a pig with prayer for his unrecognizable master Odysseus However in Homer s Iliad which partly reflects very early Greek civilization not every banquet of the princes begins with a sacrifice 16 These sacrificial practices described in these pre Homeric eras share commonalities to the 8th century forms of sacrificial rituals Furthermore throughout the poem special banquets are held whenever gods indicated their presence by some sign or success in war Before setting out for Troy this type of animal sacrifice is offered Odysseus offers Zeus a sacrificial ram in vain The occasions of sacrifice in Homer s epic poems may shed some light onto the view of the gods as members of society rather than as external entities indicating social ties Sacrificial rituals played a major role in forming the relationship between humans and the divine 17 It has been suggested that the Chthonic deities distinguished from Olympic deities by typically being offered the holocaust mode of sacrifice where the offering is wholly burnt may be remnants of the native Pre Hellenic religion and that many of the Olympian deities may come from the Proto Greeks who overran the southern part of the Balkan Peninsula in the late third millennium BCE 18 In the Hellenistic period after the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BCE several new philosophical movements began to question the ethics of animal sacrifice 19 Scythians editAccording to the unique account by the Greek author Herodotus c 484 c 425 BCE the Scythians sacrificed various kinds of livestock though the most prestigious offering was considered to be the horse The pig on the other hand was never offered in sacrifice and apparently the Scythians were loath to keep swine within their lands 20 Herodotus describes the Scythian manner of sacrifice as follows The victim stands with its fore feet tied and the sacrificing priest stands behind the victim and by pulling the end of the cord he throws the beast down and as the victim falls he calls upon the god to whom he is sacrificing and then at once throws a noose round its neck and putting a small stick into it he turns it round and so strangles the animal without either lighting a fire or making any first offering from the victim or pouring any libation over it and when he has strangled it and flayed off the skin he proceeds to boil it Then when the flesh is boiled the sacrificer takes a first offering of the flesh and of the vital organs and casts it in front of him 21 Herodotus goes on to describe the human sacrifice of prisoners conducted in a different manner Ancient Rome edit nbsp Procession of the suovetaurilia with the pig sheep and bull to be sacrificed on a panel from Trajan s ColumnFurther information Suovetaurilia October Horse Taurobolium and Haruspicy The most potent offering in Ancient Roman religion was animal sacrifice typically of domesticated animals such as cattle sheep and pigs Each was the best specimen of its kind cleansed clad in sacrificial regalia and garlanded the horns of oxen might be gilded Sacrifice sought the harmonisation of the earthly and divine so the victim must seem willing to offer its own life on behalf of the community it must remain calm and be quickly and cleanly dispatched 22 nbsp Preparation of an animal sacrifice marble fragment of an architectural relief first quarter of the 2nd century AD from Rome ItalySacrifice to deities of the heavens di superi gods above was performed in daylight and under the public gaze Deities of the upper heavens required white infertile victims of their own sex Juno a white heifer possibly a white cow Jupiter a white castrated ox bos mas for the annual oath taking by the consuls Di superi with strong connections to the earth such as Mars Janus Neptune and various genii including the Emperor s were offered fertile victims After the sacrifice a banquet was held in state cults the images of honoured deities took pride of place on banqueting couches and by means of the sacrificial fire consumed their proper portion exta the innards Rome s officials and priests reclined in order of precedence alongside and ate the meat lesser citizens may have had to provide their own 23 Chthonic gods such as Dis pater the di inferi gods below and the collective shades of the departed di Manes were given dark fertile victims in nighttime rituals Animal sacrifice usually took the form of a holocaust or burnt offering and there was no shared banquet as the living cannot share a meal with the dead 24 Ceres and other underworld goddesses of fruitfulness were sometimes offered pregnant female animals Tellus was given a pregnant cow at the Fordicidia festival Color had a general symbolic value for sacrifices Demigods and heroes who belonged to the heavens and the underworld were sometimes given black and white victims Robigo or Robigus was given red dogs and libations of red wine at the Robigalia for the protection of crops from blight and red mildew 23 A sacrifice might be made in thanksgiving or as an expiation of a sacrilege or potential sacrilege piaculum 25 a piaculum might also be offered as a sort of advance payment the Arval Brethren for instance offered a piaculum before entering their sacred grove with an iron implement which was forbidden as well as after 26 The pig was a common victim for a piaculum 27 nbsp Taurobolium ex voto altar dedicated to the Mother of the Gods on behalf of the emperor s wellbeing set up by a priest in Roman Gaul CIL 12 1569The same divine agencies who caused disease or harm also had the power to avert it and so might be placated in advance Divine consideration might be sought to avoid the inconvenient delays of a journey or encounters with banditry piracy and shipwreck with due gratitude to be rendered on safe arrival or return In times of great crisis the Senate could decree collective public rites in which Rome s citizens including women and children moved in procession from one temple to the next supplicating the gods 28 Extraordinary circumstances called for extraordinary sacrifice in one of the many crises of the Second Punic War Jupiter Capitolinus was promised every animal born that spring see ver sacrum to be rendered after five more years of protection from Hannibal and his allies 29 The contract with Jupiter is exceptionally detailed All due care would be taken of the animals If any died or were stolen before the scheduled sacrifice they would count as already sacrificed since they had already been consecrated Normally if the gods failed to keep their side of the bargain the offered sacrifice would be withheld In the imperial period sacrifice was withheld following Trajan s death because the gods had not kept the Emperor safe for the stipulated period 30 In Pompeii the Genius of the living emperor was offered a bull presumably a standard practise in Imperial cult though minor offerings incense and wine were also made 31 The exta were the entrails of a sacrificed animal comprising in Cicero s enumeration the gall bladder fel liver iecur heart cor and lungs pulmones 32 The exta were exposed for litatio divine approval as part of Roman liturgy but were read in the context of the disciplina Etrusca As a product of Roman sacrifice the exta and blood are reserved for the gods while the meat viscera is shared among human beings in a communal meal The exta of bovine victims were usually stewed in a pot olla or aula while those of sheep or pigs were grilled on skewers When the deity s portion was cooked it was sprinkled with mola salsa ritually prepared salted flour and wine then placed in the fire on the altar for the offering the technical verb for this action was porricere 33 Celtic peoples editThere is evidence that ancient Celtic people sacrificed animals almost always livestock or working animals as part of ancient Celtic religion 34 The idea seems to have been that ritually transferring a life force to the Otherworld pleased the gods and established a channel of communication between the worlds Animal sacrifices could be acts of thanksgiving appeasement to ask for good health and fertility or as a means of divination It seems that some animals were offered wholly to the gods by burying or burning while some were shared between gods and humans part eaten and part set aside 34 Archaeologists have found evidence of animal sacrifice at some Gaulish and British sanctuaries 35 and at the Irish site Uisneach 36 Accounts of Celtic animal sacrifice come from Roman and Greek writers Julius Caesar and Strabo wrote of the Gauls burning animal sacrifices in a large wickerwork figure known as a wicker man 37 while Pliny the Elder wrote of druids performing a ritual of oak and mistletoe which involved sacrificing two white bulls 38 Some animal sacrifice or ritual slaughter continued among Celtic peoples long after they converted to Christianity Until the 19th century on St Martin s Day 11 November in rural Ireland a rooster goose or sheep would be slaughtered and some of its blood sprinkled on the threshold of the house It was offered to Saint Martin 39 and was eaten as part of a feast 40 Bull sacrifices at the time of the Lughnasa festival were recorded as late as the 18th century at Cois Fharraige in Ireland where they were offered to Crom Dubh and at Loch Maree in Scotland where they were offered to Saint Mael Ruba 41 Germanic peoples editFurther information Germanic paganism Animal sacrifice or blot was an important ritual in Old Norse religion The blood was sprinkled on altars idols and the walls of temples A blot was made at seasonal festivals as well as at funerals before battles and perilous journeys or after the conclusion of business between traders 42 In the 11th century Adam of Bremen wrote that human and animal sacrifices were made at the Temple at Gamla Uppsala in Sweden He wrote that every ninth year nine men and nine of every animal were sacrificed and their bodies hung in a sacred grove 43 Abrahamic traditions editSee also Jewish and Islamic ritual slaughter Judaism edit Main articles Slaughter offering and Korban In Judaism the qorban is any of a variety of sacrificial offerings described and commanded in the Torah The most common usages are animal sacrifice zevah ז ב ח zevah shelamim the peace offering and olah the holocaust or burnt offering A qorban was an animal sacrifice such as a bull sheep goat or a dove that underwent shechita Jewish ritual slaughter Sacrifices could also consist of grain meal wine or incense 44 45 The Hebrew Bible says that Yahweh commanded the Israelites to offer offerings and sacrifices on various altars The sacrifices were only to be offered by the hands of the Kohanim Before building the Temple in Jerusalem when the Israelites were in the desert sacrifices were offered only in the Tabernacle After building Solomon s Temple sacrifices were allowed only there After the Temple was destroyed sacrifices was resumed when the Second Temple was built until it was also destroyed in 70 CE After the destruction of the Second Temple sacrifices were prohibited because there was no longer a Temple the only place allowed by halakha for sacrifices Offering of sacrifices was briefly reinstated during the Jewish Roman wars of the second century CE and was continued in certain communities thereafter 46 44 47 The Samaritans a group historically related to the Jews practice animal sacrifice in accordance with the Law of Moses 48 Christianity edit nbsp Matagh of a rooster at the entrance of a monastery church Alaverdi Armenia 2009 with inset of bloody steps nbsp Christmas goat sacrifice in Isla de Margarita VenezuelaFurther information Lamb of God Christianity has long opposed all forms of animal sacrifice and the practice s very possibility has been generally rejected as unreasonable and hostile to Christian theology 49 Most Christian denominations believe that the sacrificial death of Jesus Christ permanently abolished animal sacrifice primarily based on the teaching in the Epistle to the Hebrews that Jesus was the Lamb of God to whom all ancient sacrifices pointed 50 Most Christian sects believe that the bloodless sacrifice of the Eucharist or Lord s Supper entirely replaces the Old Testament system of sacrifices 49 Consequently animal sacrifice is rarely practiced in Christianity A handful of rural Christian communities sacrifice animals which are then consumed in a feast as part of worship especially at Easter The animal may be brought into the church before being taken out again and killed Some villages in Greece sacrifice animals to Orthodox saints in a practice known as kourbania Sacrifice of a lamb or less commonly a rooster is a common practice in Armenian Church 10 and the Tewahedo Church of Ethiopia and Eritrea This tradition called matagh is believed to stem from pre Christian pagan rituals Additionally some Mayans following a form of Folk Catholicism in Mexico today still sacrifice animals in conjunction with church practices a ritual practiced in past religions before the arrival of the Spaniards 51 Islam edit Main articles Qurban Islamic ritual sacrifice and Eid al Adha Muslims engaged in the Hajj pilgrimage are obliged to sacrifice a lamb or a goat or join others in sacrificing a cow or a camel during the celebration of the Eid al Adha 52 53 an Arabic term that means Feast of Sacrifice also known as al Id al Kabir Great Feast or Qurban Bayrami Sacrifice Feast in Turkic influenced cultures Bakar Id Goat Feast in Indian subcontinent and Reraya Qurben in Indonesia 54 Other Muslims not on the Hajj to Mecca also participate in this sacrifice wherever they are on the 10th day of the 12th lunar month in the Islamic calendar 54 It is understood as a symbolic re enactment of Abraham s sacrifice of a ram in place of his son Meat from this occasion is divided into three parts one part is kept by the sacrificing family for food the other gifted to friends and family and the third given to the poor Muslims The sacrificed animal is a sheep goat cow or camel The feast follows a communal prayer at a mosque or open air 54 55 nbsp Cattle sacrifice at Eid The animal sacrifice during the Hajj is a part of nine step pilgrimage ritual It is states Campo preceded by a statement to intention and body purification inaugural circumambulation of the Kaaba seven times running between Marwa and Safa hills encampment at Mina standing in Arafat stoning the three Mina satanic pillars with at least forty nine pebbles Thereafter animal sacrifice and this is followed by farewell circumambulation of the Kaaba 56 57 The Muslims who are not on Hajj also perform a simplified ritual animal sacrifice According to Campo the animal sacrifice at the annual Islamic festival has origins in western Arabia in vogue before Islam 56 The animal sacrifice states Philip Stewart is not required by the Quran but is based on interpretations of other Islamic texts 58 nbsp Goat sacrifice The Eid al Adha is major annual festival of animal sacrifice in Islam In Indonesia alone for example some 800 000 animals were sacrificed in 2014 by its Muslims on the festival but the number can be a bit lower or higher depending on the economic conditions 59 According to Lesley Hazleton in Turkey about 2 500 000 sheep cows and goats are sacrificed each year to observe the Islamic festival of animal sacrifice with a part of the sacrificed animal given to the needy who did not sacrifice an animal 60 According to The Independent nearly 10 000 000 animals are sacrificed in Pakistan every year on Eid 61 62 Countries such as Saudi Arabia transport nearly a million animals every year for sacrifice to Mina near Mecca The sacrificed animals at Id al Adha states Clarke Brooke include the four species considered lawful for the Hajj sacrifice sheep goats camels and cattle and additionally cow like animals initialing the water buffalo domesticated banteng and yaks Many are brought in from north Africa and parts of Asia 63 Other occasions when Muslims perform animal sacrifice include the aqiqa when a child is seven days old is shaved and given a name It is believed that the animal sacrifice binds the child to Islam and offers protection to the child from evil 57 Killing of animals by dhabihah is ritual slaughter rather than sacrifice citation needed Hinduism editFurther information Ashvamedha and Animal sacrifice in Hinduism Practices of Hindu animal sacrifice are mostly associated with Shaktism Shaiva Agamas and in currents of folk Hinduism called Kulamarga strongly rooted in local tribal traditions Animal sacrifices were carried out in ancient times in India Some later minor Puranas forbid animal sacrifice 64 65 66 67 though the upapurana Kalika Purana describes it in detail citation needed Shaktism traditions edit nbsp A male buffalo calf about to be sacrificed by a priest in the Durga Puja festival The buffalo sacrifice practice however is rare in contemporary India 68 Animal sacrifices are performed mainly at temples following the Shakti school of Hinduism where the female nature of Brahman is worshipped in the form of Kali and Durga These traditions are followed in parts of eastern states of India at Hindu temples in Assam and West Bengal India and Nepal where goats chickens and sometimes water buffalos are sacrificed Animal sacrifice is a part of Durga puja celebrations during the Navratri in eastern states of India The goddess is offered sacrificial animal in this ritual in the belief that it stimulates her violent vengeance against the buffalo demon 69 According to Christopher Fuller the animal sacrifice practice is rare among Hindus during Navratri or at other times outside the Shaktism tradition found in the eastern Indian states of West Bengal Odisha 70 and Assam Further even in these states the festival season is one where significant animal sacrifices are observed 69 In some Shakta Hindu communities the slaying of buffalo demon and victory of Durga is observed with a symbolic sacrifice instead of animal sacrifice 71 72 note 1 Animal sacrifice en masse occurs during the three day long Gadhimai festival in Nepal In 2009 it was speculated that more than 250 000 animals were killed 75 while 5 million devotees attended the festival 76 However this practise was later banned in 2015 77 78 79 Rajput traditions edit The Rajput of Rajasthan worship their weapons and horses on Navratri and formerly offered a sacrifice of a goat to a goddess revered as Kuldevi a practice that continues in some places 80 81 The ritual requires slaying of the animal with a single stroke In the past this ritual was considered a rite of passage into manhood and readiness as a warrior 82 The Kuldevi among these Rajput communities is a warrior pativrata guardian goddess with local legends tracing reverence for her during Rajput Muslim wars 83 The tradition of animal sacrifice is being substituted with vegetarian offerings to the Goddess in temples and households around Banaras in Northern India 84 Folk traditions edit In some sacred groves of India particularly in western Maharashtra animal sacrifice is practiced to pacify female deities that are supposed to rule the groves 85 In India ritual of animal sacrifice is practised in many villages before local deities or certain powerful and terrifying forms of the Devi In this form of worship animals usually goats are decapitated and the blood is offered to deity often by smearing some of it on a post outside the temple 86 For instance Kandhen Budhi is the reigning deity of Kantamal in Boudh district of Orissa India Every year animals like goat and fowl are sacrificed before the deity on the occasion of her annual Yatra Jatra festival held in the month of Aswina September October The main attraction of Kandhen Budhi Yatra is Ghusuri Puja Ghusuri means a child pig which is sacrificed to the goddess every three years Kandhen Budhi is also worshipped at Lather village under Mohangiri GP in Kalahandi district of Orissa India 87 Pasayat 2009 20 24 full citation needed The religious belief of Tabuh Rah a form of animal sacrifice of Balinese Hinduism includes a religious cockfight where a rooster is used in religious custom by allowing him to fight against another rooster in a religious and spiritual cockfight a spiritual appeasement exercise of Tabuh Rah 88 The spilling of blood is necessary as purification to appease the evil spirits and ritual fights follow an ancient and complex ritual as set out in the sacred lontar manuscripts 89 Tantrik traditions edit Human sacrifice is also mentioned in Hinduism in the Kalika Purana 90 Chapters 67 through 78 of the text constitute the Rudhiradhyaya which discusses bali animal sacrifice and of Vamacara Tantrism The Rudhiradhyaya section is notable for its uncommon discussion of human sacrifice The text states that a human sacrifice may be performed to please the goddess but only with the consent of prince before a war or cases of imminent danger citation needed However it was not until 2014 that the National Crime Records Bureau NCRB started collecting data on human sacrifice According to the bureau there were 51 cases of human sacrifice spread across 14 states between 2014 and 2016 90 An alleged case of human sacrifice was recorded as late as 2020 91 East Asian traditions edit nbsp Horse sacrifice to Duke Jing of Qi 5th century BCE ChinaHan Chinese edit Ancient China edit During Shang and Zhou Dynasty the nobles used to practice a complicated and hierarchical sacrificial system and only the king could sacrifice to heaven and earth and the four sacred mountains including Mount Tai including his nine temples for his family The Dukes sacrificed to the altar of land and grain and to the various rivers and streams and mountains in their territory and their family temples The common person didn t have a temple but sacrificed to their father or grandfather or relevant family in their apartment or house and could only sacrifice to family because of the burden of the luxurious animals The noble would sacrifice pigs goats or sheep cows mainly oxen dogs or wild dogs and other livestock at different times of the year in bad years the sacrifices were less 92 The ancient kings Confucius and Confucian scholars framed the sacrificing scale of every strata from the Zhou system not including human sacrifice in The Book of Rites The names of the offering scales from honorable to low are Tai lao 太牢 Shao lao 少牢 Te sheng 特牲 Te shi 特豕 Te tun 特豚 Yu 魚 La 臘 Dou 豆 and else The Tai lao class now only practiced in the ceremony of worshipping Huang Di or Confucius use whole cows whole goats and whole pigs in Taiwan 93 It is said Hou ji offered a sacrifice with lamb millet and southern wood and black millet whine with fragrant herbs mainly southern wood Modern day China edit Buddhism prohibits all forms of killing rituals sacrifices and worship and Taoism generally prohibit killing of animals 94 95 96 In Kaohsiung Taiwan animal sacrifices are banned in Taoist temples 97 nbsp A sacrificed pig on the altar in the ghost festival nbsp A dummy pig made of packs of noodles Some animal offerings such as fowl pigs goats fish or other livestock are accepted in some Taoism sects and beliefs in Chinese folk religion The offerings would be placed at the altar or the temple after being slaughtered The amount sacrificed is up to the worshippers who can eat all of the offerings after the rite In folk religion some regions believe that high status deities prefer vegetarian food more while ghosts low status gods and other unknown supernatural spirits like meat Therefore whole pigs whole goats whole chickens and whole ducks will be sacrificed in the ghost festival Some vegetarian believers make dummy pigs or dummy goats from vegetarian food like bread or rice for sacrifice 98 99 100 Japan edit Before Buddhism came to Japan some Shinto festivals included bear deer horse and green pheasant sacrifice citation needed Iomante イオマンテ sometimes written as Iyomante イヨマンテ is an Ainu ceremony in which a brown bear is sacrificed Traditional Sub Saharan and Afro American religions editAnimal sacrifice is regularly practiced in traditional African and Afro American religions 101 102 The U S Supreme Court s 1993 decision Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye v City of Hialeah upheld the right of Santeria adherents to practice ritual animal sacrifice in the United States of America Likewise in Texas in 2009 legal and religious issues that related to animal sacrifice animal rights and freedom of religion were taken to the 5th U S Circuit Court of Appeals in the case of Jose Merced President Templo Yoruba Omo Orisha Texas Inc v City of Euless The court ruling that the Merced case of the freedom of exercise of religion was meritorious and prevailing and that Merced was entitled under the Texas Religious Freedom and Restoration Act TRFRA to an injunction preventing the city of Euless Texas from enforcing its ordinances that burdened his religious practices relating to the use of animals 103 see Tex Civ Prac amp Rem Code 110 005 a 2 Austronesian editUtux edit Atayal Seediq and Taroko people believe that bad luck or punishments of Utux which refers to any kind of supernatural spirits or ancestors would infect the relatives When a member in relatives has violated a taboo or met with misfortune a ritual will be held It must be done in the ritual to sacrifice a pig which means the misfortune and sin would be washed away by the blood and apologize to the Utux with gift 104 See also editAnimal welfare Animal worship Anthrozoology Bans on ritual slaughter Folk religion Human sacrifice Religious abuse Self flagellation Self mutilation Slaughter offeringNotes edit In these cases Shaktism devotees consider animal sacrifice distasteful practice alternate means of expressing devotion while respecting the views of others in their tradition 73 A statue of asura demon made of flour or equivalent is immolated and smeared with vermilion to remember the blood that had necessarily been spilled during the war 71 72 Other substitutes include a vegetal or sweet dish considered equivalent to the animal 74 References edit Homo Necans The Anthropology of Ancient Greek Sacrificial Ritual and Myth trans Peter Bing Berkeley University of California 1983 ISBN 0 520 05875 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Egyptian Religion and the Problem of the Category Sacrifice academic oup com Retrieved 2022 12 06 a b Flores Diane Victoria 2003 Funerary Sacrifice of Animals in the Egyptian Predynastic Period PDF In Ancient Egypt Life Wasn t Easy for Elite Pets National Geographic 2015 Archived from the original on May 29 2015 Herodotus Histories 2 38 2 39 2 40 2 41 2 42 Archaeological Institute of America 2016 Ancient Canaanites Imported Animals from Egypt Jones O Day Sharyn Van Neer Wim Ervynck Anton 2004 Behaviour Behind Bones The Zooarchaeology of Ritual Religion Status and Identity Oxbow Books pp 35 41 ISBN 1 84217 113 5 C Michael Hogan Knossos Fieldnotes The Modern Antiquarian 2007 Archived April 16 2016 at the Wayback Machine New funerary and ritual behaviors of the Neolithic Iberian populations discovered EurekAlert 25 September 2020 a b Burkert 1972 pp 8 9 google books Burkert 1985 2 1 1 2 1 2 For more exotic local forms of sacrifice see the Laphria festival Xanthika and Lykaia The advantageous division of the animal was supposed to go back to Prometheus s trick on Zeus Burkert 1985 2 1 1 to some extent different animals were thought appropriate for different deities from bulls for Zeus and Poseidon to doves for Aphrodite Burkert 1985 2 1 4 Struck P T 2014 Animals and Divination In Campbell G L Ed The Oxford Handbook of Animals in Classical Thought and Life 2014 Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199589425 013 019 online Burkert 1985 2 1 2 Burkert 1985 2 1 4 Sarah Hitch King of Sacrifice Ritual and Royal Authority in the Iliad online at Archived 2021 01 25 at the Wayback Machine Harvard University s Center for Hellenic Studies Meuli Karl 1946 Griechische Opferbrauche Schwabe Chadwick John 1976 The Mycenaean World New York Cambridge University Press p 85 ISBN 978 0 521 29037 1 Burkert 1972 6 7 Macaulay 1904 315 full citation needed Macaulay 1904 314 Halm in Rupke ed 239 a b Scheid in Rupke ed 263 71 Though the household Lares do just that and at least some Romans understood them to be ancestral spirits Sacrifices to the spirits of deceased mortals are discussed below in Funerals and the afterlife Jorg Rupke Religion of the Romans Polity Press 2007 originally published in German 2001 p 81 online William Warde Fowler The Religious Experience of the Roman People London 1922 p 191 Robert E A Palmer The Deconstruction of Mommsen on Festus 462 464 L or the Hazards of Interpretation in Imperium sine fine T Robert S Broughton and the Roman Republic Franz Steiner 1996 p 99 note 129 online Roger D Woodard Indo European Sacred Space Vedic and Roman Cult University of Illinois Press 2006 p 122 online The Augustan historian Livy 8 9 1 11 says Publius Decius Mus consul 340 BCE P Decius Mus is like a piaculum when he makes his vow to sacrifice himself in battle devotio Hahn Frances Hickson 25 March 2011 Performing the Sacred Prayers and Hymns In Rupke Jorg ed A Companion to Roman Religion John Wiley amp Sons p 238 ISBN 9781444341317 Beard et al Vol 1 32 36 Gradel 21 but this need not imply sacrifice as a mutual contract breached in this instance Evidently the gods had the greater power and freedom of choice in the matter See Beard et al 34 The gods would accept as sufficient exactly what they were offered no more no less Human error in the previous annual vows and sacrifice remains a possibility Gradel 78 93 Cicero De divinatione 2 12 29 According to Pliny Natural History 11 186 before 274 BCE the heart was not included among the exta Robert Schilling The Roman Religion in Historia Religionum Religions of the Past Brill 1969 vol 1 pp 471 72 and Roman Sacrifice Roman and European Mythologies University of Chicago Press 1992 p 79 John Scheid An Introduction to Roman Religion Indiana University Press 2003 originally published in French 1998 p 84 a b Green Miranda 2002 Animals in Celtic Life and Myth Routledge pp 94 96 Green pp 109 110 Schot Roseanne 2006 Uisneach Midi a medon Erenn a prehistoric cult centre and royal site in Co Westmeath Journal of Irish Archaeology issue 15 pp 39 46 Davidson Hilda Ellis 1988 Myths and Symbols in Pagan Europe Early Scandinavian and Celtic Religions Syracuse University Press pp 60 61 Koch John 2006 Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 612 MacCulloch John Arnott 1911 The Religion of the Ancient Celts Chapter 18 Festivals Hutton Ronald The Stations of the Sun A History of the Ritual Year in Britain Oxford University Press 1996 p 386 MacNeill Maire The Festival of Lughnasa A Study of the Survival of the Celtic Festival of the Beginning of Harvest Oxford University Press 1962 pp 407 410 Magnell Ola 2012 Sacred Cows or Old Beasts A Taphonomic Approach to Studying Ritual Killing with an Example from Iron Age Uppakra In Pluskowski Aleksander ed The Ritual Killing and Burial of Animals European Perspectives Oxbow Books p 195 ISBN 978 1 84217 444 9 Davidson Hilda Ellis 1988 Myths and Symbols in Pagan Europe Early Scandinavian and Celtic Religions Syracuse University Press p 59 a b Zotti Ed ed 17 April 2003 Why do Jews no longer sacrifice animals The Straight Dope Rabbi Zalman Kravitz Jews For Judaism Archived from the original on 2016 03 30 Retrieved 2016 04 24 Judaism 101 Qorbanot Sacrifices and Offerings What is the Tabernacle of Moses Archived from the original on 2016 04 27 Retrieved 2016 04 24 Barton 1903 p 9 a b Kovaltchuk 2008 p 163 Kovaltchuk 2008 pp 162 63 Maya and Catholic Religious Syncretism at Chamula Mexico Vagabondjourney com 2011 11 26 Retrieved 2014 02 12 Traditional festivals 2 M Z ABC CLIO 2005 p 132 ISBN 978 1576070895 Bongmba Elias Kifon The Wiley Blackwell Companion to African Religions Wiley com p 327 a b c Juan Campo 2009 Encyclopedia of Islam Infobase Publishing p 342 ISBN 978 1 4381 2696 8 Bowen John R 1992 On scriptural essentialism and ritual variation Muslim sacrifice in Sumatra and Morocco American Ethnologist Wiley Blackwell 19 4 656 71 doi 10 1525 ae 1992 19 4 02a00020 a b Juan Campo 2009 Encyclopedia of Islam Infobase Publishing p 282 ISBN 978 1 4381 2696 8 a b Edward Hulmes 2013 Ian Richard Netton ed Encyclopedia of Islamic Civilization and Religion Taylor amp Francis pp 248 49 ISBN 978 1 135 17967 0 Philip J Stewart 1979 Islamic law as a factor in grazing management The Pilgrimage Sacrifice The Commonwealth Forestry Review Vol 58 No 1 175 March 1979 pp 27 31 Animal Sacrifice in the World s Largest Muslim Majority Nation The Wall Street Journal September 23 2015 Lesley Hazleton 2008 Mary Bloomsbury Publishing p 41 ISBN 978 1 59691 799 6 Eid al Adha 2016 When is it and why does it not fall on the same date every year Harriet Agerholm The Independent 6 September 2016 Zaidi Farrah Chen Xue xin 2011 A preliminary survey of carrion breeding insects associated with the Eid ul Azha festival in remote Pakistan Forensic Science International Elsevier BV 209 1 3 186 94 doi 10 1016 j forsciint 2011 01 027 PMID 21330071 Brooke Clarke 1987 Sacred Slaughter The Sacrificing of Animals at theHajjandId al Adha Journal of Cultural Geography Taylor amp Francis 7 2 67 88 doi 10 1080 08873638709478508 Quote Id al Adha s lawful sacrificial offerings include the four species prescribed for Hajj sacrifice sheep goats camels and cattle and additionally cow like animals initialing the water buffalo domesticated banteng and yaks To meet market demands for sacrificial animals pastoralists in northern Africa and southwestern Asia increased their flocks and overstocked grazing land consequently accelerating the deterioration of biotic resources Preece Rod 2001 Animals and Nature Cultural Myths Cultural Realities UBC Press p 202 ISBN 978 0774807241 Kemmerer Lisa Nocella Anthony J 2011 Call to Compassion Reflections on Animal Advocacy from the World s Religions Lantern Books p 60 ISBN 978 1590562819 Stephens Alan Andrew Walden Raphael Walden 2006 For the Sake of Humanity BRILL p 69 ISBN 9004141251 Smith David Whitten Bur Elizabeth Geraldine January 2007 Understanding World Religions A Road Map for Justice and Peace Rowman amp Littlefield p 13 ISBN 978 0742550551 Christopher John Fuller 2004 The Camphor Flame Popular Hinduism and Society in India Princeton University Press p 141 ISBN 0 691 12048 X a b Christopher John Fuller 2004 The Camphor Flame Popular Hinduism and Society in India Princeton University Press pp 46 83 85 ISBN 0 691 12048 X Hardenberg Roland 2000 Visnu s Sleep Mahisa s Attack Durga s Victory Concepts of Royalty in a Sacrificial Drama PDF Journal of Social Science 4 4 267 Retrieved 29 September 2015 a b Hillary Rodrigues 2003 pp 277 78 a b June McDaniel 2004 pp 204 05 Ira Katznelson Gareth Stedman Jones 2010 Religion and the Political Imagination Cambridge University Press p 343 ISBN 978 1 139 49317 8 Rachel Fell McDermott 2011 Revelry Rivalry and Longing for the Goddesses of Bengal The Fortunes of Hindu Festivals Columbia University Press pp 204 05 ISBN 978 0 231 12919 0 Olivia Lang in Bariyapur 2009 11 24 Hindu sacrifice of 250 000 animals begins The Guardian London Retrieved 2012 08 13 Ritual animal slaughter begins in Nepal CNN 2009 11 24 Retrieved 2012 08 13 Ram Chandra Shah Gadhimai Temple Trust Chairman Mr Ram Chandra Shah on the decision to stop holding animal sacrifices during the Gadhimai festival Later the trust denied the decision as per trust such decision was obtained forcefully by animal right Trust said it is not in our hand to stop the sacrifice it is up to people as trust or priest never ask devotee to offer sacrifice It is their sole and self decision PDF Humane Society International Retrieved 29 July 2015 Meredith Charlotte 29 July 2015 Thousands of Animals Have Been Saved in Nepal as Mass Slaughter Is Cancelled Vice News Vice Media Inc Retrieved 29 July 2015 Kumar Yadav Praveen Tripathi Ritesh 29 July 2015 Gadhimai Trust dismisses reports on animal sacrifice ban Archived from the original on 27 June 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2018 Harlan Lindsey 2003 The goddesses henchmen gender in Indian hero worship Oxford u a Oxford University Press pp 45 with footnote 55 58 59 ISBN 978 0195154269 Retrieved 14 October 2016 Hiltebeitel Alf Erndl Kathleen M 2000 Is the Goddess a Feminist the Politics of South Asian Goddesses Sheffield England Sheffield Academic Press p 77 ISBN 978 0814736197 Harlan Lindsey 1992 Religion and Rajput Women Berkeley California University of California Press pp 61 88 ISBN 0 520 07339 8 Harlan Lindsey 1992 Religion and Rajput Women Berkeley CA University of California Press pp 107 08 ISBN 0 520 07339 8 Rodrigues Hillary 2003 Ritual Worship of the Great Goddess The Liturgy of the Durga Puja with interpretation Albany NY State University of New York Press p 215 ISBN 07914 5399 5 Retrieved 26 October 2015 Gadgil M VD Vartak 1975 Sacred Groves of India PDF Journal of the Bombay Natural History 72 2 314 James G Lochtefeld 2002 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism A M The Rosen Publishing Group p 41 ISBN 978 0823931798 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2012 03 18 Retrieved 2015 02 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Bali Today Love and social life By Jean Couteau Jean Couteau et al p 129 Couteau Jean 2008 Bali Today Love and social life Kepustakaan Populer Gramedia ISBN 9789799101150 Eliot Joshua Capaldi Liz Bickersteth Jane 2001 Indonesia Footprint Handbooks p 450 ISBN 1900949512 a b Bhattacharya Aritra 6 November 2018 Does Goddess Kali Really Demand Human Sacrifice to Slay Demons The Quint Retrieved 24 May 2021 Rajaram R 3 June 2020 Murder gets human sacrifice colour The Hindu Pudukottai Kasturi amp Sons Retrieved 24 May 2021 Herbert Plutschow 1996 Archaic Chinese Sacrificial Practices in the Light of Generative Anthropology Anthropoetics Retrieved 2021 07 22 As we have learned above Shang dynasty sacrifice consisted in humans and animals and to a lesser extent wine and food millet and sometimes as practiced later in Japan tools weapons and clothing Sacrificial animals included dogs traditionally interpreted as guides for the spirits to help them during their hunts and also sheep oxen and pigs 祭孔的起源與發展 in Chinese Taipei Confucius Temple Governing Board Retrieved 2021 07 19 高祖十二年 前195年 十二月 漢高祖劉邦平定英布之亂後 於返京途中 路過曲阜孔廟 漢高祖以全牛 全豬 全羊之太牢重禮祭孔廟 為後世立下天子祭孔典範 办丧事或祭祀祖先可以杀生吗 Archived March 31 2012 at the Wayback Machine 齋醮略談 Archived March 6 2016 at the Wayback Machine 符籙齋醮 Archived April 22 2010 at the Wayback Machine 中山大學 West BBS 西子灣站 分類佈告 maev91 高雄地名知多少 Archived from the original on 2011 08 12 Retrieved 2011 08 28 林真 馬年運程 馬年運氣書 風水 掌相 看相 八字 命理 算命 衣紙2 Archived March 13 2012 at the Wayback Machine 道教拜神用品 Archived July 5 2007 at the Wayback Machine Marie Jose Alcide Saint Lot 2003 Vodou a Sacred Theatre The African Heritage in Haiti Educa Vision Inc p 14 ISBN 978 1584321774 Insoll T Talensi Animal Sacrifice and its Archaeological Implications pp 231 34 Archived October 22 2016 at the Wayback Machine Full text of the opinion courtesy of Findlaw com 太魯閣族 in Chinese 原住民族委員會 Retrieved 2021 07 22 在部落中有一種力量 就如泰雅的gaga一樣 太魯閣叫做gaya Gaya是家與部落的中心 每一個成員都必須嚴格遵守的 否則一人違規全家或全部落都會遭殃的 這種力量像是一種規訓 如果不遵守就會觸犯禁忌 受到祖先的懲罰 這時必須殺豬來解除 其內容各gaya間會略有不同 但大抵來說都是道德上的訓誡 如不可口出穢言 要參與部落活動等等 Bibliography edit Hillary Rodrigues 2003 Ritual Worship of the Great Goddess The Liturgy of the Durga Puja with Interpretations SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 8844 7 June McDaniel 2004 Offering Flowers Feeding Skulls Popular Goddess Worship in West Bengal Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 534713 5 Barik Sarmistha 2009 Bali Yatra of Sonepur in Orissa Review Vol LXVI No 2 September pp 160 62 Burkert Walter 1972 Homo Necans pp 6 22 Burkert Walter 1985 Greek Religion Archaic and Classical Harvard University Press ISBN 0674362810 Gihus Ingvild Saelid Animals Gods and Humans Changing Ideas to Animals in Greek Roman and early Christian Ideas London New York Routeledge 2006 Pasayat C 2003 Glimpses of Tribal an Folkculture New Delhi Anmol Publications Pvt Ltd pp 67 84 Insoll T 2010 Talensi Animal Sacrifice and its Archaeological Implications World Archaeology 42 231 44 Garnsey Peter Food and Society in Classical Antiquity Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1999 Kovaltchuk Ekaterina 2008 The Encaenia of St Sophia Animal Sacrifice in a Christian Context Scrinium 4 1 158 200 doi 10 1163 18177565 90000183 S2CID 191410592 Pasayat C 2009 Kandhen Budhi in Orissa Review Vol LXVI No 2 September pp 20 24 Petropoulou M Z 2008 Animal Sacrifice in Ancient Greek Religion Judaism and Christianity 100 BC to AD 200 Oxford classical monographs Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 921854 7 Rosivach Vincent J The System of Public Sacrifice in Fourth Century Athens Atlanta GA Scholars Press 1994 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Animal sacrifice amp oldid 1207558760, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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