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Manichaeism

Manichaeism (/ˌmænɪˈkɪzəm/;[1] in New Persian آیینِ مانی Āyīn-e Mānī; Chinese: 摩尼教; pinyin: Móníjiào) is a former major religion[2] founded in the 3rd century AD by the Parthian[3] prophet Mani (AD 216–274), in the Sasanian Empire.[4]

A portrait of a Persian Manichaean
An image of a Manichaean temple with stars and seven firmaments
Line drawing copy of two frescoes from cave 38B at Bezeklik Grottoes.

Manichaeism teaches an elaborate dualistic cosmology describing the struggle between a good, spiritual world of light, and an evil, material world of darkness.[5] Through an ongoing process that takes place in human history, light is gradually removed from the world of matter and returned to the world of light, whence it came. Its beliefs are based on local Mesopotamian religious movements and Gnosticism.[6] It reveres Mani as the final prophet after Zoroaster, Gautama Buddha, and Jesus.

Manichaeism was quickly successful and spread far through the Aramaic-speaking regions.[7] It thrived between the third and seventh centuries, and at its height was one of the most widespread religions in the world. Manichaean churches and scriptures existed as far east as China and as far west as the Roman Empire.[8] It was briefly the main rival to Christianity in the competition to replace classical polytheism before the spread of Islam. Beginning with the emperor Diocletian, a follower of Roman Religion, Manichaeism was persecuted by the Roman state and was eventually stamped out in the Roman Empire.[2]

Manichaeism has survived longer in the east than it did in the west. Although it was thought to have finally faded away after the 14th century in south China,[9] contemporary to the decline of the Church of the East in Ming China, there is a growing corpus of evidence that shows Manichaeism persists in some areas of China, especially in Fujian province,[10][11][12][13] where numerous Manichaean relics have been discovered over time. The currently known sects are notably secretive and protective of their belief system, which has aided in them going relatively undetected. This stems from fears relating to persecution and suppression during various periods of Chinese history.[10]

While most of Manichaeism's original writings have been lost, numerous translations and fragmentary texts have survived.[14]

An adherent of Manichaeism is called a Manichaean or Manichean, or Manichee, especially in older sources.[15][16]

History

Life of Mani

 
Manichaean priests, writing at their desks. Eighth or ninth century manuscript from Gaochang, Tarim Basin, China.
 
Yuan Chinese silk painting Mani's Birth.

Mani was an Iranian,[17][18][a] born in 216 in or near Seleucia-Ctesiphon (now al-Mada'in) in the Parthian Empire.[19] According to the Cologne Mani-Codex,[20] Mani's parents were members of the Jewish Christian Gnostic sect known as the Elcesaites.[21]

Mani composed seven works, six of which were written in the Syriac language, a late variety of Aramaic. The seventh, the Shabuhragan,[22] was written by Mani in Middle Persian and presented by him to the Sasanian emperor, Shapur I. Although there is no proof Shapur I was a Manichaean, he tolerated the spread of Manichaeism and refrained from persecuting it within his empire's boundaries.[23]

According to one tradition, Mani invented the unique version of the Syriac script known as the Manichaean alphabet,[24] which was used in all of the Manichaean works written within the Sasanian Empire, whether they were in Syriac or Middle Persian, and also for most of the works written within the Uyghur Khaganate. The primary language of Babylon (and the administrative and cultural language of the Sassanid Empire) at that time was Eastern Middle Aramaic, which included three main dialects: Jewish Babylonian Aramaic (the language of the Babylonian Talmud), Mandaean (the language of Mandaeism), and Syriac, which was the language of Mani, as well as of the Syriac Christians.[25]

 
A 14th-century illustration of the execution of Mani

While Manichaeism was spreading, existing religions such as Zoroastrianism were still popular and Christianity was gaining social and political influence. Although having fewer adherents, Manichaeism won the support of many high-ranking political figures. With the assistance of the Sasanian Empire, Mani began missionary expeditions. After failing to win the favour of the next generation of Persian royalty, and incurring the disapproval of the Zoroastrian clergy, Mani is reported to have died in prison awaiting execution by the Persian Emperor Bahram I. The date of his death is estimated at 276–277.[19]

Influences

 
Sermon on Mani's Teaching of Salvation, 13th-century Chinese Manichaean silk painting.

Mani believed that the teachings of Gautama Buddha, Zoroaster, and Jesus were incomplete, and that his revelations were for the entire world, calling his teachings the "Religion of Light".[19] Manichaean writings indicate that Mani received revelations when he was 12 and again when he was 24, and over this period he grew dissatisfied with the Elcesaite sect he was born into.[26]

Mani taught how the soul of the righteous returns to Paradise whereas the soul of the person who persisted in things of the flesh – fornication, procreation, possessions, cultivation, harvesting, eating of meat, drinking of wine – is condemned to rebirth in a succession of bodies.[27]

Mani began preaching at an early age and was possibly influenced by contemporary Babylonian-Aramaic movements such as Mandaeism, and Aramaic translations of Jewish apocalyptic writings similar to those found at Qumran (such as the book of Enoch literature), and by the Syriac dualist-gnostic writer Bardaisan (who lived a generation before Mani). With the discovery of the Mani-Codex, it also became clear that he was raised in a Jewish-Christian baptism sect, the Elcesaites, and was possibly influenced by their writings, as well.[citation needed]

According to biographies preserved by Ibn al-Nadim and the Persian polymath al-Biruni, he received a revelation as a youth from a spirit, whom he would later call his Twin (Imperial Aramaic: תאומא tɑʔwmɑ, from which is also derived the name of the Thomas the Apostle, the "twin"), his Syzygos (Koinē Greek: σύζυγος "spouse, partner", in the Cologne Mani-Codex), his Double, his Protective Angel or Divine Self. It taught him truths that he developed into a religion. His divine Twin or true Self brought Mani to self-realization. He claimed to be the Paraclete of the Truth, as promised by Jesus in the New Testament.[28]

 
Manichaean Painting of the Buddha Jesus depicts Jesus Christ as a Manichaean prophet. The figure can be identified as a representation of Jesus Christ by the small gold cross that sits on the red lotus pedestal in His left hand.

Manichaeism's views on Jesus are described by historians:

Jesus in Manichaeism possessed three separate identities: (1) Jesus the Luminous, (2) Jesus the Messiah and (3) Jesus patibilis (the suffering Jesus). (1) As Jesus the Luminous ... his primary role was as supreme revealer and guide and it was he who woke Adam from his slumber and revealed to him the divine origins of his soul and its painful captivity by the body and mixture with matter. (2) Jesus the Messiah was a historical being who was the prophet of the Jews and the forerunner of Mani. However, the Manichaeans believed he was wholly divine, and that he never experienced human birth, as the physical realities surrounding the notions of his conception and his birth filled the Manichaeans with horror. However, the Christian doctrine of virgin birth was also regarded as obscene. Since Jesus the Messiah was the light of the world, where was this light, they reasoned, when Jesus was in the womb of the Virgin? Jesus the Messiah, they believed, was truly born only at his baptism, as it was on that occasion that the Father openly acknowledged his sonship. The suffering, death and resurrection of this Jesus were in appearance only as they had no salvific value but were an exemplum of the suffering and eventual deliverance of the human soul and a prefiguration of Mani's own martyrdom. (3) The pain suffered by the imprisoned Light-Particles in the whole of the visible universe, on the other hand, was real and immanent. This was symbolized by the mystic placing of the Cross whereby the wounds of the passion of our souls are set forth. On this mystical Cross of Light was suspended the Suffering Jesus (Jesus patibilis) who was the life and salvation of Man. This mystica cruxificio was present in every tree, herb, fruit, vegetable and even stones and the soil. This constant and universal suffering of the captive soul is exquisitely expressed in one of the Coptic Manichaean psalms.[29]

Augustine of Hippo also noted that Mani declared himself to be an "apostle of Jesus Christ".[30] Manichaean tradition is also noted to have claimed that Mani was the reincarnation of different religious figures such as Buddha, Krishna, Zoroaster, and Jesus.[31][self-published source?]

Academics also note that much of what is known about Manichaeism comes from later 10th- and 11th-century Muslim historians like Al-Biruni and especially ibn al-Nadim (and his Fihrist), who "ascribed to Mani the claim to be the Seal of the Prophets."[32] However, given the Islamic milieu of Arabia and Persia at the time, it stands to reason that Manichaens would regularly assert in their evangelism that Mani, not Muhammad, was the "Seal of the Prophets".[33] In reality, for Mani the metaphorical expression "Seal of Prophets" is not a reference to his finality in a long succession of prophets, as it is in Islam, but, rather to his followers, who testify or attest his message, as a seal does.[34][35]

 
10th century Manichaean Electae in Gaochang (Khocho), China.

Another source of Mani's scriptures was original Aramaic writings relating to the Book of Enoch literature (see the Book of Enoch and the Second Book of Enoch), as well as an otherwise unknown section of the Book of Enoch called The Book of Giants. This book was quoted directly, and expanded on by Mani, becoming one of the original six Syriac writings of the Manichaean Church. Besides brief references by non-Manichaean authors through the centuries, no original sources of The Book of Giants (which is actually part six of the Book of Enoch) were available until the 20th century.[36]

Scattered fragments of both the original Aramaic "Book of Giants" (which were analyzed and published by Józef Milik in 1976)[37] and of the Manichaean version of the same name (analyzed and published by Walter Bruno Henning in 1943)[38] were found with the discovery in the twentieth century of the Dead Sea Scrolls in the Judaean Desert and the Manichaean writings of the Uyghur Manichaean kingdom in Turpan. Henning wrote in his analysis of them:

It is noteworthy that Mani, who was brought up and spent most of his life in a province of the Persian empire, and whose mother belonged to a famous Parthian family, did not make any use of the Iranian mythological tradition. There can no longer be any doubt that the Iranian names of Sām, Narīmān, etc., that appear in the Persian and Sogdian versions of the Book of the Giants, did not figure in the original edition, written by Mani in the Syriac language.[38]

By comparing the cosmology in the Book of Enoch literature and the Book of Giants, alongside the description of the Manichaean myth, scholars have observed that the Manichaean cosmology can be described as being based, in part, on the description of the cosmology developed in detail in the Book of Enoch literature.[39] This literature describes the being that the prophets saw in their ascent to heaven, as a king who sits on a throne at the highest of the heavens. In the Manichaean description, this being, the "Great King of Honor", becomes a deity who guards the entrance to the world of light, placed at the seventh of ten heavens.[40] In the Aramaic Book of Enoch, in the Qumran writings in general, and in the original Syriac section of Manichaean scriptures quoted by Theodore bar Konai,[41] he is called "malka raba de-ikara" (the Great King of Honor).[citation needed]

Mani was also influenced by writings of the Assyrian gnostic Bardaisan (154–222), who, like Mani, wrote in Syriac, and presented a dualistic interpretation of the world in terms of light and darkness, in combination with elements from Christianity.[42]

 
Akshobhya in the Abhirati with the Cross of Light, a symbol of Manichaeism.

Noting Mani's travels to the Kushan Empire (several religious paintings in Bamyan are attributed to him) at the beginning of his proselytizing career, Richard Foltz postulates Buddhist influences in Manichaeism:

Buddhist influences were significant in the formation of Mani's religious thought. The transmigration of souls became a Manichaean belief, and the quadripartite structure of the Manichaean community, divided between male and female monks (the "elect") and lay followers (the "hearers") who supported them, appears to be based on that of the Buddhist sangha.[43]

The Kushan monk Lokakṣema began translating Pure Land Buddhist texts into Chinese in the century prior to Mani arriving there, and the Chinese texts of Manichaeism are full of uniquely Buddhist terms taken directly from these Chinese Pure Land scriptures, including the term "pure land" (淨土 Jìngtǔ) itself.[44] However, the central object of veneration in Pure Land Buddhism, Amitābha, the Buddha of Infinite Light, does not appear in Chinese Manichaeism, and seems to have been replaced by another deity.[45]

Spread

Roman Empire

 
A map of the spread of Manichaeism (300–500). World History Atlas, Dorling Kindersly.

Manichaeism reached Rome through the apostle Psattiq by 280, who was also in Egypt in 244 and 251. It was flourishing in the Faiyum in 290.

Manichaean monasteries existed in Rome in 312 during the time of Pope Miltiades.[46]

In 291, persecution arose in the Sasanian Empire with the murder of the apostle Sisin by Emperor Bahram II and the slaughter of many Manichaeans. Then, in 302, the first official reaction and legislation against Manichaeism from the Roman state to Manichaeism was issued under Diocletian. In an official edict called the De Maleficiis et Manichaeis compiled in the Collatio Legum Mosaicarum et Romanarum and addressed to the proconsul of Africa, Diocletian wrote

We have heard that the Manichaeans [...] have set up new and hitherto unheard-of sects in opposition to the older creeds so that they might cast out the doctrines vouchsafed to us in the past by the divine favour for the benefit of their own depraved doctrine. They have sprung forth very recently like new and unexpected monstrosities among the race of the Persians – a nation still hostile to us – and have made their way into our empire, where they are committing many outrages, disturbing the tranquility of our people and even inflicting grave damage to the civic communities. We have cause to fear that with the passage of time they will endeavour, as usually happens, to infect the modest and tranquil of an innocent nature with the damnable customs and perverse laws of the Persians as with the poison of a malignant (serpent) ... We order that the authors and leaders of these sects be subjected to severe punishment, and, together with their abominable writings, burnt in the flames. We direct their followers, if they continue recalcitrant, shall suffer capital punishment, and their goods be forfeited to the imperial treasury. And if those who have gone over to that hitherto unheard-of, scandalous and wholly infamous creed, or to that of the Persians, are persons who hold public office, or are of any rank or of superior social status, you will see to it that their estates are confiscated and the offenders sent to the (quarry) at Phaeno or the mines at Proconnesus. And in order that this plague of iniquity shall be completely extirpated from this our most happy age, let your devotion hasten to carry out our orders and commands.[47]

By 354, Hilary of Poitiers wrote that Manichaeism was a significant force in Roman Gaul. In 381, Christians requested Theodosius I to strip Manichaeans of their civil rights. Starting in 382, the emperor issued a series of edicts to suppress Manichaeism and punish its followers.[48]

 
Augustine of Hippo was once a Manichaean.

Augustine of Hippo (354–430) converted to Christianity from Manichaeism in the year 387. This was shortly after the Roman emperor Theodosius I had issued a decree of death for all Manichaean monks in 382 and shortly before he declared Christianity to be the only legitimate religion for the Roman Empire in 391. Due to the heavy persecution, the religion almost disappeared from western Europe in the fifth century and from the eastern portion of the empire in the sixth century.[49]

According to his Confessions, after nine or ten years of adhering to the Manichaean faith as a member of the group of "hearers", Augustine became a Christian and a potent adversary of Manichaeism (which he expressed in writing against his Manichaean opponent Faustus of Mileve), seeing their beliefs that knowledge was the key to salvation as too passive and not able to effect any change in one's life.[50]

I still thought that it is not we who sin but some other nature that sins within us. It flattered my pride to think that I incurred no guilt and, when I did wrong, not to confess it ... I preferred to excuse myself and blame this unknown thing which was in me but was not part of me. The truth, of course, was that it was all my own self, and my own impiety had divided me against myself. My sin was all the more incurable because I did not think myself a sinner.[51]

Some modern scholars have suggested that Manichaean ways of thinking influenced the development of some of Augustine's ideas, such as the nature of good and evil, the idea of hell, the separation of groups into elect, hearers, and sinners, and the hostility to the flesh and sexual activity, and his dualistic theology.[52]

 
A 13th-century manuscript from Augustine's book VII of Confessions criticizing Manichaeism.

Central Asia

 
Amitābha in his Western Paradise with Indians, Tibetans, and Central Asians, with two symbols of Manichaeism: Sun and Cross.

Some Sogdians in Central Asia believed in the religion.[53][54] Uyghur khagan Boku Tekin (759–780) converted to the religion in 763 after a three-day discussion with its preachers,[55][56] the Babylonian headquarters sent high rank clerics to Uyghur, and Manichaeism remained the state religion for about a century before the collapse of the Uyghur Khaganate in 840.[citation needed]

China

In the east it spread along trade routes as far as Chang'an, the capital of Tang China.[57][58]

After the Tang Dynasty, some Manichaean groups participated in peasant movements. The religion was used by many rebel leaders to mobilise followers. In the Song and Yuan dynasties of China remnants of Manichaeism continued to leave a legacy contributing to sects such as the Red Turbans. During the Song Dynasty, the Manichaeans were derogatorily referred by the Chinese as chicai simo (meaning that they "abstain from meat and worship demons").[59][60]

An account in Fozu Tongji, an important historiography of Buddhism in China compiled by Buddhist scholars during 1258–1269, says that the Manichaeans worshipped the "white Buddha" and their leader wore a violet headgear, while the followers wore white costumes. Many Manichaeans took part in rebellions against the Song government and were eventually quelled. After that, all governments were suppressive against Manichaeism and its followers and the religion was banned by the Ming Dynasty in 1370.[61][60] While it had long been thought that Manichaeism arrived in China only at the end of the seventh century, a recent archaeological discovery demonstrated that it was already known there in the second half of the 6th century.[62]

Tibet

Manichaeism spread to Tibet during the Tibetan Empire. There was likely a serious attempt to introduce the religion to the Tibetans as the text Criteria of the Authentic Scriptures (a text attributed to Tibetan Emperor Trisong Detsen) makes a great effort to attack Manichaeism by stating that Mani was a heretic who took ideas from all faiths and blended them together into a deviating and inauthentic form.[63]

Iran

Manichaeans in Iran tried to assimilate their religion along with Islam in the Muslim caliphates.[64] Relatively little is known about the religion during the first century of Islamic rule. During the early caliphates, Manichaeism attracted many followers. It had a significant appeal among the Muslim society, especially among the elites. Due to the appeal of its teachings, many Muslims adopted the ideas of its theology and some even became dualists. An apologia for Manichaeism ascribed to ibn al-Muqaffa' defended its phantasmagorical cosmogony and attacked the fideism of Islam and other monotheistic religions. The Manichaeans had sufficient structure to have a head of their community.[65][66][67]

Arab world

Under the eighth-century Abbasid Caliphate, Arabic zindīq and the adjectival term zandaqa could denote many different things, though it seems primarily (or at least initially) to have signified a follower of Manichaeism, however its true meaning is not known.[68] In the ninth century, it is reported that Caliph al-Ma'mun tolerated a community of Manichaeans.[69]

During the early Abbasid period, the Manichaeans underwent persecution. The third Abbasid caliph, al-Mahdi, persecuted the Manichaeans, establishing an inquisition against dualists who if being found guilty of heresy refused to renounce their beliefs, were executed. Their persecution was finally ended in 780s by Harun al-Rashid.[70][71] During the reign of the Caliph al-Muqtadir, many Manichaeans fled from Mesopotamia to Khorasan from fear of persecution and the base of the religion was later shifted to Samarkand.[49][72]

 
The four primary prophets of Manichaeism in the Manichaean Diagram of the Universe, from left to right: Mani, Zoroaster, Buddha and Jesus.

Syncretism and translation

Manichaeism claimed to present the complete version of teachings that were corrupted and misinterpreted by the followers of its predecessors Adam, Zoroaster, Buddha and Jesus. Accordingly, as it spread, it adapted new deities from other religions into forms it could use for its scriptures. Its original Aramaic texts already contained stories of Jesus.

When they moved eastward and were translated into Iranian languages, the names of the Manichaean deities (or angels) were often transformed into the names of Zoroastrian yazatas. Thus Abbā dəRabbūṯā ("The Father of Greatness", the highest Manichaean deity of Light), in Middle Persian texts might either be translated literally as pīd ī wuzurgīh, or substituted with the name of the deity Zurwān.

Similarly, the Manichaean primal figure Nāšā Qaḏmāyā "The Original Man" was rendered Ohrmazd Bay, after the Zoroastrian god Ohrmazd. This process continued in Manichaeism's meeting with Chinese Buddhism, where, for example, the original Aramaic קריא qaryā (the "call" from the World of Light to those seeking rescue from the World of Darkness), becomes identified in the Chinese scriptures with Guanyin (觀音 or Avalokiteśvara in Sanskrit, literally, "watching/perceiving sounds [of the world]", the bodhisattva of Compassion).[citation needed]

Persecution and suppression

Manichaeism was repressed by the Sasanian Empire.[64] In 291, persecution arose in the Persian empire with the murder of the apostle Sisin by Bahram II, and the slaughter of many Manichaeans. In 296, the Roman emperor Diocletian decreed all the Manichaean leaders to be burnt alive along with the Manichaean scriptures and many Manichaeans in Europe and North Africa were killed. It was not until 372 with Valentinian I and Valens that Manichaeism was legislated against again.[73]

Theodosius I issued a decree of death for all Manichaean monks in 382 AD.[74] The religion was vigorously attacked and persecuted by both the Christian Church and the Roman state, and the religion almost disappeared from western Europe in the fifth century and from the eastern portion of the empire in the sixth century.[49]

In 732, Emperor Xuanzong of Tang banned any Chinese from converting to the religion, saying it was a heretic religion that was confusing people by claiming to be Buddhism. However, the foreigners who followed the religion were allowed to practice it without punishment.[75] After the fall of the Uyghur Khaganate in 840, which was the chief patron of Manichaeism (which was also the state religion of the Khaganate) in China, all Manichaean temples in China except in the two capitals and Taiyuan were closed down and never reopened since these temples were viewed as a symbol of foreign arrogance by the Chinese (see Cao'an). Even those that were allowed to remain open did not for long.[58]

The Manichaean temples were attacked by Chinese people who burned the images and idols of these temples. Manichaean priests were ordered to wear hanfu instead of their traditional clothing, which was viewed as un-Chinese. In 843, Emperor Wuzong of Tang gave the order to kill all Manichaean clerics as part of his Great Anti-Buddhist Persecution, and over half died. They were made to look like Buddhists by the authorities, their heads were shaved, they were made to dress like Buddhist monks and then killed.[58]

Although the religion was mostly forbidden and its followers persecuted thereafter in China, it survives within syncretic sects throughout Fujian in a form of Chinese Manichaeism also called Mingjiao.[10][11][12][13] Under the Song dynasty, its followers were derogatorily referred to with the chengyu 吃菜祀魔 (pinyin: chī cài sì mó) "vegetarian demon-worshippers".

Many Manichaeans took part in rebellions against the Song dynasty. They were quelled by Song China and were suppressed and persecuted by all successive governments before the Mongol Yuan dynasty. In 1370, the religion was banned through an edict of the Ming dynasty, whose Hongwu Emperor had a personal dislike for the religion.[58][60][76] Its core teaching influences many religious sects in China, including the White Lotus movement.[77]

According to Wendy Doniger, Manichaeism may have continued to exist in the modern-East Turkestan region until the Mongol conquest in the 13th century.[78]

Manicheans also suffered persecution for some time under the Abbasid Caliphate of Baghdad. In 780, the third Abbasid Caliph, al-Mahdi, started a campaign of inquisition against those who were "dualist heretics" or "Manichaeans" called the zindīq. He appointed a "master of the heretics" (Arabic: الزنادقة صاحب ṣāhib al-zanādiqa), an official whose task was to pursue and investigate suspected dualists, who were then examined by the Caliph. Those found guilty who refused to abjure their beliefs were executed.[70]

This persecution continued under his successor, Caliph al-Hadi, and continued for some time during reign of Harun al-Rashid, who finally abolished it and ended it.[70] During the reign of the 18th Abbasid Caliph al-Muqtadir, many Manichaeans fled from Mesopotamia to Khorasan from fear of persecution by him and about 500 of them assembled in Samarkand. The base of the religion was later shifted to this city, which became their new Patriarchate.[49][72]

Manichaean pamphlets were still in circulation in Greek in 9th-century Byzantine Constantinople, as the patriarch Photios summarizes and discusses one that he has read by Agapius in his Bibliotheca.

Later movements associated with Manichaeism

During the Middle Ages, several movements emerged that were collectively described as "Manichaean" by the Catholic Church, and persecuted as Christian heresies through the establishment of the Inquisition in 1184.[79] They included the Cathar churches of Western Europe. Other groups sometimes referred to as "neo-Manichaean" were the Paulician movement, which arose in Armenia,[80] and the Bogomils in Bulgaria.[81] An example of this usage can be found in the published edition of the Latin Cathar text, the Liber de duobus principiis (Book of the Two Principles), which was described as "Neo-Manichaean" by its publishers.[82] As there is no presence of Manichaean mythology or church terminology in the writings of these groups, there has been some dispute among historians as to whether these groups were descendants of Manichaeism.[83]

Manichaeism could have influenced the Bogomils, Paulicians, and Cathars. However, these groups left few records, and the link between them and Manichaeans is tenuous. Regardless of its accuracy, the charge of Manichaeism was leveled at them by contemporary orthodox opponents, who often tried to make contemporary heresies conform to those combatted by the church fathers.[81]

Whether the dualism of the Paulicians, Bogomils, and Cathars and their belief that the world was created by a Satanic demiurge were due to influence from Manichaeism is impossible to determine. The Cathars apparently adopted the Manichaean principles of church organization. Priscillian and his followers may also have been influenced by Manichaeism. The Manichaeans preserved many apocryphal Christian works, such as the Acts of Thomas, that would otherwise have been lost.[81]

Present day

Some sites are preserved in Xinjiang and Fujian in China.[84][85] The Cao'an temple is the most widely known, and best preserved Manichaean building,[29]: 256–257  though it later became associated with Buddhism.[86]

Chinese Manichaeans continue to practice the faith.[10][11][12][87][88]

Teachings and beliefs

 
Uyghur Manichaean clergymen, wall painting from the Khocho ruins, 10th/11th century CE. Located in the Museum für Asiatische Kunst, Humboldt Forum, Berlin.
 
Worship of the Tree of Life in the World of Light; a Manichaean picture from the Bezeklik Caves

General

Mani's teaching dealt with the origin of evil,[19] by addressing a theoretical part of the problem of evil by denying the omnipotence of God and postulating two opposite powers. Manichaean theology taught a dualistic view of good and evil. A key belief in Manichaeism is that the powerful, though not omnipotent good power (God), was opposed by the eternal evil power (devil). Humanity, the world, and the soul are seen as the by-product of the battle between God's proxy, Primal Man, and the devil.[89]

The human person is seen as a battle-ground for these powers: the soul defines the person, but it is under the influence of both light and dark. This contention plays out over the world as well as the human body—neither the Earth nor the flesh were seen as intrinsically evil, but rather possessed portions of both light and dark. Natural phenomena (such as rain) were seen as the physical manifestation of this spiritual contention. Therefore, the Manichaean view explained the existence of evil by positing a flawed creation in the formation of which God took no part and which constituted rather the product of a battle by the devil against God.[89]

Cosmogony

Manichaeism presented an elaborate description of the conflict between the spiritual world of light and the material world of darkness. The beings of both the world of darkness and the world of light have names. There are numerous sources for the details of the Manichaean belief. There are two portions of Manichaean scriptures that are probably the closest thing to the original Manichaean writings in their original languages that will ever be available. These are the Syriac-Aramaic quotation by the Nestorian Christian Theodore bar Konai, in his Syriac "Book of Scholia" (Ketba de-Skolionz, 8th century),[41] and the Middle Persian sections of Mani's Shabuhragan discovered at Turpan (a summary of Mani's teachings prepared for Shapur I).[22]

From these and other sources, it is possible to derive an almost complete description of the detailed Manichaean vision[90] (a complete list of Manichaean deities is outlined below). According to Mani, the unfolding of the universe takes place with three "creations":[citation needed]

The First Creation
Originally, good and evil existed in two completely separate realms, one the World of Light (Chinese: 明界), ruled by the Father of Greatness together with his five Shekhinas (divine attributes of light), and the other the World of Darkness, ruled by the King of Darkness. At a certain point, the Kingdom of Darkness notices the World of Light, becomes greedy for it and attacks it. The Father of Greatness, in the first of three "creations" (or "calls"), calls to the Mother of Life, who sends her son Original Man (Imperial Aramaic: Nāšā Qaḏmāyā), to battle with the attacking powers of Darkness, which include the Demon of Greed. The Original Man is armed with five different shields of light (reflections of the five Shekhinas), which he loses to the forces of darkness in the ensuing battle, described as a kind of "bait" to trick the forces of darkness, as the forces of darkness greedily consume as much light as they can. When the Original Man comes to, he is trapped among the forces of darkness.
The Second Creation
Then the Father of Greatness begins the Second Creation, calling to the Living Spirit, who calls to his five sons, and sends a call to the Original Man (Call then becomes a Manichaean deity). An answer (Answer becomes another Manichaean deity) then returns from the Original Man to the World of Light. The Mother of Life, the Living Spirit, and his five sons begin to create the universe from the bodies of the evil beings of the World of Darkness, together with the light that they have swallowed. Ten heavens and eight earths are created, all consisting of various mixtures of the evil material beings from the World of Darkness and the swallowed light. The sun, moon, and stars are all created from light recovered from the World of Darkness. The waxing and waning of the moon is described as the moon filling with light, which passes to the sun, then through the Milky Way, and eventually back to the World of Light.
The Third Creation
Great demons (called archons in bar-Khonai's account) are hung out over the heavens, and then the Father of Greatness begins the Third Creation. Light is recovered from out of the material bodies of the male and female evil beings and demons, by causing them to become sexually aroused in greed, towards beautiful images of the beings of light, such as the Third Messenger and the Virgins of Light. However, as soon as the light is expelled from their bodies and falls to the earth (some in the form of abortions – the source of fallen angels in the Manichaean myth), the evil beings continue to swallow up as much of it as they can to keep the light inside of them. This results eventually in the evil beings swallowing huge quantities of light, copulating, and producing Adam and Eve. The Father of Greatness then sends the Radiant Jesus to awaken Adam, and to enlighten him to the true source of the light that is trapped in his material body. Adam and Eve, however, eventually copulate, and produce more human beings, trapping the light in bodies of mankind throughout human history. The appearance of the Prophet Mani was another attempt by the World of Light to reveal to mankind the true source of the spiritual light imprisoned within their material bodies.

Outline of the beings and events in the Manichaean mythology

Beginning with the time of its creation by Mani, the Manichaean religion had a detailed description of deities and events that took place within the Manichaean scheme of the universe. In every language and region that Manichaeism spread to, these same deities reappear, whether it is in the original Syriac quoted by Theodore bar Konai,[41] or the Latin terminology given by Saint Augustine from Mani's Epistola Fundamenti, or the Persian and Chinese translations found as Manichaeism spread eastward. While the original Syriac retained the original description that Mani created, the transformation of the deities through other languages and cultures produced incarnations of the deities not implied in the original Syriac writings. Chinese translations were especially syncretic, borrowing and adapting terminology common in Chinese Buddhism.[91]

The World of Light

  • The Father of Greatness (Syriac: ܐܒܐ ܕܪܒܘܬܐ Abbā dəRabbūṯā; Middle Persian: pīd ī wuzurgīh, or the Zoroastrian deity Zurwān; Parthian: Pidar wuzurgift, Pidar roshn; Chinese: 無上明尊; lit. 'Unsurpassed Divinity of Light' or 薩緩 lit.'Zurvan')
    • His Four Faces (Greek: ὁ τετραπρόσωπος πατήρ τοῦ μεγέθους; Chinese: 四寂法身; lit. 'Four Silent Dharmakayas')[91]
      • Divinity (Middle Persian: yzd; Parthian: bg’; Chinese: 清净)
      • Light (Middle Persian and Parthian: rwšn; Chinese: 光明)
      • Power (Middle Persian: zwr; Parthian: z’wr’; Chinese: 大力)
      • Wisdom (Middle Persian: whyh; Parthian: jyryft’; Chinese: 智慧)
    • His Five Shekhinas (Syriac: ܚܡܫ ܫܟܝܢܬܗ khamesh shkhinatei; Chinese: 五種大 wǔ zhǒng dà, lit.'five great ones'):[92][91]
Shekhina: Reason Mind Intelligence Thought Understanding
Syriac ܗܘܢܐ hawnā ܡܕܥܐ maddeʻā ܪܥܝܢܐ reyānā ܡܚܫܒܬܐ maḥšavṯɑ ܬܪܥܝܬܐ tarʻiṯā
Parthian bām manohmēd andēšišn parmānag
Chinese xiāng, "phase" xīn, "heart-mind" niàn, "mindfulness" , "thought" , "meaning"
Turkic qut ög köngül saqinç tuimaq
Greek νοῦς (Nous) ἔννοια (Ennoia) φρόνησις (Phronēsis) ἐνθύμησις (Enthymēsis) λογισμός (Logismos)
Latin mens sensus prudentia intellectus cogitatio
  • The Great Spirit (Middle Persian: Waxsh zindag, Waxsh yozdahr; Latin: Spiritus Potens)

The first creation

The second creation

  • The Friend of the Lights (Syriac: ܚܒܝܒ ܢܗܝܖܐ ḥaviv nehirē; Chinese: 樂明佛; lit. 'Enjoyer of Lights')[91] Calls to:
  • The Great Builder (Syriac: ܒܢ ܖܒܐ ban rabbā; Chinese: 造相; lit. 'Creator of Forms') In charge of creating the new world that will separate the darkness from the light. He calls to:
  • The Living Spirit (Syriac: ܪܘܚܐ ܚܝܐ ruḥā ḥayyā; Middle Persian: Mihryazd; Chinese: 淨活風; pinyin: Jìnghuófēng; Latin: Spiritus Vivens; Greek: Ζων Πνευμα). Acts as a demiurge, creating the structure of the material world.
    • His five Sons (Syriac: ܚܡܫܐ ܒܢܘܗܝ ḥamšā benawhy; Chinese: 五等驍健子; lit. 'Five Valiant Sons')
      • The Keeper of the Splendour (Syriac: ܨܦܬ ܙܝܘܐ ṣfat ziwā; Latin: Splenditenens; Chinese: 催光明使; lit. 'Urger of Enlightenment'). Holds up the ten heavens from above.
      • The King of Glory (Syriac: ܡܠܟ ܫܘܒܚܐ mlex šuvḥā; Latin: Rex Gloriosus; Chinese: 地藏 Dìzàng "Earth Treasury", a Chinese bodhisattva).
      • The Adamas of Light (Syriac: ܐܕܡܘܣ ܢܘܗܪܐ adamus nuhrā; Latin: Adamas; Chinese: 降魔使; pinyin: Jiàngmó shǐ). Fights with and overcomes an evil being in the image of the King of Darkness.
      • The Great King of Honour (Syriac: ܡܠܟܐ ܪܒܐ ܕܐܝܩܪܐ malkā rabbā dikkārā; Dead Sea Scrolls Imperial Aramaic: מלכא רבא דאיקרא malka raba de-ikara; Latin: Rex Honoris; Chinese: 十天大王; pinyin: Shítiān Dàwáng; lit. 'Ten Heavens Great King'). A being that plays a central role in The Book of Enoch (originally written in Aramaic), as well as Mani's Syriac version of it, the Book of Giants. Sits in the seventh heaven of the ten heavens (corresponding to the celestial spheres, the first seven of which house the classical planets) and guards the entrance to the world of light.
      • Atlas (Syriac: ܣܒܠܐ sebblā; Latin: Atlas; Chinese: 持世主; pinyin: Chíshìzhǔ). Supports the eight worlds from below.
    • His sixth Son, the Call-God (Syriac: ܩܪܝܐ qaryā; Middle Persian: Padvaxtag; Chinese: 觀音 Guanyin "watching/perceiving sounds [of the world]", the Chinese Bodhisattva of Compassion). Sent from the Living Spirit to awaken the First Man from his battle with the forces of darkness.

The third creation

  • The Third Messenger (Syriac: ܐܝܙܓܕܐ izgaddā; Middle Persian: narēsahyazad, Parthian: hridīg frēštag; tertius legatus)
  • Jesus the Splendour (Syriac: ܝܫܘܥ ܙܝܘܐ Ishoʻ Ziwā; Chinese: 光明夷數; lit. 'Jesus of Bright Light' or 夷數精和 lit.'Jesus the Essence of Harmony'). Sent to awaken Adam and Eve to the source of the spiritual light trapped within their physical bodies.
  • The Maiden of Light (Middle Persian and Parthian: qnygrwšn; Chinese: 謹你嚧詵, a phonetic loan from Middle Persian)
  • The Twelve Virgins of Light (Syriac: ܬܪܬܥܣܪܐ ܒܬܘܠܬܐ tratʻesrā btultē; Middle Persian: kanīgān rōšnān; Chinese: 日宮十二化女; pinyin: Rìgōng shí'èr huànǚ; lit. 'Sun Palace Twelve Maidens of Transformation').[b][91] Reflected in the twelve constellations of the Zodiac.
  • The Column of Glory (Syriac: ܐܣܛܘܢ ܫܘܒܚܐ esṭun šuvḥā; Middle Persian: srōš-ahrāy; Chinese: 蘇露沙羅夷; pinyin: Sūlù shāluóyí and 盧舍那, Lúshěnà, both phonetic from Middle Persian: srōš-ahrāy). The path that souls take back to the World of Light; corresponds to the Milky Way.
  • The Great Nous
    • His five Limbs (Chinese: 五體) (See "His Five Shekhinas" above.)
      • Reason
      • Mind
      • Intelligence
      • Thought
      • Understanding
  • The Just Judge (Parthian: d’dbr r’štygr; Chinese: 平等王; lit. 'Impartial King')[91]
  • The Last God

The World of Darkness

  • The Prince of Darkness (Syriac: ܡܠܟ ܚܫܘܟܐ mlex ḥešoxā; Middle Persian: Ahriman, the Zoroastrian supreme evil being)
    • His five evil kingdoms Evil counterparts of the five elements of light, the lowest being the kingdom of Darkness.
    • His son (Syriac: ܐܫܩܠܘܢ Ashaklun; Middle Persian: Az, from the Zoroastrian demon, Aži Dahāka)
    • His son's mate (Syriac: ܢܒܪܘܐܠ Nevro'el)
    • Their offspring – Adam and Eve (Middle Persian: Gehmurd and Murdiyanag)
  • Giants (Fallen Angels, also Abortions): (Syriac: ܝܚܛܐ yaḥtē, "abortions" or "those that fell"; also: ܐܪܟܘܢܬܐ; ’Εγρήγοροι Egrēgoroi, "Giants"). Related to the story of the fallen angels in the Book of Enoch (which Mani used extensively in The Book of Giants), and the נפילים nephilim described in Genesis (6:1–4).

The Manichaean Church

Organization

The Manichaean Church was divided into the Elect, who had taken upon themselves the vows of Manichaeism, and the Hearers, those who had not, but still participated in the Church. The Elect were forbidden to consume alcohol and meat, as well as to harvest crops or prepare food, due to Mani's claim that harvesting was a form of murder against plants. The Hearers would therefore commit the sin of preparing food, and would provide it to the Elect, who would in turn pray for the Hearers and cleanse them of these sins.[94]

The terms for these divisions were already common since the days of early Christianity, however, it had a different meaning in Christianity. In Chinese writings, the Middle Persian and Parthian terms are transcribed phonetically (instead of being translated into Chinese).[95] These were recorded by Augustine of Hippo.[96]

  • The Leader (Syriac: ܟܗܢܐ /kɑhnɑ/; Parthian: yamag; Chinese: 閻默; pinyin: yánmò), Mani's designated successor, seated as Patriarch at the head of the Church, originally in Ctesiphon, from the ninth century in Samarkand. Two notable leaders were Mār Sīsin (or Sisinnios), the first successor of Mani, and Abū Hilāl al-Dayhūri, an eighth-century leader.
  • 12 Apostles (Latin: magistrī; Syriac: ܫܠܝܚܐ /ʃ(ə)liħe/; Middle Persian: možag; Chinese: 慕闍; pinyin: mùdū). Three of Mani's original apostles were Mār Pattī (Pattikios; Mani's father), Akouas and Mar Ammo.
  • 72 Bishops (Latin: episcopī; Syriac: ܐܦܣܩܘܦܐ /ʔappisqoppe/; Middle Persian: aspasag, aftadan; Chinese: 薩波塞; pinyin: sàbōsāi or Chinese: 拂多誕; pinyin: fúduōdàn; see also: seventy disciples). One of Mani's original disciples who was specifically referred to as a bishop was Mār Addā.
  • 360 Presbyters (Latin: presbyterī; Syriac: ܩܫܝܫܐ /qaʃʃiʃe/; Middle Persian: mahistan; Chinese: 默奚悉德; pinyin: mòxīxīdé)
  • The general body of the Elect (Latin: ēlēctī; Syriac: ܡܫܡܫܢܐ /m(ə)ʃamməʃɑne/; Middle Persian: ardawan or dēnāwar; Chinese: 阿羅緩; pinyin: āluóhuǎn or Chinese: 電那勿; pinyin: diànnàwù)
  • The Hearers (Latin: audītōrēs; Syriac: ܫܡܘܥܐ /ʃɑmoʿe/; Middle Persian: niyoshagan; Chinese: 耨沙喭; pinyin: nòushāyàn)

Religious practices

Prayers

Evidently from Manichaean sources, Manichaeans observed daily prayers, either four for the hearers or seven for the elect. The sources differ about the exact time of prayer. The Fihrist by al-Nadim, points them after noon, mid-afternoon, just after sunset and at nightfall. Al-Biruni places the prayers at dawn, sunrise, noon, and nightfall. The elect additionally pray at mid-afternoon, half an hour after nightfall and at midnight. Al-Nadim's account of daily prayers is probably adjusted to coincide with the public prayers for the Muslims, while Al-Birunis report may reflect an older tradition unaffected by Islam.[97][98]

When Al-Nadim's account of daily prayers had been the only detailed source available, there was a concern, that these practises had been only adapted by Muslims during the Abbasid Caliphate. However, it is clear that the Arabic text provided by Al-Nadim corresponds with the descriptions of Egyptian texts from the fourth century.[99]

Every prayer started with an ablution with water or, if water was not available, with other substances comparable to ablution in Islam[100] and consisted of several blessings to the apostles and spirits. The prayer consisted of prostrating oneself to the ground and rising again twelve times during every prayer.[101] During day, Manichaeans turned towards the sun and during night towards the moon. If the moon is not visible at night, they turned towards north.[102]

Evident from Faustus of Mileve, Celestial bodies are not the subject of worship themselves, but are "ships" carrying the light particles of the world to the supreme god, who can not be seen, since he exists beyond time and space, and also the dwelling places for emanations of the supreme deity, such as Jesus the Splendour.[102] According to the writings of Augustine of Hippo, ten prayers were performed, the first devoted to the Father of Greatness, and the following to lesser deities, spirits and angels and finally towards the elect, in order to be freed from rebirth and pain and to attain peace in the realm of light.[99] Comparable, in the Uighur confession, four prayers are directed to the supreme God (Äzrua), the God of the Sun and the Moon, and fivefold God and the buddhas.[102]

Primary sources

 
An image of the Buddha as one of the primary prophets on a Manichaean pictorial roll fragment from Chotscho, 10th century.

Mani wrote seven books, which contained the teachings of the religion. Only scattered fragments and translations of the originals remain, most having been discovered in Egypt and Turkistan during the 20th century."[103]

The original six Syriac writings are not preserved, although their Syriac names have been. There are also fragments and quotations from them. A long quotation, preserved by the eighth-century Nestorian Christian author Theodore Bar Konai,[41] shows that in the original Syriac Aramaic writings of Mani there was no influence of Iranian or Zoroastrian terms. The terms for the Manichaean deities in the original Syriac writings are in Aramaic. The adaptation of Manichaeism to the Zoroastrian religion appears to have begun in Mani's lifetime however, with his writing of the Middle Persian Shabuhragan, his book dedicated to the Sasanian emperor, Shapur I.[22]

In it, there are mentions of Zoroastrian divinities such as Ahura Mazda, Angra Mainyu, and Āz. Manichaeism is often presented as a Persian religion, mostly due to the vast number of Middle Persian, Parthian, and Sogdian (as well as Turkish) texts discovered by German researchers near Turpan in what is now Xinjiang, China, during the early 1900s. However, from the vantage point of its original Syriac descriptions (as quoted by Theodore Bar Khonai and outlined above), Manichaeism may be better described as a unique phenomenon of Aramaic Babylonia, occurring in proximity to two other new Aramaic religious phenomena, Talmudic Judaism and Mandaeism, which also appeared in Babylonia in roughly the third century.[citation needed]

The original, but now lost, six sacred books of Manichaeism were composed in Syriac Aramaic, and translated into other languages to help spread the religion. As they spread to the east, the Manichaean writings passed through Middle Persian, Parthian, Sogdian, Tocharian, and ultimately Uyghur and Chinese translations. As they spread to the west, they were translated into Greek, Coptic, and Latin.[citation needed]

 
Statue of prophet Mani as the "Buddha of Light" in Cao'an Temple in Jinjiang, Fujian, "a Manichaean temple in Buddhist disguise",[104] which is considered "the only extant Manichean temple in China"[105]

Henning describes how this translation process evolved and influenced the Manichaeans of Central Asia:

Beyond doubt, Sogdian was the national language of the Majority of clerics and propagandists of the Manichaean faith in Central Asia. Middle Persian (Pārsīg), and to a lesser degree, Parthian (Pahlavānīg), occupied the position held by Latin in the medieval church. The founder of Manichaeism had employed Syriac (his own language) as his medium, but conveniently he had written at least one book in Middle Persian, and it is likely that he himself had arranged for the translation of some or all of his numerous writings from Syriac into Middle Persian. Thus the Eastern Manichaeans found themselves entitled to dispense with the study of Mani’s original writings, and to continue themselves to reading the Middle Persian edition; it presented small difficulty to them to acquire a good knowledge of the Middle Persian language, owing to its affinity with Sogdian.[106]

Originally written in Syriac

Originally written in Middle Persian

Other books

  • The Ardahang, the "Picture Book". In Iranian tradition, this was one of Mani's holy books that became remembered in later Persian history, and was also called Aržang, a Parthian word meaning "Worthy", and was beautified with paintings. Therefore, Iranians gave him the title of "The Painter".
  • The Kephalaia of the Teacher (Κεφαλαια), "Discourses", found in Coptic translation.
  • On the Origin of His Body, the title of the Cologne Mani-Codex, a Greek translation of an Aramaic book that describes the early life of Mani.[20]

Non-Manichaean works preserved by the Manichaean Church

Later works

 
摩尼教文獻 The Chinese Manichaean "Compendium"
 
Two female musicians depicted in a Manichaean text

In later centuries, as Manichaeism passed through eastern Persian-speaking lands and arrived at the Uyghur Khaganate (回鶻帝國), and eventually the Uyghur kingdom of Turpan (destroyed around 1335), Middle Persian and Parthian prayers (āfrīwan or āfurišn) and the Parthian hymn-cycles (the Huwīdagmān and Angad Rōšnan created by Mar Ammo) were added to the Manichaean writings.[108] A translation of a collection of these produced the Manichaean Chinese Hymnscroll (Chinese: 摩尼教下部讚; pinyin: Móní-jiào Xiàbù Zàn, which Lieu translates as "Hymns for the Lower Section [i.e. the Hearers] of the Manichaean Religion"[109]).

In addition to containing hymns attributed to Mani, it contains prayers attributed to Mani's earliest disciples, including Mār Zaku, Mār Ammo and Mār Sīsin. Another Chinese work is a complete translation of the Sermon of the Light Nous, presented as a discussion between Mani and his disciple Adda.[110]

Critical and polemic sources

Until discoveries in the 1900s of original sources, the only sources for Manichaeism were descriptions and quotations from non-Manichaean authors, either Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, or Zoroastrian ones. While often criticizing Manichaeism, they also quoted directly from Manichaean scriptures. This enabled Isaac de Beausobre, writing in the 18th century, to create a comprehensive work on Manichaeism, relying solely on anti-Manichaean sources.[111][112] Thus quotations and descriptions in Greek and Arabic have long been known to scholars, as have the long quotations in Latin by Saint Augustine, and the extremely important quotation in Syriac by Theodore Bar Konai.[citation needed]

Patristic depictions of Mani and Manichaeism

Eusebius commented as follows:

The error of the Manichees, which commenced at this time.

— In the mean time, also, that madman Manes, (Mani is of Persian or Semitic origin) as he was called, well agreeing with his name, for his demoniacal heresy, armed himself by the perversion of his reason, and at the instruction of Satan, to the destruction of many. He was a barbarian in his life, both in speech and conduct, but in his nature as one possessed and insane. Accordingly, he attempted to form himself into a Christ, and then also proclaimed himself to be the very paraclete and the Holy Spirit, and with all this was greatly puffed up with his madness. Then, as if he were Christ, he selected twelve disciples, the partners of his new religion, and after patching together false and ungodly doctrines, collected from a thousand heresies long since extinct, he swept them off like a deadly poison, from Persia, upon this part of the world. Hence the impious name of the Manichaeans spreading among many, even to the present day. Such then was the occasion of this knowledge, as it was falsely called, that sprouted up in these times.[113]

Acta Archelai

An example of how inaccurate some of these accounts could be can be seen in the account of the origins of Manichaeism contained in the Acta Archelai. This was a Greek anti-Manichaean work written before 348, most well known in its Latin version, which was regarded as an accurate account of Manichaeism until refuted by Isaac de Beausobre in the 18th century:

In the time of the Apostles there lived a man named Scythianus, who is described as coming "from Scythia", and also as being "a Saracen by race" ("ex genere Saracenorum"). He settled in Egypt, where he became acquainted with "the wisdom of the Egyptians", and invented the religious system that was afterwards known as Manichaeism. Finally he emigrated to Palestine, and, when he died, his writings passed into the hands of his sole disciple, a certain Terebinthus. The latter betook himself to Babylonia, assumed the name of Budda, and endeavoured to propagate his master's teaching. But he, like Scythianus, gained only one disciple, who was an old woman. After a while he died, in consequence of a fall from the roof of a house, and the books that he had inherited from Scythianus became the property of the old woman, who, on her death, bequeathed them to a young man named Corbicius, who had been her slave. Corbicius thereupon changed his name to Manes, studied the writings of Scythianus, and began to teach the doctrines that they contained, with many additions of his own. He gained three disciples, named Thomas, Addas, and Hermas. About this time the son of the Persian king fell ill, and Manes undertook to cure him; the prince, however, died, whereupon Manes was thrown into prison. He succeeded in escaping, but eventually fell into the hands of the king, by whose order he was flayed, and his corpse was hung up at the city gate.

A. A. Bevan, who quoted this story, commented that it "has no claim to be considered historical".[114]

View of Judaism in the Acta Archelai

According to Hegemonius' portrayal of Mani, the evil demiurge who created the world was the Jewish Jehovah. Hegemonius reports that Mani said,

"It is the Prince of Darkness who spoke with Moses, the Jews and their priests. Thus the Christians, the Jews, and the Pagans are involved in the same error when they worship this God. For he leads them astray in the lusts he taught them." He goes on to state: "Now, he who spoke with Moses, the Jews, and the priests he says is the archont of Darkness, and the Christians, Jews, and pagans (ethnic) are one and the same, as they revere the same god. For in his aspirations he seduces them, as he is not the god of truth. And so therefore all those who put their hope in the god who spoke with Moses and the prophets have (this in store for themselves, namely) to be bound with him, because they did not put their hope in the god of truth. For that one spoke with them (only) according to their own aspirations.[115]

Central Asian and Iranian primary sources

In the early 1900s, original Manichaean writings started to come to light when German scholars led by Albert Grünwedel, and then by Albert von Le Coq, began excavating at Gaochang, the ancient site of the Manichaean Uyghur Kingdom near Turpan, in Chinese Turkestan (destroyed around AD 1300). While most of the writings they uncovered were in very poor condition, there were still hundreds of pages of Manichaean scriptures, written in three Iranian languages (Middle Persian, Parthian, and Sogdian) and old Uyghur. These writings were taken back to Germany and were analyzed and published at the Prussian Academy of Sciences in Berlin, by Le Coq and others, such as Friedrich W. K. Müller and Walter Bruno Henning. While the vast majority of these writings were written in a version of the Syriac script known as Manichaean script, the German researchers, perhaps for lack of suitable fonts, published most of them using the Hebrew alphabet (which could easily be substituted for the 22 Syriac letters).[citation needed]

Perhaps the most comprehensive of these publications was Manichaeische Dogmatik aus chinesischen und iranischen Texten (Manichaean Dogma from Chinese and Iranian texts), by Ernst Waldschmidt and Wolfgang Lentz, published in Berlin in 1933.[116] More than any other research work published before or since, this work printed, and then discussed, the original key Manichaean texts in the original scripts, and consists chiefly of sections from Chinese texts, and Middle Persian and Parthian texts transcribed with the Hebrew alphabet. After the Nazi Party gained power in Germany, the Manichaean writings continued to be published during the 1930s, but the publishers no longer used Hebrew letters, instead transliterating the texts into Latin letters.[citation needed]

Coptic primary sources

Additionally, in 1930, German researchers in Egypt found a large body of Manichaean works in Coptic. Though these were also damaged, hundreds of complete pages survived and, beginning in 1933, were analyzed and published in Berlin before World War II, by German scholars such as Hans Jakob Polotsky.[117] Some of these Coptic Manichaean writings were lost during the war.[118]

Chinese primary sources

After the success of the German researchers, French scholars visited China and discovered what is perhaps the most complete set of Manichaean writings, written in Chinese. These three Chinese writings, all found at the Mogao Caves among the Dunhuang manuscripts, and all written before the 9th century, are today kept in London, Paris, and Beijing. Some of the scholars involved with their initial discovery and publication were Édouard Chavannes, Paul Pelliot, and Aurel Stein. The original studies and analyses of these writings, along with their translations, first appeared in French, English, and German, before and after World War II. The complete Chinese texts themselves were first published in Tokyo, Japan in 1927, in the Taishō Tripiṭaka, volume 54. While in the last thirty years or so they have been republished in both Germany (with a complete translation into German, alongside the 1927 Japanese edition),[119] and China, the Japanese publication remains the standard reference for the Chinese texts.[citation needed]

Greek life of Mani, Cologne codex

In Egypt, a small codex was found and became known through antique dealers in Cairo. It was purchased by the University of Cologne in 1969. Two of its scientists, Henrichs and Koenen, produced the first edition known since as the Cologne Mani-Codex, which was published in four articles in the Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik. The ancient papyrus manuscript contained a Greek text describing the life of Mani. Thanks to this discovery, much more is known about the man who founded one of the most influential world religions of the past.[120]

Figurative use

The terms "Manichaean" and "Manichaeism" are sometimes used figuratively as a synonym of the more general term "dualist" with respect to a philosophy, outlook, or world-view.[121] The terms are often used to suggest that the world-view in question simplistically reduces the world to a struggle between good and evil. For example, Zbigniew Brzezinski used the phrase "Manichaean paranoia" in reference to U.S. President George W. Bush's world-view (in The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, 14 March 2007); Brzezinski elaborated that he meant "the notion that he [Bush] is leading the forces of good against the 'Axis of evil.'" Author and journalist Glenn Greenwald followed up on the theme in describing Bush in his book A Tragic Legacy (2007).

The term is frequently used by critics to describe the attitudes and foreign policies of the United States and its leaders.[122][123][124]

Philosopher Frantz Fanon frequently invoked the concept of Manicheanism in his discussions of violence between colonizers and the colonized.[125]

In My Secret History, author Paul Theroux's protagonist defines the word Manichaean for the protagonist's son as "seeing that good and evil are mingled." Before explaining the word to his son, the protagonist mentions Joseph Conrad's short story "The Secret Sharer" at least twice in the book, the plot of which also examines the idea of the duality of good and evil.[126]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "According to the Fehrest, Mani was of Arsacid stock on both his father's and his mother's sides, at least if the readings al-ḥaskāniya (Mani's father) and al-asʿāniya (Mani's mother) are corrected to al-aškāniya and al-ašḡāniya (ed. Flügel, 1862, p. 49, ll. 2 and 3) respectively. The forefathers of Mani's father are said to have been from Hamadan and so perhaps of Iranian origin (ed. Flügel, 1862, p. 49, 5–6). The Chinese Compendium, which makes the father a local king, maintains that his mother was from the house Jinsajian, explained by Henning as the Armenian Arsacid family of Kamsarakan (Henning, 1943, p. 52, n. 4 1977, II, p. 115). Is that fact, or fiction, or both? The historicity of this tradition is assumed by most, but the possibility that Mani's noble Arsacid background is legendary cannot be ruled out (cf. Scheftelowitz, 1933, pp. 403–4). In any case, it is characteristic that Mani took pride in his origin from time-honored Babel, but never claimed affiliation to the Iranian upper class." – Manichaeism at Encyclopædia Iranica
  2. ^ These are apparently the 'twelve centuries clothed with flowers and full of melodies' (duodecim saecula floribus convestita et canoribus plena) at St Augustine, Contra Faustum 15.5[93]

References

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  105. ^ Chinese Turkestan: vii. Manicheism in Chinese Turkestan and China at Encyclopædia Iranica
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  107. ^ "Let none read the gospel according to Thomas, for it is the work, not of one of the twelve apostles, but of one of Mani's three wicked disciples."Cyril of Jerusalem, Cathechesis V (4th century)
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  109. ^ Lieu 1998, p. 50.
  110. ^ "The Traité is, despite its title (Moni jiao cao jing, lit. "fragmentary [Mathews, no. 6689] Manichean scripture"), a long text in an excellent state of preservation, with only a few lines missing at the beginning. It was first fully published with a facsimile by Edouard Chavannes (q.v.) and Paul Pelliot in 1911 and is frequently known as Traité Pelliot. Their transcription (including typographical errors) was reproduced in the Chinese translation of the Buddhist Tripiṭaka (Taishō, no. 2141 B, LIV, pp. 1281a16-1286a29); that text was in turn reproduced with critical notes by Helwig Schmidt-Glintzer (1987b, pp. T. 81–86). A more accurate transcription was published by Chen Yuan in 1923 (pp. 531–44), and a new collation based on a reexamination of the original photographs of the manuscript has now been published by Lin Wu-shu (1987, pp. 217–29), with the photographs", Chinese Turkestan vii. Manicheism in Chinese Turkestan and China at Encyclopædia Iranica
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Bibliography

  • Baker-Brian, Nicholas J. (2011). Manichaeism: An Ancient Faith Rediscovered. London and New York. T&T Clark.
  • Ibscher, Hugo (1938). Allberry Charles R. C. (ed.). Manichaean Manuscripts in the Chester Beatty Collection: Vol II, part II: A Manichaean Psalm Book. Stuttgart: W. Kohlammer.
  • Beatty, Alfred Chester (1938). Charles Allberry (ed.). A Manichean Psalm-Book, Part II. Stuttgart.
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  • BeDuhn, Jason David (2002). The Manichaean Body: In Discipline and Ritual. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-7107-8.
  • Cross, F. L.; E. A. Livingstone (1974). The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. London: Oxford UP: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-211545-4.
  • Favre, Francois (5 May 2005). Mani, the Gift of Light. Renova symposium. Bilthoven, The Netherlands.
  • Foltz, Richard (2010). Religions of the Silk Road. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-62125-1.
  • Foltz, Richard (2013). Religions of Iran: From Prehistory to the Present. London: Oneworld publications. ISBN 978-1-78074-308-0.
  • Gardner, Iain; Lieu, Samuel N.C. (2004). Manichaean Texts from the Roman Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-56822-7.
  • Gardner, Iain (2020). The Founder of Manichaeism. Rethinking the Lives of Mani. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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  • Giversen, Soren (1988). The Manichaean Coptic Papyri in The Chester Beatty Library Vol. IV: Psalm Book part II (Facsimile ed.). Geneva: Patrick Crammer. (Cahiers D'Orientalism XVI) 1988b.
  • Grousset, Rene (1939), tr. Walford, Naomi (1970), The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia, New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers.ISBN 978-0-8135-1304-1.
  • Gulácsi, Zsuzsanna (2001). Manichaean art in Berlin Collections. Turnhout. (Original Manichaean manuscripts found since 1902 in China, Egypt, Turkestan to be seen in the Museum of Indian Art in Berlin.)
  • Heinrichs, Albert; Ludwig Koenen, Ein griechischer Mani-Kodex, 1970 (ed.) Der Kölner Mani-Codex ( P. Colon. Inv. nr. 4780), 1975–1982.
  • La Vaissière, Etienne de, "Mani en Chine au VIe siècle", Journal Asiatique, 293–1, 2005, p. 357–378.
  • Legge, Francis (1964) [1914]. Forerunners and Rivals of Christianity, From 330 B.C. to 330 A.D.. New York: University Books. LC Catalog 64-24125. reprinted in two volumes bound as one
  • Lieu, Samuel N.C. (1992). Manichaeism in the Later Roman Empire and Medieval China. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. ISBN 978-0-7190-1088-0.
  • Ma, Xiaohe; Wang, Chuan (2018). "On the Xiapu Ritual Manual Mani the Buddha of Light". Religions. 9 (7): 212. doi:10.3390/rel9070212.
  • Mani (216–276/7) and his 'biography': the Codex Manichaicus Coloniensis (CMC):
  • Melchert, Norman (2002). The Great Conversation: A Historical Introduction to Philosophy. McGraw Hill. ISBN 978-0-19-517510-3.
  • Runciman, Steven (1982) [1947]. The Medieval Manichee: a study of the Christian dualist heresy. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-28926-9.
  • Skjaervo, Prods Oktor (2006). An Introduction to Manicheism.
  • Towers, Susanna (2019). Constructions of Gender in Late Antique Manichaean Cosmological Narrative. Brepols. Turnhout.
  • Welburn, Andrew (1998). Mani, the Angel and the Column of Glory. Edinburgh: Floris. ISBN 978-0-86315-274-0.
  • Widengren, Geo (1965). Mani and Manichaeism. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
  • Wurst, Gregor (July 2001). "Die Bema-Psalmen". Journal of Near Eastern Studies. 60 (3): 203–204. doi:10.1086/468925.

Further reading

  • Scheftelowitz, J. Is Manicheism an Iranic Religion? Part I. 1924.

External links

Outside articles

  • Catholic Encyclopedia – Manichæism public domain, published 1917.
  • International Association of Manichaean Studies
  • Manichaean and Christian Remains in Zayton (Quanzhou, South China)
  • Religions of Iran: Manichaeism by I.J.S. Taraporewala
  • 专题研究–摩尼教研究 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  • 《光明皇帝》明尊教背景书(1)

Manichaean sources in English translation

  • A summary of the Manichaean creation myth
  • Manichaean Writings
  • . Complete bibliography and selection of Manichaean source texts in PDF format:
    • A thorough bibliography and outline of Manichaean Studies
    • A number of key Manichaean texts in English translation
  • The Book of the Giants by W.B. Henning, 1943
  • Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies (NHMS) series from Brill (various volumes containing English translations of Manichaean texts)

Secondary Manichaean sources in English translation

  • St. Augustine Against the Fundamental Epistle of Manichaeus

Manichaean sources in their original languages

  • Photos of the Entire Koeln Mani-Kodex (Greek).
  • (The index of this German site can be searched for additional Manichaean material, including photos of the original Chinese Manichaean writings)
  • "Sermon of the Soul", in Parthian and Sogdian 24 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • Middle Persian and Parthian Texts
  • D. N. MacKenzie, Mani's Šābuhragān, pt. 1 (text and translation), BSOAS 42/3, 1979, pp. 500–34, pt. 2 (glossary and plates), BSOAS 43/2, 1980, pp. 288–310 .
  • Chinese Manichaean Scriptures: 摩尼教殘經一 ("Incomplete Sutra one of Manichaeism") & 摩尼光佛教法儀略("The Mani Bright Buddha teaching plan") & 下部讚("The Lower Part Praises")

Secondary Manichaean sources in their original languages

  • (Latin)

manichaeism, confused, with, mandaeism, persian, آیین, مانی, Āyīn, mānī, chinese, 摩尼教, pinyin, móníjiào, former, major, religion, founded, century, parthian, prophet, mani, sasanian, empire, portrait, persian, manichaeanan, image, manichaean, temple, with, sta. Not to be confused with Mandaeism Manichaeism ˌ m ae n ɪ ˈ k iː ɪ z em 1 in New Persian آیین مانی Ayin e Mani Chinese 摩尼教 pinyin Monijiao is a former major religion 2 founded in the 3rd century AD by the Parthian 3 prophet Mani AD 216 274 in the Sasanian Empire 4 A portrait of a Persian ManichaeanAn image of a Manichaean temple with stars and seven firmamentsLine drawing copy of two frescoes from cave 38B at Bezeklik Grottoes Manichaeism teaches an elaborate dualistic cosmology describing the struggle between a good spiritual world of light and an evil material world of darkness 5 Through an ongoing process that takes place in human history light is gradually removed from the world of matter and returned to the world of light whence it came Its beliefs are based on local Mesopotamian religious movements and Gnosticism 6 It reveres Mani as the final prophet after Zoroaster Gautama Buddha and Jesus Manichaeism was quickly successful and spread far through the Aramaic speaking regions 7 It thrived between the third and seventh centuries and at its height was one of the most widespread religions in the world Manichaean churches and scriptures existed as far east as China and as far west as the Roman Empire 8 It was briefly the main rival to Christianity in the competition to replace classical polytheism before the spread of Islam Beginning with the emperor Diocletian a follower of Roman Religion Manichaeism was persecuted by the Roman state and was eventually stamped out in the Roman Empire 2 Manichaeism has survived longer in the east than it did in the west Although it was thought to have finally faded away after the 14th century in south China 9 contemporary to the decline of the Church of the East in Ming China there is a growing corpus of evidence that shows Manichaeism persists in some areas of China especially in Fujian province 10 11 12 13 where numerous Manichaean relics have been discovered over time The currently known sects are notably secretive and protective of their belief system which has aided in them going relatively undetected This stems from fears relating to persecution and suppression during various periods of Chinese history 10 While most of Manichaeism s original writings have been lost numerous translations and fragmentary texts have survived 14 An adherent of Manichaeism is called a Manichaean or Manichean or Manichee especially in older sources 15 16 Contents 1 History 1 1 Life of Mani 1 2 Influences 1 3 Spread 1 3 1 Roman Empire 1 3 2 Central Asia 1 3 3 China 1 3 4 Tibet 1 3 5 Iran 1 3 6 Arab world 1 4 Syncretism and translation 1 5 Persecution and suppression 1 6 Later movements associated with Manichaeism 1 6 1 Present day 2 Teachings and beliefs 2 1 General 2 2 Cosmogony 2 3 Outline of the beings and events in the Manichaean mythology 2 3 1 The World of Light 2 3 2 The first creation 2 3 3 The second creation 2 3 4 The third creation 2 3 5 The World of Darkness 3 The Manichaean Church 3 1 Organization 4 Religious practices 4 1 Prayers 5 Primary sources 5 1 Originally written in Syriac 5 2 Originally written in Middle Persian 5 3 Other books 5 4 Non Manichaean works preserved by the Manichaean Church 5 5 Later works 5 6 Critical and polemic sources 5 6 1 Patristic depictions of Mani and Manichaeism 5 6 2 Acta Archelai 5 6 2 1 View of Judaism in the Acta Archelai 5 7 Central Asian and Iranian primary sources 5 8 Coptic primary sources 5 9 Chinese primary sources 5 10 Greek life of Mani Cologne codex 6 Figurative use 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External links 12 1 Outside articles 12 2 Manichaean sources in English translation 12 3 Secondary Manichaean sources in English translation 12 4 Manichaean sources in their original languages 12 5 Secondary Manichaean sources in their original languagesHistory EditLife of Mani Edit Main article Mani prophet Manichaean priests writing at their desks Eighth or ninth century manuscript from Gaochang Tarim Basin China Yuan Chinese silk painting Mani s Birth Mani was an Iranian 17 18 a born in 216 in or near Seleucia Ctesiphon now al Mada in in the Parthian Empire 19 According to the Cologne Mani Codex 20 Mani s parents were members of the Jewish Christian Gnostic sect known as the Elcesaites 21 Mani composed seven works six of which were written in the Syriac language a late variety of Aramaic The seventh the Shabuhragan 22 was written by Mani in Middle Persian and presented by him to the Sasanian emperor Shapur I Although there is no proof Shapur I was a Manichaean he tolerated the spread of Manichaeism and refrained from persecuting it within his empire s boundaries 23 According to one tradition Mani invented the unique version of the Syriac script known as the Manichaean alphabet 24 which was used in all of the Manichaean works written within the Sasanian Empire whether they were in Syriac or Middle Persian and also for most of the works written within the Uyghur Khaganate The primary language of Babylon and the administrative and cultural language of the Sassanid Empire at that time was Eastern Middle Aramaic which included three main dialects Jewish Babylonian Aramaic the language of the Babylonian Talmud Mandaean the language of Mandaeism and Syriac which was the language of Mani as well as of the Syriac Christians 25 A 14th century illustration of the execution of Mani While Manichaeism was spreading existing religions such as Zoroastrianism were still popular and Christianity was gaining social and political influence Although having fewer adherents Manichaeism won the support of many high ranking political figures With the assistance of the Sasanian Empire Mani began missionary expeditions After failing to win the favour of the next generation of Persian royalty and incurring the disapproval of the Zoroastrian clergy Mani is reported to have died in prison awaiting execution by the Persian Emperor Bahram I The date of his death is estimated at 276 277 19 Influences Edit See also Chinese Manichaeism and Docetism Sermon on Mani s Teaching of Salvation 13th century Chinese Manichaean silk painting Mani believed that the teachings of Gautama Buddha Zoroaster and Jesus were incomplete and that his revelations were for the entire world calling his teachings the Religion of Light 19 Manichaean writings indicate that Mani received revelations when he was 12 and again when he was 24 and over this period he grew dissatisfied with the Elcesaite sect he was born into 26 Mani taught how the soul of the righteous returns to Paradise whereas the soul of the person who persisted in things of the flesh fornication procreation possessions cultivation harvesting eating of meat drinking of wine is condemned to rebirth in a succession of bodies 27 Mani began preaching at an early age and was possibly influenced by contemporary Babylonian Aramaic movements such as Mandaeism and Aramaic translations of Jewish apocalyptic writings similar to those found at Qumran such as the book of Enoch literature and by the Syriac dualist gnostic writer Bardaisan who lived a generation before Mani With the discovery of the Mani Codex it also became clear that he was raised in a Jewish Christian baptism sect the Elcesaites and was possibly influenced by their writings as well citation needed According to biographies preserved by Ibn al Nadim and the Persian polymath al Biruni he received a revelation as a youth from a spirit whom he would later call his Twin Imperial Aramaic תאומא tɑʔwmɑ from which is also derived the name of the Thomas the Apostle the twin his Syzygos Koine Greek syzygos spouse partner in the Cologne Mani Codex his Double his Protective Angel or Divine Self It taught him truths that he developed into a religion His divine Twin or true Self brought Mani to self realization He claimed to be the Paraclete of the Truth as promised by Jesus in the New Testament 28 Manichaean Painting of the Buddha Jesus depicts Jesus Christ as a Manichaean prophet The figure can be identified as a representation of Jesus Christ by the small gold cross that sits on the red lotus pedestal in His left hand Manichaeism s views on Jesus are described by historians Jesus in Manichaeism possessed three separate identities 1 Jesus the Luminous 2 Jesus the Messiah and 3 Jesus patibilis the suffering Jesus 1 As Jesus the Luminous his primary role was as supreme revealer and guide and it was he who woke Adam from his slumber and revealed to him the divine origins of his soul and its painful captivity by the body and mixture with matter 2 Jesus the Messiah was a historical being who was the prophet of the Jews and the forerunner of Mani However the Manichaeans believed he was wholly divine and that he never experienced human birth as the physical realities surrounding the notions of his conception and his birth filled the Manichaeans with horror However the Christian doctrine of virgin birth was also regarded as obscene Since Jesus the Messiah was the light of the world where was this light they reasoned when Jesus was in the womb of the Virgin Jesus the Messiah they believed was truly born only at his baptism as it was on that occasion that the Father openly acknowledged his sonship The suffering death and resurrection of this Jesus were in appearance only as they had no salvific value but were an exemplum of the suffering and eventual deliverance of the human soul and a prefiguration of Mani s own martyrdom 3 The pain suffered by the imprisoned Light Particles in the whole of the visible universe on the other hand was real and immanent This was symbolized by the mystic placing of the Cross whereby the wounds of the passion of our souls are set forth On this mystical Cross of Light was suspended the Suffering Jesus Jesus patibilis who was the life and salvation of Man This mystica cruxificio was present in every tree herb fruit vegetable and even stones and the soil This constant and universal suffering of the captive soul is exquisitely expressed in one of the Coptic Manichaean psalms 29 Augustine of Hippo also noted that Mani declared himself to be an apostle of Jesus Christ 30 Manichaean tradition is also noted to have claimed that Mani was the reincarnation of different religious figures such as Buddha Krishna Zoroaster and Jesus 31 self published source Academics also note that much of what is known about Manichaeism comes from later 10th and 11th century Muslim historians like Al Biruni and especially ibn al Nadim and his Fihrist who ascribed to Mani the claim to be the Seal of the Prophets 32 However given the Islamic milieu of Arabia and Persia at the time it stands to reason that Manichaens would regularly assert in their evangelism that Mani not Muhammad was the Seal of the Prophets 33 In reality for Mani the metaphorical expression Seal of Prophets is not a reference to his finality in a long succession of prophets as it is in Islam but rather to his followers who testify or attest his message as a seal does 34 35 10th century Manichaean Electae in Gaochang Khocho China Another source of Mani s scriptures was original Aramaic writings relating to the Book of Enoch literature see the Book of Enoch and the Second Book of Enoch as well as an otherwise unknown section of the Book of Enoch called The Book of Giants This book was quoted directly and expanded on by Mani becoming one of the original six Syriac writings of the Manichaean Church Besides brief references by non Manichaean authors through the centuries no original sources of The Book of Giants which is actually part six of the Book of Enoch were available until the 20th century 36 Scattered fragments of both the original Aramaic Book of Giants which were analyzed and published by Jozef Milik in 1976 37 and of the Manichaean version of the same name analyzed and published by Walter Bruno Henning in 1943 38 were found with the discovery in the twentieth century of the Dead Sea Scrolls in the Judaean Desert and the Manichaean writings of the Uyghur Manichaean kingdom in Turpan Henning wrote in his analysis of them It is noteworthy that Mani who was brought up and spent most of his life in a province of the Persian empire and whose mother belonged to a famous Parthian family did not make any use of the Iranian mythological tradition There can no longer be any doubt that the Iranian names of Sam Nariman etc that appear in the Persian and Sogdian versions of the Book of the Giants did not figure in the original edition written by Mani in the Syriac language 38 By comparing the cosmology in the Book of Enoch literature and the Book of Giants alongside the description of the Manichaean myth scholars have observed that the Manichaean cosmology can be described as being based in part on the description of the cosmology developed in detail in the Book of Enoch literature 39 This literature describes the being that the prophets saw in their ascent to heaven as a king who sits on a throne at the highest of the heavens In the Manichaean description this being the Great King of Honor becomes a deity who guards the entrance to the world of light placed at the seventh of ten heavens 40 In the Aramaic Book of Enoch in the Qumran writings in general and in the original Syriac section of Manichaean scriptures quoted by Theodore bar Konai 41 he is called malka raba de ikara the Great King of Honor citation needed Mani was also influenced by writings of the Assyrian gnostic Bardaisan 154 222 who like Mani wrote in Syriac and presented a dualistic interpretation of the world in terms of light and darkness in combination with elements from Christianity 42 Akshobhya in the Abhirati with the Cross of Light a symbol of Manichaeism Noting Mani s travels to the Kushan Empire several religious paintings in Bamyan are attributed to him at the beginning of his proselytizing career Richard Foltz postulates Buddhist influences in Manichaeism Buddhist influences were significant in the formation of Mani s religious thought The transmigration of souls became a Manichaean belief and the quadripartite structure of the Manichaean community divided between male and female monks the elect and lay followers the hearers who supported them appears to be based on that of the Buddhist sangha 43 The Kushan monk Lokakṣema began translating Pure Land Buddhist texts into Chinese in the century prior to Mani arriving there and the Chinese texts of Manichaeism are full of uniquely Buddhist terms taken directly from these Chinese Pure Land scriptures including the term pure land 淨土 Jingtǔ itself 44 However the central object of veneration in Pure Land Buddhism Amitabha the Buddha of Infinite Light does not appear in Chinese Manichaeism and seems to have been replaced by another deity 45 Spread Edit Roman Empire Edit A map of the spread of Manichaeism 300 500 World History Atlas Dorling Kindersly Manichaeism reached Rome through the apostle Psattiq by 280 who was also in Egypt in 244 and 251 It was flourishing in the Faiyum in 290 Manichaean monasteries existed in Rome in 312 during the time of Pope Miltiades 46 In 291 persecution arose in the Sasanian Empire with the murder of the apostle Sisin by Emperor Bahram II and the slaughter of many Manichaeans Then in 302 the first official reaction and legislation against Manichaeism from the Roman state to Manichaeism was issued under Diocletian In an official edict called the De Maleficiis et Manichaeis compiled in the Collatio Legum Mosaicarum et Romanarum and addressed to the proconsul of Africa Diocletian wrote We have heard that the Manichaeans have set up new and hitherto unheard of sects in opposition to the older creeds so that they might cast out the doctrines vouchsafed to us in the past by the divine favour for the benefit of their own depraved doctrine They have sprung forth very recently like new and unexpected monstrosities among the race of the Persians a nation still hostile to us and have made their way into our empire where they are committing many outrages disturbing the tranquility of our people and even inflicting grave damage to the civic communities We have cause to fear that with the passage of time they will endeavour as usually happens to infect the modest and tranquil of an innocent nature with the damnable customs and perverse laws of the Persians as with the poison of a malignant serpent We order that the authors and leaders of these sects be subjected to severe punishment and together with their abominable writings burnt in the flames We direct their followers if they continue recalcitrant shall suffer capital punishment and their goods be forfeited to the imperial treasury And if those who have gone over to that hitherto unheard of scandalous and wholly infamous creed or to that of the Persians are persons who hold public office or are of any rank or of superior social status you will see to it that their estates are confiscated and the offenders sent to the quarry at Phaeno or the mines at Proconnesus And in order that this plague of iniquity shall be completely extirpated from this our most happy age let your devotion hasten to carry out our orders and commands 47 By 354 Hilary of Poitiers wrote that Manichaeism was a significant force in Roman Gaul In 381 Christians requested Theodosius I to strip Manichaeans of their civil rights Starting in 382 the emperor issued a series of edicts to suppress Manichaeism and punish its followers 48 Augustine of Hippo was once a Manichaean Augustine of Hippo 354 430 converted to Christianity from Manichaeism in the year 387 This was shortly after the Roman emperor Theodosius I had issued a decree of death for all Manichaean monks in 382 and shortly before he declared Christianity to be the only legitimate religion for the Roman Empire in 391 Due to the heavy persecution the religion almost disappeared from western Europe in the fifth century and from the eastern portion of the empire in the sixth century 49 According to his Confessions after nine or ten years of adhering to the Manichaean faith as a member of the group of hearers Augustine became a Christian and a potent adversary of Manichaeism which he expressed in writing against his Manichaean opponent Faustus of Mileve seeing their beliefs that knowledge was the key to salvation as too passive and not able to effect any change in one s life 50 I still thought that it is not we who sin but some other nature that sins within us It flattered my pride to think that I incurred no guilt and when I did wrong not to confess it I preferred to excuse myself and blame this unknown thing which was in me but was not part of me The truth of course was that it was all my own self and my own impiety had divided me against myself My sin was all the more incurable because I did not think myself a sinner 51 Some modern scholars have suggested that Manichaean ways of thinking influenced the development of some of Augustine s ideas such as the nature of good and evil the idea of hell the separation of groups into elect hearers and sinners and the hostility to the flesh and sexual activity and his dualistic theology 52 A 13th century manuscript from Augustine s book VII of Confessions criticizing Manichaeism Central Asia Edit Amitabha in his Western Paradise with Indians Tibetans and Central Asians with two symbols of Manichaeism Sun and Cross Some Sogdians in Central Asia believed in the religion 53 54 Uyghur khagan Boku Tekin 759 780 converted to the religion in 763 after a three day discussion with its preachers 55 56 the Babylonian headquarters sent high rank clerics to Uyghur and Manichaeism remained the state religion for about a century before the collapse of the Uyghur Khaganate in 840 citation needed China Edit In the east it spread along trade routes as far as Chang an the capital of Tang China 57 58 After the Tang Dynasty some Manichaean groups participated in peasant movements The religion was used by many rebel leaders to mobilise followers In the Song and Yuan dynasties of China remnants of Manichaeism continued to leave a legacy contributing to sects such as the Red Turbans During the Song Dynasty the Manichaeans were derogatorily referred by the Chinese as chicai simo meaning that they abstain from meat and worship demons 59 60 An account in Fozu Tongji an important historiography of Buddhism in China compiled by Buddhist scholars during 1258 1269 says that the Manichaeans worshipped the white Buddha and their leader wore a violet headgear while the followers wore white costumes Many Manichaeans took part in rebellions against the Song government and were eventually quelled After that all governments were suppressive against Manichaeism and its followers and the religion was banned by the Ming Dynasty in 1370 61 60 While it had long been thought that Manichaeism arrived in China only at the end of the seventh century a recent archaeological discovery demonstrated that it was already known there in the second half of the 6th century 62 Tibet Edit Manichaeism spread to Tibet during the Tibetan Empire There was likely a serious attempt to introduce the religion to the Tibetans as the text Criteria of the Authentic Scriptures a text attributed to Tibetan Emperor Trisong Detsen makes a great effort to attack Manichaeism by stating that Mani was a heretic who took ideas from all faiths and blended them together into a deviating and inauthentic form 63 Iran Edit Manichaeans in Iran tried to assimilate their religion along with Islam in the Muslim caliphates 64 Relatively little is known about the religion during the first century of Islamic rule During the early caliphates Manichaeism attracted many followers It had a significant appeal among the Muslim society especially among the elites Due to the appeal of its teachings many Muslims adopted the ideas of its theology and some even became dualists An apologia for Manichaeism ascribed to ibn al Muqaffa defended its phantasmagorical cosmogony and attacked the fideism of Islam and other monotheistic religions The Manichaeans had sufficient structure to have a head of their community 65 66 67 Arab world Edit Under the eighth century Abbasid Caliphate Arabic zindiq and the adjectival term zandaqa could denote many different things though it seems primarily or at least initially to have signified a follower of Manichaeism however its true meaning is not known 68 In the ninth century it is reported that Caliph al Ma mun tolerated a community of Manichaeans 69 During the early Abbasid period the Manichaeans underwent persecution The third Abbasid caliph al Mahdi persecuted the Manichaeans establishing an inquisition against dualists who if being found guilty of heresy refused to renounce their beliefs were executed Their persecution was finally ended in 780s by Harun al Rashid 70 71 During the reign of the Caliph al Muqtadir many Manichaeans fled from Mesopotamia to Khorasan from fear of persecution and the base of the religion was later shifted to Samarkand 49 72 The four primary prophets of Manichaeism in the Manichaean Diagram of the Universe from left to right Mani Zoroaster Buddha and Jesus Syncretism and translation Edit Manichaeism claimed to present the complete version of teachings that were corrupted and misinterpreted by the followers of its predecessors Adam Zoroaster Buddha and Jesus Accordingly as it spread it adapted new deities from other religions into forms it could use for its scriptures Its original Aramaic texts already contained stories of Jesus When they moved eastward and were translated into Iranian languages the names of the Manichaean deities or angels were often transformed into the names of Zoroastrian yazatas Thus Abba deRabbuṯa The Father of Greatness the highest Manichaean deity of Light in Middle Persian texts might either be translated literally as pid i wuzurgih or substituted with the name of the deity Zurwan Similarly the Manichaean primal figure Nasa Qaḏmaya The Original Man was rendered Ohrmazd Bay after the Zoroastrian god Ohrmazd This process continued in Manichaeism s meeting with Chinese Buddhism where for example the original Aramaic קריא qarya the call from the World of Light to those seeking rescue from the World of Darkness becomes identified in the Chinese scriptures with Guanyin 觀音 or Avalokitesvara in Sanskrit literally watching perceiving sounds of the world the bodhisattva of Compassion citation needed Persecution and suppression Edit See also Manichaean schisms Manichaeism was repressed by the Sasanian Empire 64 In 291 persecution arose in the Persian empire with the murder of the apostle Sisin by Bahram II and the slaughter of many Manichaeans In 296 the Roman emperor Diocletian decreed all the Manichaean leaders to be burnt alive along with the Manichaean scriptures and many Manichaeans in Europe and North Africa were killed It was not until 372 with Valentinian I and Valens that Manichaeism was legislated against again 73 Theodosius I issued a decree of death for all Manichaean monks in 382 AD 74 The religion was vigorously attacked and persecuted by both the Christian Church and the Roman state and the religion almost disappeared from western Europe in the fifth century and from the eastern portion of the empire in the sixth century 49 In 732 Emperor Xuanzong of Tang banned any Chinese from converting to the religion saying it was a heretic religion that was confusing people by claiming to be Buddhism However the foreigners who followed the religion were allowed to practice it without punishment 75 After the fall of the Uyghur Khaganate in 840 which was the chief patron of Manichaeism which was also the state religion of the Khaganate in China all Manichaean temples in China except in the two capitals and Taiyuan were closed down and never reopened since these temples were viewed as a symbol of foreign arrogance by the Chinese see Cao an Even those that were allowed to remain open did not for long 58 The Manichaean temples were attacked by Chinese people who burned the images and idols of these temples Manichaean priests were ordered to wear hanfu instead of their traditional clothing which was viewed as un Chinese In 843 Emperor Wuzong of Tang gave the order to kill all Manichaean clerics as part of his Great Anti Buddhist Persecution and over half died They were made to look like Buddhists by the authorities their heads were shaved they were made to dress like Buddhist monks and then killed 58 Although the religion was mostly forbidden and its followers persecuted thereafter in China it survives within syncretic sects throughout Fujian in a form of Chinese Manichaeism also called Mingjiao 10 11 12 13 Under the Song dynasty its followers were derogatorily referred to with the chengyu 吃菜祀魔 pinyin chi cai si mo vegetarian demon worshippers Many Manichaeans took part in rebellions against the Song dynasty They were quelled by Song China and were suppressed and persecuted by all successive governments before the Mongol Yuan dynasty In 1370 the religion was banned through an edict of the Ming dynasty whose Hongwu Emperor had a personal dislike for the religion 58 60 76 Its core teaching influences many religious sects in China including the White Lotus movement 77 According to Wendy Doniger Manichaeism may have continued to exist in the modern East Turkestan region until the Mongol conquest in the 13th century 78 Manicheans also suffered persecution for some time under the Abbasid Caliphate of Baghdad In 780 the third Abbasid Caliph al Mahdi started a campaign of inquisition against those who were dualist heretics or Manichaeans called the zindiq He appointed a master of the heretics Arabic الزنادقة صاحب ṣahib al zanadiqa an official whose task was to pursue and investigate suspected dualists who were then examined by the Caliph Those found guilty who refused to abjure their beliefs were executed 70 This persecution continued under his successor Caliph al Hadi and continued for some time during reign of Harun al Rashid who finally abolished it and ended it 70 During the reign of the 18th Abbasid Caliph al Muqtadir many Manichaeans fled from Mesopotamia to Khorasan from fear of persecution by him and about 500 of them assembled in Samarkand The base of the religion was later shifted to this city which became their new Patriarchate 49 72 Manichaean pamphlets were still in circulation in Greek in 9th century Byzantine Constantinople as the patriarch Photios summarizes and discusses one that he has read by Agapius in his Bibliotheca Later movements associated with Manichaeism Edit During the Middle Ages several movements emerged that were collectively described as Manichaean by the Catholic Church and persecuted as Christian heresies through the establishment of the Inquisition in 1184 79 They included the Cathar churches of Western Europe Other groups sometimes referred to as neo Manichaean were the Paulician movement which arose in Armenia 80 and the Bogomils in Bulgaria 81 An example of this usage can be found in the published edition of the Latin Cathar text the Liber de duobus principiis Book of the Two Principles which was described as Neo Manichaean by its publishers 82 As there is no presence of Manichaean mythology or church terminology in the writings of these groups there has been some dispute among historians as to whether these groups were descendants of Manichaeism 83 Manichaeism could have influenced the Bogomils Paulicians and Cathars However these groups left few records and the link between them and Manichaeans is tenuous Regardless of its accuracy the charge of Manichaeism was leveled at them by contemporary orthodox opponents who often tried to make contemporary heresies conform to those combatted by the church fathers 81 Whether the dualism of the Paulicians Bogomils and Cathars and their belief that the world was created by a Satanic demiurge were due to influence from Manichaeism is impossible to determine The Cathars apparently adopted the Manichaean principles of church organization Priscillian and his followers may also have been influenced by Manichaeism The Manichaeans preserved many apocryphal Christian works such as the Acts of Thomas that would otherwise have been lost 81 Present day Edit Some sites are preserved in Xinjiang and Fujian in China 84 85 The Cao an temple is the most widely known and best preserved Manichaean building 29 256 257 though it later became associated with Buddhism 86 Chinese Manichaeans continue to practice the faith 10 11 12 87 88 Teachings and beliefs Edit Uyghur Manichaean clergymen wall painting from the Khocho ruins 10th 11th century CE Located in the Museum fur Asiatische Kunst Humboldt Forum Berlin Worship of the Tree of Life in the World of Light a Manichaean picture from the Bezeklik Caves General Edit Mani s teaching dealt with the origin of evil 19 by addressing a theoretical part of the problem of evil by denying the omnipotence of God and postulating two opposite powers Manichaean theology taught a dualistic view of good and evil A key belief in Manichaeism is that the powerful though not omnipotent good power God was opposed by the eternal evil power devil Humanity the world and the soul are seen as the by product of the battle between God s proxy Primal Man and the devil 89 The human person is seen as a battle ground for these powers the soul defines the person but it is under the influence of both light and dark This contention plays out over the world as well as the human body neither the Earth nor the flesh were seen as intrinsically evil but rather possessed portions of both light and dark Natural phenomena such as rain were seen as the physical manifestation of this spiritual contention Therefore the Manichaean view explained the existence of evil by positing a flawed creation in the formation of which God took no part and which constituted rather the product of a battle by the devil against God 89 Cosmogony Edit Manichaean Diagram of the Universe depicts the Manichaean cosmology Manichaeism presented an elaborate description of the conflict between the spiritual world of light and the material world of darkness The beings of both the world of darkness and the world of light have names There are numerous sources for the details of the Manichaean belief There are two portions of Manichaean scriptures that are probably the closest thing to the original Manichaean writings in their original languages that will ever be available These are the Syriac Aramaic quotation by the Nestorian Christian Theodore bar Konai in his Syriac Book of Scholia Ketba de Skolionz 8th century 41 and the Middle Persian sections of Mani s Shabuhragan discovered at Turpan a summary of Mani s teachings prepared for Shapur I 22 From these and other sources it is possible to derive an almost complete description of the detailed Manichaean vision 90 a complete list of Manichaean deities is outlined below According to Mani the unfolding of the universe takes place with three creations citation needed The First Creation Originally good and evil existed in two completely separate realms one the World of Light Chinese 明界 ruled by the Father of Greatness together with his five Shekhinas divine attributes of light and the other the World of Darkness ruled by the King of Darkness At a certain point the Kingdom of Darkness notices the World of Light becomes greedy for it and attacks it The Father of Greatness in the first of three creations or calls calls to the Mother of Life who sends her son Original Man Imperial Aramaic Nasa Qaḏmaya to battle with the attacking powers of Darkness which include the Demon of Greed The Original Man is armed with five different shields of light reflections of the five Shekhinas which he loses to the forces of darkness in the ensuing battle described as a kind of bait to trick the forces of darkness as the forces of darkness greedily consume as much light as they can When the Original Man comes to he is trapped among the forces of darkness The Second Creation Then the Father of Greatness begins the Second Creation calling to the Living Spirit who calls to his five sons and sends a call to the Original Man Call then becomes a Manichaean deity An answer Answer becomes another Manichaean deity then returns from the Original Man to the World of Light The Mother of Life the Living Spirit and his five sons begin to create the universe from the bodies of the evil beings of the World of Darkness together with the light that they have swallowed Ten heavens and eight earths are created all consisting of various mixtures of the evil material beings from the World of Darkness and the swallowed light The sun moon and stars are all created from light recovered from the World of Darkness The waxing and waning of the moon is described as the moon filling with light which passes to the sun then through the Milky Way and eventually back to the World of Light The Third Creation Great demons called archons in bar Khonai s account are hung out over the heavens and then the Father of Greatness begins the Third Creation Light is recovered from out of the material bodies of the male and female evil beings and demons by causing them to become sexually aroused in greed towards beautiful images of the beings of light such as the Third Messenger and the Virgins of Light However as soon as the light is expelled from their bodies and falls to the earth some in the form of abortions the source of fallen angels in the Manichaean myth the evil beings continue to swallow up as much of it as they can to keep the light inside of them This results eventually in the evil beings swallowing huge quantities of light copulating and producing Adam and Eve The Father of Greatness then sends the Radiant Jesus to awaken Adam and to enlighten him to the true source of the light that is trapped in his material body Adam and Eve however eventually copulate and produce more human beings trapping the light in bodies of mankind throughout human history The appearance of the Prophet Mani was another attempt by the World of Light to reveal to mankind the true source of the spiritual light imprisoned within their material bodies Analysis of Mani s cosmology as illustrated in the Manichaean Diagram Heaven scene from the Manichaean Diagram Maiden of Light from the Manichaean Diagram Outline of the beings and events in the Manichaean mythology Edit Beginning with the time of its creation by Mani the Manichaean religion had a detailed description of deities and events that took place within the Manichaean scheme of the universe In every language and region that Manichaeism spread to these same deities reappear whether it is in the original Syriac quoted by Theodore bar Konai 41 or the Latin terminology given by Saint Augustine from Mani s Epistola Fundamenti or the Persian and Chinese translations found as Manichaeism spread eastward While the original Syriac retained the original description that Mani created the transformation of the deities through other languages and cultures produced incarnations of the deities not implied in the original Syriac writings Chinese translations were especially syncretic borrowing and adapting terminology common in Chinese Buddhism 91 The World of Light Edit The Father of Greatness Syriac ܐܒܐ ܕܪܒܘܬܐ Abba deRabbuṯa Middle Persian pid i wuzurgih or the Zoroastrian deity Zurwan Parthian Pidar wuzurgift Pidar roshn Chinese 無上明尊 lit Unsurpassed Divinity of Light or 薩緩 lit Zurvan His Four Faces Greek ὁ tetraproswpos pathr toῦ mege8oys Chinese 四寂法身 lit Four Silent Dharmakayas 91 Divinity Middle Persian yzd Parthian bg Chinese 清净 Light Middle Persian and Parthian rwsn Chinese 光明 Power Middle Persian zwr Parthian z wr Chinese 大力 Wisdom Middle Persian whyh Parthian jyryft Chinese 智慧 His Five Shekhinas Syriac ܚܡܫ ܫܟܝܢܬܗ khamesh shkhinatei Chinese 五種大 wǔ zhǒng da lit five great ones 92 91 Shekhina Reason Mind Intelligence Thought UnderstandingSyriac ܗܘܢܐ hawna ܡܕܥܐ maddeʻa ܪܥܝܢܐ reyana ܡܚܫܒܬܐ maḥsavṯɑ ܬܪܥܝܬܐ tarʻiṯaParthian bam manohmed us andesisn parmanagChinese 相 xiang phase 心 xin heart mind 念 nian mindfulness 思 si thought 意 yi meaning Turkic qut og kongul saqinc tuimaqGreek noῦs Nous ἔnnoia Ennoia fronhsis Phronesis ἐn8ymhsis Enthymesis logismos Logismos Latin mens sensus prudentia intellectus cogitatioThe Great Spirit Middle Persian Waxsh zindag Waxsh yozdahr Latin Spiritus Potens The first creation Edit The Mother of Life Syriac ܐܡܐ ܕܚܝܐ ima deḥayye Middle Persian mʾdrʾy zyndgʾn Chinese 善母佛 lit Good Mother Buddha The First Man Syriac ܐܢܫܐ ܩܕܡܝܐ Nasa Qaḏmaya Middle Persian Ohrmazd Bay the Zoroastrian god of light and goodness Latin Primus Homo First Enthymesis Middle Persian hndysysn nxwysṯyn Chinese 先意 lit First Understanding His five Sons the five Light Elements Parthian panj rōsn Middle Persian Amahraspandan Chinese 五明子 91 Ether Parthian ardaw Middle Persian frawahr Chinese 氣 Wind Parthian and Middle Persian wad Chinese 風 Light Parthian and Middle Persian rōsn Chinese 明 Water Parthian and Middle Persian ab Chinese 水 Fire Parthian and Middle Persian adur Chinese 火 His sixth Son the Answer God Syriac ܥܢܝܐ ʻanya Parthian and Middle Persian xroshtag Chinese 勢至 Shi Zhi The Power of Wisdom a Chinese bodhisattva The answer sent by the First Man to the Call from the World of Light The Living Self Parthian and Middle Persian griw zindag griw rōsn Chinese 明性 lit Light Nature The anima mundi made up of the five Light Elements identical with the Suffering Jesus who is crucified in the world The second creation Edit The Friend of the Lights Syriac ܚܒܝܒ ܢܗܝܖܐ ḥaviv nehire Chinese 樂明佛 lit Enjoyer of Lights 91 Calls to The Great Builder Syriac ܒܢ ܖܒܐ ban rabba Chinese 造相 lit Creator of Forms In charge of creating the new world that will separate the darkness from the light He calls to The Living Spirit Syriac ܪܘܚܐ ܚܝܐ ruḥa ḥayya Middle Persian Mihryazd Chinese 淨活風 pinyin Jinghuofeng Latin Spiritus Vivens Greek Zwn Pneyma Acts as a demiurge creating the structure of the material world His five Sons Syriac ܚܡܫܐ ܒܢܘܗܝ ḥamsa benawhy Chinese 五等驍健子 lit Five Valiant Sons The Keeper of the Splendour Syriac ܨܦܬ ܙܝܘܐ ṣfat ziwa Latin Splenditenens Chinese 催光明使 lit Urger of Enlightenment Holds up the ten heavens from above The King of Glory Syriac ܡܠܟ ܫܘܒܚܐ mlex suvḥa Latin Rex Gloriosus Chinese 地藏 Dizang Earth Treasury a Chinese bodhisattva The Adamas of Light Syriac ܐܕܡܘܣ ܢܘܗܪܐ adamus nuhra Latin Adamas Chinese 降魔使 pinyin Jiangmo shǐ Fights with and overcomes an evil being in the image of the King of Darkness The Great King of Honour Syriac ܡܠܟܐ ܪܒܐ ܕܐܝܩܪܐ malka rabba dikkara Dead Sea Scrolls Imperial Aramaic מלכא רבא דאיקרא malka raba de ikara Latin Rex Honoris Chinese 十天大王 pinyin Shitian Dawang lit Ten Heavens Great King A being that plays a central role in The Book of Enoch originally written in Aramaic as well as Mani s Syriac version of it the Book of Giants Sits in the seventh heaven of the ten heavens corresponding to the celestial spheres the first seven of which house the classical planets and guards the entrance to the world of light Atlas Syriac ܣܒܠܐ sebbla Latin Atlas Chinese 持世主 pinyin Chishizhǔ Supports the eight worlds from below His sixth Son the Call God Syriac ܩܪܝܐ qarya Middle Persian Padvaxtag Chinese 觀音 Guanyin watching perceiving sounds of the world the Chinese Bodhisattva of Compassion Sent from the Living Spirit to awaken the First Man from his battle with the forces of darkness The third creation Edit The Third Messenger Syriac ܐܝܙܓܕܐ izgadda Middle Persian naresahyazad Parthian hridig frestag tertius legatus Jesus the Splendour Syriac ܝܫܘܥ ܙܝܘܐ Ishoʻ Ziwa Chinese 光明夷數 lit Jesus of Bright Light or 夷數精和 lit Jesus the Essence of Harmony Sent to awaken Adam and Eve to the source of the spiritual light trapped within their physical bodies The Maiden of Light Middle Persian and Parthian qnygrwsn Chinese 謹你嚧詵 a phonetic loan from Middle Persian The Twelve Virgins of Light Syriac ܬܪܬܥܣܪܐ ܒܬܘܠܬܐ tratʻesra btulte Middle Persian kanigan rōsnan Chinese 日宮十二化女 pinyin Rigōng shi er huanǚ lit Sun Palace Twelve Maidens of Transformation b 91 Reflected in the twelve constellations of the Zodiac The Column of Glory Syriac ܐܣܛܘܢ ܫܘܒܚܐ esṭun suvḥa Middle Persian srōs ahray Chinese 蘇露沙羅夷 pinyin Sulu shaluoyi and 盧舍那 Lushena both phonetic from Middle Persian srōs ahray The path that souls take back to the World of Light corresponds to the Milky Way The Great Nous His five Limbs Chinese 五體 See His Five Shekhinas above Reason Mind Intelligence Thought Understanding The Just Judge Parthian d dbr r stygr Chinese 平等王 lit Impartial King 91 The Last GodThe World of Darkness Edit The Prince of Darkness Syriac ܡܠܟ ܚܫܘܟܐ mlex ḥesoxa Middle Persian Ahriman the Zoroastrian supreme evil being His five evil kingdoms Evil counterparts of the five elements of light the lowest being the kingdom of Darkness His son Syriac ܐܫܩܠܘܢ Ashaklun Middle Persian Az from the Zoroastrian demon Azi Dahaka His son s mate Syriac ܢܒܪܘܐܠ Nevro el Their offspring Adam and Eve Middle Persian Gehmurd and Murdiyanag Giants Fallen Angels also Abortions Syriac ܝܚܛܐ yaḥte abortions or those that fell also ܐܪܟܘܢܬܐ Egrhgoroi Egregoroi Giants Related to the story of the fallen angels in the Book of Enoch which Mani used extensively in The Book of Giants and the נפילים nephilim described in Genesis 6 1 4 The Manichaean Church EditOrganization Edit The Manichaean Church was divided into the Elect who had taken upon themselves the vows of Manichaeism and the Hearers those who had not but still participated in the Church The Elect were forbidden to consume alcohol and meat as well as to harvest crops or prepare food due to Mani s claim that harvesting was a form of murder against plants The Hearers would therefore commit the sin of preparing food and would provide it to the Elect who would in turn pray for the Hearers and cleanse them of these sins 94 The terms for these divisions were already common since the days of early Christianity however it had a different meaning in Christianity In Chinese writings the Middle Persian and Parthian terms are transcribed phonetically instead of being translated into Chinese 95 These were recorded by Augustine of Hippo 96 The Leader Syriac ܟܗܢܐ kɑhnɑ Parthian yamag Chinese 閻默 pinyin yanmo Mani s designated successor seated as Patriarch at the head of the Church originally in Ctesiphon from the ninth century in Samarkand Two notable leaders were Mar Sisin or Sisinnios the first successor of Mani and Abu Hilal al Dayhuri an eighth century leader 12 Apostles Latin magistri Syriac ܫܠܝܚܐ ʃ e liħe Middle Persian mozag Chinese 慕闍 pinyin mudu Three of Mani s original apostles were Mar Patti Pattikios Mani s father Akouas and Mar Ammo 72 Bishops Latin episcopi Syriac ܐܦܣܩܘܦܐ ʔappisqoppe Middle Persian aspasag aftadan Chinese 薩波塞 pinyin sabōsai or Chinese 拂多誕 pinyin fuduōdan see also seventy disciples One of Mani s original disciples who was specifically referred to as a bishop was Mar Adda 360 Presbyters Latin presbyteri Syriac ܩܫܝܫܐ qaʃʃiʃe Middle Persian mahistan Chinese 默奚悉德 pinyin moxixide The general body of the Elect Latin electi Syriac ܡܫܡܫܢܐ m e ʃammeʃɑne Middle Persian ardawan or denawar Chinese 阿羅緩 pinyin aluohuǎn or Chinese 電那勿 pinyin diannawu The Hearers Latin auditōres Syriac ܫܡܘܥܐ ʃɑmoʿe Middle Persian niyoshagan Chinese 耨沙喭 pinyin noushayan Religious practices EditPrayers Edit Evidently from Manichaean sources Manichaeans observed daily prayers either four for the hearers or seven for the elect The sources differ about the exact time of prayer The Fihrist by al Nadim points them after noon mid afternoon just after sunset and at nightfall Al Biruni places the prayers at dawn sunrise noon and nightfall The elect additionally pray at mid afternoon half an hour after nightfall and at midnight Al Nadim s account of daily prayers is probably adjusted to coincide with the public prayers for the Muslims while Al Birunis report may reflect an older tradition unaffected by Islam 97 98 When Al Nadim s account of daily prayers had been the only detailed source available there was a concern that these practises had been only adapted by Muslims during the Abbasid Caliphate However it is clear that the Arabic text provided by Al Nadim corresponds with the descriptions of Egyptian texts from the fourth century 99 Every prayer started with an ablution with water or if water was not available with other substances comparable to ablution in Islam 100 and consisted of several blessings to the apostles and spirits The prayer consisted of prostrating oneself to the ground and rising again twelve times during every prayer 101 During day Manichaeans turned towards the sun and during night towards the moon If the moon is not visible at night they turned towards north 102 Evident from Faustus of Mileve Celestial bodies are not the subject of worship themselves but are ships carrying the light particles of the world to the supreme god who can not be seen since he exists beyond time and space and also the dwelling places for emanations of the supreme deity such as Jesus the Splendour 102 According to the writings of Augustine of Hippo ten prayers were performed the first devoted to the Father of Greatness and the following to lesser deities spirits and angels and finally towards the elect in order to be freed from rebirth and pain and to attain peace in the realm of light 99 Comparable in the Uighur confession four prayers are directed to the supreme God Azrua the God of the Sun and the Moon and fivefold God and the buddhas 102 Primary sources Edit An image of the Buddha as one of the primary prophets on a Manichaean pictorial roll fragment from Chotscho 10th century Mani wrote seven books which contained the teachings of the religion Only scattered fragments and translations of the originals remain most having been discovered in Egypt and Turkistan during the 20th century 103 The original six Syriac writings are not preserved although their Syriac names have been There are also fragments and quotations from them A long quotation preserved by the eighth century Nestorian Christian author Theodore Bar Konai 41 shows that in the original Syriac Aramaic writings of Mani there was no influence of Iranian or Zoroastrian terms The terms for the Manichaean deities in the original Syriac writings are in Aramaic The adaptation of Manichaeism to the Zoroastrian religion appears to have begun in Mani s lifetime however with his writing of the Middle Persian Shabuhragan his book dedicated to the Sasanian emperor Shapur I 22 In it there are mentions of Zoroastrian divinities such as Ahura Mazda Angra Mainyu and Az Manichaeism is often presented as a Persian religion mostly due to the vast number of Middle Persian Parthian and Sogdian as well as Turkish texts discovered by German researchers near Turpan in what is now Xinjiang China during the early 1900s However from the vantage point of its original Syriac descriptions as quoted by Theodore Bar Khonai and outlined above Manichaeism may be better described as a unique phenomenon of Aramaic Babylonia occurring in proximity to two other new Aramaic religious phenomena Talmudic Judaism and Mandaeism which also appeared in Babylonia in roughly the third century citation needed The original but now lost six sacred books of Manichaeism were composed in Syriac Aramaic and translated into other languages to help spread the religion As they spread to the east the Manichaean writings passed through Middle Persian Parthian Sogdian Tocharian and ultimately Uyghur and Chinese translations As they spread to the west they were translated into Greek Coptic and Latin citation needed Statue of prophet Mani as the Buddha of Light in Cao an Temple in Jinjiang Fujian a Manichaean temple in Buddhist disguise 104 which is considered the only extant Manichean temple in China 105 Henning describes how this translation process evolved and influenced the Manichaeans of Central Asia Beyond doubt Sogdian was the national language of the Majority of clerics and propagandists of the Manichaean faith in Central Asia Middle Persian Parsig and to a lesser degree Parthian Pahlavanig occupied the position held by Latin in the medieval church The founder of Manichaeism had employed Syriac his own language as his medium but conveniently he had written at least one book in Middle Persian and it is likely that he himself had arranged for the translation of some or all of his numerous writings from Syriac into Middle Persian Thus the Eastern Manichaeans found themselves entitled to dispense with the study of Mani s original writings and to continue themselves to reading the Middle Persian edition it presented small difficulty to them to acquire a good knowledge of the Middle Persian language owing to its affinity with Sogdian 106 Originally written in Syriac Edit the Gospel of Mani Syriac ܐܘܢܓܠܝܘܢ ʔɛwwanɡallijon Koine Greek eὐaggelion good news gospel Quotations from the first chapter were brought in Arabic by ibn al Nadim who lived in Baghdad at a time when there were still Manichaeans living there in his 938 book the Fihrist a catalog of all written books known to him The Treasure of Life The Treatise Coptic pragmateia pragmateia Secrets The Book of Giants Original fragments were discovered at Qumran pre Manichaean and Turpan Epistles Augustine brings quotations in Latin from Mani s Fundamental Epistle in some of his anti Manichaean works Psalms and Prayers A Coptic Manichaean Psalter discovered in Egypt in the early 1900s was edited and published by Charles Allberry from Manichaean manuscripts in the Chester Beatty collection and in the Berlin Academy 1938 9 Originally written in Middle Persian Edit The Shabuhragan dedicated to Shapur I Original Middle Persian fragments were discovered at Turpan quotations were brought in Arabic by al Biruni Other books Edit The Ardahang the Picture Book In Iranian tradition this was one of Mani s holy books that became remembered in later Persian history and was also called Arzang a Parthian word meaning Worthy and was beautified with paintings Therefore Iranians gave him the title of The Painter The Kephalaia of the Teacher Kefalaia Discourses found in Coptic translation On the Origin of His Body the title of the Cologne Mani Codex a Greek translation of an Aramaic book that describes the early life of Mani 20 Non Manichaean works preserved by the Manichaean Church Edit Portions of the Book of Enoch literature such as the Book of Giants Literature relating to the apostle Thomas who by tradition went to India and was also venerated in Syria such as portions of the Syriac The Acts of Thomas and the Psalms of Thomas The Gospel of Thomas was also attributed to Manichaeans by Cyril of Jerusalem a fourth century Church Father 107 The legend of Barlaam and Josaphat passed from an Indian story about the Buddha through a Manichaean version before it transformed into the story of a Christian Saint in the west Later works Edit 摩尼教文獻 The Chinese Manichaean Compendium Two female musicians depicted in a Manichaean text In later centuries as Manichaeism passed through eastern Persian speaking lands and arrived at the Uyghur Khaganate 回鶻帝國 and eventually the Uyghur kingdom of Turpan destroyed around 1335 Middle Persian and Parthian prayers afriwan or afurisn and the Parthian hymn cycles the Huwidagman and Angad Rōsnan created by Mar Ammo were added to the Manichaean writings 108 A translation of a collection of these produced the Manichaean Chinese Hymnscroll Chinese 摩尼教下部讚 pinyin Moni jiao Xiabu Zan which Lieu translates as Hymns for the Lower Section i e the Hearers of the Manichaean Religion 109 In addition to containing hymns attributed to Mani it contains prayers attributed to Mani s earliest disciples including Mar Zaku Mar Ammo and Mar Sisin Another Chinese work is a complete translation of the Sermon of the Light Nous presented as a discussion between Mani and his disciple Adda 110 Critical and polemic sources Edit Until discoveries in the 1900s of original sources the only sources for Manichaeism were descriptions and quotations from non Manichaean authors either Christian Muslim Buddhist or Zoroastrian ones While often criticizing Manichaeism they also quoted directly from Manichaean scriptures This enabled Isaac de Beausobre writing in the 18th century to create a comprehensive work on Manichaeism relying solely on anti Manichaean sources 111 112 Thus quotations and descriptions in Greek and Arabic have long been known to scholars as have the long quotations in Latin by Saint Augustine and the extremely important quotation in Syriac by Theodore Bar Konai citation needed Patristic depictions of Mani and Manichaeism Edit Eusebius commented as follows The error of the Manichees which commenced at this time In the mean time also that madman Manes Mani is of Persian or Semitic origin as he was called well agreeing with his name for his demoniacal heresy armed himself by the perversion of his reason and at the instruction of Satan to the destruction of many He was a barbarian in his life both in speech and conduct but in his nature as one possessed and insane Accordingly he attempted to form himself into a Christ and then also proclaimed himself to be the very paraclete and the Holy Spirit and with all this was greatly puffed up with his madness Then as if he were Christ he selected twelve disciples the partners of his new religion and after patching together false and ungodly doctrines collected from a thousand heresies long since extinct he swept them off like a deadly poison from Persia upon this part of the world Hence the impious name of the Manichaeans spreading among many even to the present day Such then was the occasion of this knowledge as it was falsely called that sprouted up in these times 113 Acta Archelai Edit An example of how inaccurate some of these accounts could be can be seen in the account of the origins of Manichaeism contained in the Acta Archelai This was a Greek anti Manichaean work written before 348 most well known in its Latin version which was regarded as an accurate account of Manichaeism until refuted by Isaac de Beausobre in the 18th century In the time of the Apostles there lived a man named Scythianus who is described as coming from Scythia and also as being a Saracen by race ex genere Saracenorum He settled in Egypt where he became acquainted with the wisdom of the Egyptians and invented the religious system that was afterwards known as Manichaeism Finally he emigrated to Palestine and when he died his writings passed into the hands of his sole disciple a certain Terebinthus The latter betook himself to Babylonia assumed the name of Budda and endeavoured to propagate his master s teaching But he like Scythianus gained only one disciple who was an old woman After a while he died in consequence of a fall from the roof of a house and the books that he had inherited from Scythianus became the property of the old woman who on her death bequeathed them to a young man named Corbicius who had been her slave Corbicius thereupon changed his name to Manes studied the writings of Scythianus and began to teach the doctrines that they contained with many additions of his own He gained three disciples named Thomas Addas and Hermas About this time the son of the Persian king fell ill and Manes undertook to cure him the prince however died whereupon Manes was thrown into prison He succeeded in escaping but eventually fell into the hands of the king by whose order he was flayed and his corpse was hung up at the city gate A A Bevan who quoted this story commented that it has no claim to be considered historical 114 View of Judaism in the Acta Archelai Edit According to Hegemonius portrayal of Mani the evil demiurge who created the world was the Jewish Jehovah Hegemonius reports that Mani said It is the Prince of Darkness who spoke with Moses the Jews and their priests Thus the Christians the Jews and the Pagans are involved in the same error when they worship this God For he leads them astray in the lusts he taught them He goes on to state Now he who spoke with Moses the Jews and the priests he says is the archont of Darkness and the Christians Jews and pagans ethnic are one and the same as they revere the same god For in his aspirations he seduces them as he is not the god of truth And so therefore all those who put their hope in the god who spoke with Moses and the prophets have this in store for themselves namely to be bound with him because they did not put their hope in the god of truth For that one spoke with them only according to their own aspirations 115 Central Asian and Iranian primary sources Edit In the early 1900s original Manichaean writings started to come to light when German scholars led by Albert Grunwedel and then by Albert von Le Coq began excavating at Gaochang the ancient site of the Manichaean Uyghur Kingdom near Turpan in Chinese Turkestan destroyed around AD 1300 While most of the writings they uncovered were in very poor condition there were still hundreds of pages of Manichaean scriptures written in three Iranian languages Middle Persian Parthian and Sogdian and old Uyghur These writings were taken back to Germany and were analyzed and published at the Prussian Academy of Sciences in Berlin by Le Coq and others such as Friedrich W K Muller and Walter Bruno Henning While the vast majority of these writings were written in a version of the Syriac script known as Manichaean script the German researchers perhaps for lack of suitable fonts published most of them using the Hebrew alphabet which could easily be substituted for the 22 Syriac letters citation needed Perhaps the most comprehensive of these publications was Manichaeische Dogmatik aus chinesischen und iranischen Texten Manichaean Dogma from Chinese and Iranian texts by Ernst Waldschmidt and Wolfgang Lentz published in Berlin in 1933 116 More than any other research work published before or since this work printed and then discussed the original key Manichaean texts in the original scripts and consists chiefly of sections from Chinese texts and Middle Persian and Parthian texts transcribed with the Hebrew alphabet After the Nazi Party gained power in Germany the Manichaean writings continued to be published during the 1930s but the publishers no longer used Hebrew letters instead transliterating the texts into Latin letters citation needed Coptic primary sources Edit Additionally in 1930 German researchers in Egypt found a large body of Manichaean works in Coptic Though these were also damaged hundreds of complete pages survived and beginning in 1933 were analyzed and published in Berlin before World War II by German scholars such as Hans Jakob Polotsky 117 Some of these Coptic Manichaean writings were lost during the war 118 Chinese primary sources Edit After the success of the German researchers French scholars visited China and discovered what is perhaps the most complete set of Manichaean writings written in Chinese These three Chinese writings all found at the Mogao Caves among the Dunhuang manuscripts and all written before the 9th century are today kept in London Paris and Beijing Some of the scholars involved with their initial discovery and publication were Edouard Chavannes Paul Pelliot and Aurel Stein The original studies and analyses of these writings along with their translations first appeared in French English and German before and after World War II The complete Chinese texts themselves were first published in Tokyo Japan in 1927 in the Taishō Tripiṭaka volume 54 While in the last thirty years or so they have been republished in both Germany with a complete translation into German alongside the 1927 Japanese edition 119 and China the Japanese publication remains the standard reference for the Chinese texts citation needed Greek life of Mani Cologne codex Edit In Egypt a small codex was found and became known through antique dealers in Cairo It was purchased by the University of Cologne in 1969 Two of its scientists Henrichs and Koenen produced the first edition known since as the Cologne Mani Codex which was published in four articles in the Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik The ancient papyrus manuscript contained a Greek text describing the life of Mani Thanks to this discovery much more is known about the man who founded one of the most influential world religions of the past 120 Figurative use EditThe terms Manichaean and Manichaeism are sometimes used figuratively as a synonym of the more general term dualist with respect to a philosophy outlook or world view 121 The terms are often used to suggest that the world view in question simplistically reduces the world to a struggle between good and evil For example Zbigniew Brzezinski used the phrase Manichaean paranoia in reference to U S President George W Bush s world view in The Daily Show with Jon Stewart 14 March 2007 Brzezinski elaborated that he meant the notion that he Bush is leading the forces of good against the Axis of evil Author and journalist Glenn Greenwald followed up on the theme in describing Bush in his book A Tragic Legacy 2007 The term is frequently used by critics to describe the attitudes and foreign policies of the United States and its leaders 122 123 124 Philosopher Frantz Fanon frequently invoked the concept of Manicheanism in his discussions of violence between colonizers and the colonized 125 In My Secret History author Paul Theroux s protagonist defines the word Manichaean for the protagonist s son as seeing that good and evil are mingled Before explaining the word to his son the protagonist mentions Joseph Conrad s short story The Secret Sharer at least twice in the book the plot of which also examines the idea of the duality of good and evil 126 See also EditManichaean art Athinganoi a purportedly related movement Abu Hilal al Dayhuri 8th century Agapius Manichaean 4th or 5th centuries Akouas Ancient Mesopotamian religion Chinese Manichaeism Conflict between good and evil Dualism in cosmology Hiwi al Balkhi Indo Iranian religion Mar Ammo third century Mazdak Ming Cult Moral realism Abu Isa al Warraq Yazdanism YazidiNotes Edit According to the Fehrest Mani was of Arsacid stock on both his father s and his mother s sides at least if the readings al ḥaskaniya Mani s father and al asʿaniya Mani s mother are corrected to al askaniya and al asḡaniya ed Flugel 1862 p 49 ll 2 and 3 respectively The forefathers of Mani s father are said to have been from Hamadan and so perhaps of Iranian origin ed Flugel 1862 p 49 5 6 The Chinese Compendium which makes the father a local king maintains that his mother was from the house Jinsajian explained by Henning as the Armenian Arsacid family of Kamsarakan Henning 1943 p 52 n 4 1977 II p 115 Is that fact or fiction or both The historicity of this tradition is assumed by most but the possibility that Mani s noble Arsacid background is legendary cannot be ruled out cf Scheftelowitz 1933 pp 403 4 In any case it is characteristic that Mani took pride in his origin from time honored Babel but never claimed affiliation to the Iranian upper class Manichaeism at Encyclopaedia Iranica These are apparently the twelve centuries clothed with flowers and full of melodies duodecim saecula floribus convestita et canoribus plena at St Augustine Contra Faustum 15 5 93 References Edit manichaeism Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required a b R van den Broek Wouter J Hanegraaff Gnosis and Hermeticism from Antiquity to Modern TimesSUNY Press 1998 ISBN 978 0 7914 3611 0 p 37 Yarshater Ehsan The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 3 2 The Seleucid Parthian and Sasanian Periods Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1983 Manichaeism New Advent Encyclopedia Retrieved 4 October 2013 Cosmogony and Cosmology iii In Manicheism Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 24 February 2018 I n Manicheism the world was a prison for demons Widengren Geo Mesopotamian elements in Manichaeism King and Saviour II Studies in Manichaean Mandaean and Syrian gnostic religion Lundequistska bokhandeln 1946 Jason BeDuhn Paul Allan Mirecki 2007 Frontiers of Faith The Christian Encounter With Manichaeism in the Acts of Archelaus BRILL p 6 ISBN 978 90 04 16180 1 Andrew Welburn Mani the Angel and the Column of Glory An Anthology of Manichaean Texts Edinburgh Floris Books 1998 p 68 Jason David BeDuhn The Manichaean Body In Discipline and Ritual Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2000 republished 2002 p IX a b c d 杨富学 林瞪及其在中国摩尼教史上的地位 www 360doc com Retrieved 9 June 2022 a b c Li Linzhou 2004 福州摩尼教重要遗址 福州台江义洲浦西福寿宫 in Chinese 1 ed p 44 a b c Chen Yizhou Tu Yuanji 2004 福建摩尼教寺院遗址考 in Chinese 1 ed p 82 a b 福建明教遺裔 kameyou 謎米博客 17 August 2020 Archived from the original on 17 August 2020 Retrieved 25 July 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Gardner Iain Lieu Samuel N C eds 2004 Manichaean Texts from the Roman Empire Cambridge Cambridge University Press Such as the Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers First Series ed Philip Schaff writing of Augustine Definition of MANICHAEAN www merriam webster com Mary Boyce Zoroastrians their religious beliefs and practices Routledge 2001 p 111 He was Iranian of noble Parthian blood Warwick Ball Rome in the East the transformation of an empire Routledge 2001 p 437 Manichaeism was a syncretic religion proclaimed by the Iranian Prophet Mani a b c d John Kevin Coyle 15 September 2009 Manichaeism and Its Legacy BRILL pp 13 ISBN 978 90 04 17574 7 Retrieved 27 August 2012 a b L Koenen and C Romer eds Der Kolner Mani Kodex Uber das Werden seines Leibes Kritische Edition Abhandlung der Reinisch Westfalischen Akademie der Wissenschaften Papyrologica Coloniensia 14 Opladen Germany 1988 Manichaeism at Encyclopaedia Iranica a b c Middle Persian Sources D N MacKenzie Mani s Sabuhragan pt 1 text and translation BSOAS 42 3 1979 pp 500 34 pt 2 glossary and plates BSOAS 43 2 1980 pp 288 310 Welburn 1998 pp 67 68 Tardieu Michel 2008 Manichaeism University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 03278 3 Joosten Jan 1996 The Syriac Language of the Peshitta and Old Syriac Versions of Matthew Syntactic Structure Inner Syriac Developments and Translation Technique BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 10036 7 Reeves John C 1996 Heralds of That Good Realm Syro Mesopotamian Gnosis and Jewish Traditions BRILL pp 6 ISBN 978 90 04 10459 4 Retrieved 27 August 2012 Manichaeism Definition Beliefs History amp Facts Britannica van Oort Johannes 2020 The Paraclete Mani as the Apostle of Jesus Christ and the Origins of a New Church Mani and Augustine Leiden the Netherlands Brill a b Lieu Samuel N C 1 January 1992 Manichaeism in the Later Roman Empire and Medieval China ISBN 9783161458200 Saint Augustine Bishop of Hippo 2006 The Manichean Debate ISBN 978 1 56548 247 0 Retrieved 18 August 2012 The movement of the Manichaean tradition along the Silk Road Silkspice wordpress com 5 April 2011 Retrieved 18 August 2012 self published source Eschatology ii Manichean Eschatology at Encyclopaedia Iranica Stroumsa Guy G 2015 The Making of the Abrahamic Religions in Late Antiquity Oxford Oxford University Press p 95 C Colpe Das Siegel der Propheten historische Beziehungen zwischen Judentum Judenchristentum Heidentum und fruhem Islam Arbeiten zur neutestamentlichen Theologie und Zeitgeschichte 3 Berlin Institut Kirche und Judentum 1990 227 243 G G Stroumsa The Making of the Abrahamic Religions in Late Antiquity Oxford Studies in the Abrahamic Religions Oxford Oxford University Press 2015 68 The Dead Sea Scrolls 1Q Enoch Book of Giants The Dead Sea Scrolls 1Q Enoch Book of Giants Retrieved 7 October 2019 J T Milik ed and trans The Books of Enoch Aramaic Fragments of Qumran Cave 4 Oxford Clarendon Press 1976 a b In Henning W B The Book of Giants BSOAS Vol XI Part 1 1943 pp 52 74 Reeves John C Jewish Lore in Manichaean Cosmogony Studies in the Book of Giants Traditions 1992 See Henning A Sogdian Fragment of the Manichaean Cosmogony BSOAS 1948 a b c d Original Syriac in Theodorus bar Konai Liber Scholiorum II ed A Scher Corpus Scriptorum Christianorum Orientalium scrip syri 1912 pp 311 8 ISBN 978 90 429 0104 9 English translation in A V W Jackson Researches in Manichaeism New York 1932 pp 222 54 Ephraim Saint Press Aeterna Of Mani Marcion and Bardaisan Aeterna Press Richard Foltz Religions of the Silk Road Palgrave Macmillan 2nd edition 2010 p 71 ISBN 978 0 230 62125 1 Peter Bryder The Chinese Transformation of Manichaeism A Study of Chinese Manichaean Terminology 1985 Lieu Samuel N C 1998 Manichaeism in Central Asia and China BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 10405 1 Lieu Samuel N C 1985 Manichaeism in the Later Roman Empire and Medieval China A Historical Survey Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 1088 0 Iain Gardner and Samuel N C Lieu eds Manichaean Texts from the Roman Empire Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2004 117 18 Lieu Samuel 1992 Manichaeism in the Later Roman Empire and Medieval China 2d edition pp 145 148 a b c d Doniger Wendy 1999 Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of World Religions Merriam Webster pp 689 690 ISBN 9789068310023 St Augustine of Hippo Catholic org Retrieved 18 August 2012 Confessions Book V Section 10 A Adam Das Fortwirken des Manichaismus bei Augustin In ZKG 69 1958 S 1 25 从信仰摩尼教看漠北回纥 permanent dead link 关于回鹘摩尼教史的几个问题 Archived from the original on 7 August 2007 九姓回鹘爱登里罗汨没蜜施合毗伽可汗圣文神武碑 Bbs sjtu edu cn Archived from the original on 24 December 2013 Retrieved 14 February 2014 TM276 Uygurca Alttuerkisch Qedimi Uygurche TT 2 pdf Turkische Turfan Texte permanent dead link Perkins Dorothy 2013 Encyclopedia of China History and Culture Routledge p 309 ISBN 9781135935627 a b c d Samuel N C Lieu 1998 Manachaeism in Central Asia and China Brill Publishers pp 115 129 130 ISBN 978 90 04 10405 1 Patricia Ebrey Anne Walthall 2013 Pre Modern East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History Volume I To 1800 Cengage p 228 ISBN 978 1 285 54623 0 a b c Xisha Ma Huiying Meng 2011 Popular Religion and Shamanism Brill Publishers pp 56 57 99 ISBN 9789004174559 Patricia Ebrey Anne Walthall 2013 Pre Modern East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History Volume I To 1800 Cengage p 228 ISBN 978 1 285 54623 0 Etienne de la Vaissiere Mani en Chine au VIe siecle Journal asiatique 293 1 2005 357 378 Schaeffer Kurtis Kapstein Matthew Tuttle Gray 2013 Sources of Tibetan Tradition New York Columbia University Press pp 95 96 ISBN 978 0 231 13599 3 a b Rippin Andrew 2013 The Islamic World Routledge p 73 ISBN 978 1 136 80343 7 Berkey Jonathan Porter 2003 The Formation of Islam Religion and Society in the Near East Cambridge University Press pp 99 100 ISBN 978 0 521 58813 3 Lewis Bernard 2009 The Middle East Simon amp Schuster ISBN 9781439190005 Lambton Ann K S 2013 State and Government in Medieval Islam Routledge pp 50 51 ISBN 978 1 136 60521 5 Zaman Muhammad Qasim 1997 Religion and Politics Under the Early Abbasids The Emergence of the Proto Sunni Elite Brill pp 63 65 ISBN 978 9004106789 Ibrahim Mahmood 1994 Religious inquisition as social policy the persecution of the Zanadiqa in the early Abbasid Caliphate Arab Studies Quarterly Archived from the original on 11 July 2012 a b c Ames Christine Caldwell 2015 Medieval Heresies Cambridge University Press p 88 ISBN 978 1 107 02336 9 Irfan Shahid Byzantium and the Arabs in the fourth century 1984 p 425 a b Duchesne Guillemin Jacques Lecoq Pierre 1985 Papers in Honor of Professor Mary Boyce Brill Publishers p 658 ISBN 9789068310023 Coyle J K 2009 Manichaeism and its Legacy Brill p 19 Melton J Gordon 2014 Faiths Across Time 5000 years of Religious History ABC CLIO p 361 ISBN 9781610690263 Liu Xinru 1997 Silk and Religion An Exploration of Material Life and the Thought of People AD 600 1200 Parts 600 1200 Oxford University Press p 182 ISBN 9780195644524 Lieu Samuel N C 1985 Manichaeism in the Later Roman Empire and Medieval China A Historical Survey Manchester University Press p 261 ISBN 978 0 7190 1088 0 ter Haar B J 1999 The White Lotus Teachings in Chinese Religious History University of Hawaii Press ISBN 9780824822187 Doniger Wendy 1999 Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of World Religions Merriam Webster p 690 ISBN 9789068310023 Stroumsa Gedaliahu G Anti Cathar Polemics and the Liber de duobus principiis in B Lewis and F Niewohner eds Religionsgesprache im Mittelalter Wolfenbutteler Mittelalter Studien 4 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz 1992 169 183 p 170 Catholic Encyclopedia Paulicians Newadvent org 1 February 1911 Retrieved 18 August 2012 a b c Runciman Steven The Medieval Manichee a study of the Christian dualist heresy Cambridge University Press 1947 Dondaine Antoine O P Un traite neo manicheen du XIIIe siecle Le Liber de duobus principiis suivi d un fragment de rituel Cathare Rome Institutum Historicum Fratrum Praedicatorum 1939 Catholic Encyclopedia Albigenses Newadvent org 1 March 1907 Retrieved 18 August 2012 明教在温州的最后遗存 温州社会研究所 The Last Remains of Mingjiao in Wenzhou Wenzhou Institute of Social Research in Chinese 25 August 2013 Archived from the original on 25 August 2013 崇寿宫记 Cxsz cixi gov cn 8 October 2012 Archived from the original on 13 May 2013 Retrieved 14 February 2014 Manichaean and Nestorian Christian Remains in Zayton Quanzhou South China ARC DP0557098 Mq edu au Archived from the original on 8 August 2014 Retrieved 27 August 2014 Neo Manichaeanism Questions and Answers Oocities org Retrieved 27 August 2014 Central Manichaean Temple Manichaean org 20 June 2014 Archived from the original on 24 July 2013 Retrieved 27 August 2014 a b Bevan A A 1930 Manichaeism Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics Volume VIII Ed James Hastings London A completely sourced description built around bar Khoni s account with additional sources is found in Jonas Hans The Gnostic Religion 1958 Ch 9 Creation World History Salvation According to Mani a b c d e f g Ma amp Wang 2018 Chart from E Waldschmidt and W Lenz Die Stellung Jesu im Manichaismus Berlin 1926 p 42 Augustine Contra Faustum 15 5 Augustine and Manichaeism www personal umich edu Retrieved 5 April 2020 G Haloun and W B Henning The Compendium of the Doctrines and Styles of the Teaching of Mani the Buddha of Light Asia Major 1952 pp 184 212 p 195 Manichaeism The Catholic Encyclopedia 1910 J van Johannes Oort Jacob Albert van den Berg In Search of Truth Augustine Manichaeism and Other Gnosticism Studies for Johannes Van Oort at Sixty BRILL 2011 ISBN 9789004189973 p 258 Jason BeDuhn New Light on Manichaeism Papers from the Sixth International Congress on Manichaeism Organized by the International Association of Manichaean Studies BRILL 2009 ISBN 9789004172852 p 77 a b Johannes van Oort Augustine and Manichaean Christianity Selected Papers from the First South African Conference on Augustine of Hippo University of Pretoria 24 26 April 2012 BRILL 01 08 2013 ISBN 9789004255067 p 74 Charles George Herbermann The Catholic Encyclopedia An International Work of Reference on the Constitution Doctrine Discipline and History of the Catholic Church Band 9 Universal Knowledge Foundation 1913 Digit 16 Aug 2006 p 594 New Light on Manichaeism Papers from the Sixth International Congress o p 78 a b c Johannes van Oort Augustine and Manichaean Christianity Selected Papers from the First South African Conference on Augustine of Hippo University of Pretoria 24 26 April 2012 BRILL 01 08 2013 ISBN 9789004255067 p 75 Manichaeism www britannica com Retrieved 24 July 2021 Manicheism i General Survey at Encyclopaedia Iranica Chinese Turkestan vii Manicheism in Chinese Turkestan and China at Encyclopaedia Iranica W B Henning Sogdica 1940 p 11 Let none read the gospel according to Thomas for it is the work not of one of the twelve apostles but of one of Mani s three wicked disciples Cyril of Jerusalem Cathechesis V 4th century See for example Boyce Mary 1954 The Manichaean hymn cycles in Parthian London Oriental Series Vol 3 London Oxford University Press Lieu 1998 p 50 The Traite is despite its title Moni jiao cao jing lit fragmentary Mathews no 6689 Manichean scripture a long text in an excellent state of preservation with only a few lines missing at the beginning It was first fully published with a facsimile by Edouard Chavannes q v and Paul Pelliot in 1911 and is frequently known as Traite Pelliot Their transcription including typographical errors was reproduced in the Chinese translation of the Buddhist Tripiṭaka Taishō no 2141 B LIV pp 1281a16 1286a29 that text was in turn reproduced with critical notes by Helwig Schmidt Glintzer 1987b pp T 81 86 A more accurate transcription was published by Chen Yuan in 1923 pp 531 44 and a new collation based on a reexamination of the original photographs of the manuscript has now been published by Lin Wu shu 1987 pp 217 29 with the photographs Chinese Turkestan vii Manicheism in Chinese Turkestan and China at Encyclopaedia Iranica de Beausobre Isaac 1734 Histoire critique de Manichee et du manicheisme Critical history of Manichae and Manichaeism in French Vol 1 Amsterdam J Frederic Bernard Beausobre Isaac de Formey S 1739 Histoire critique de Manichee et du manicheisme Critical history of Manichae and Manichaeism in French Vol 2 Amsterdam J Frederic Bernard Eusebius The Ecclesiastical History of Eusebius Pamphilus Bishop of Caesarea Translated from the originals by Christian Frederick Cruse 1939 Ch XXXI Bevan A A 1930 Manichaeism Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics Volume VIII Ed James Hastings London Classical Texts Acta Archelai of Mani PDF Iranian Studies at Harvard University p 76 Waldschmidt E and Lentz W Manichaische Dogmatik aus chinesischen und iranischen Texten SPAW 1933 No 13 Hans Jakob Polotsky and Karl Schmidt Ein Mani Fund in Agypten Original Schriften des Mani und seiner Schuler Berlin Akademie der Wissenschaften 1933 Mirecki Paul Allan BeDuhn Jason David 31 December 1996 Emerging from Darkness Studies in the Recovery of Manichaean Sources Brill pp vii ISBN 978 90 04 10760 1 Schmidt Glintzer Helwig 1987 Chinesische Manichaeica Chinese Manichaica in German Wiesbaden Cologne Mani Codex Encyclopedia Iranica Manichaean definition of Manichaean in English Archived copy The Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on 25 September 2011 Retrieved 31 July 2011 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Ode to a Philistine Howard Jacobson s pussy www newstatesman com 26 April 2017 Kaplan Fred 21 October 2004 Paul Nitze Slate Bryant Nick 10 July 2015 The decline of US power BBC News Fieser James Dowden Bradley eds Frantz Fanon Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Martin TN University of Tennessee at Martin Archived from the original on 15 August 2016 Retrieved 25 September 2020 Theroux Paul 1989 My Secret History New York G P Putnam s Sons pp 471 473 ISBN 0 399 13424 7 Bibliography EditBaker Brian Nicholas J 2011 Manichaeism An Ancient Faith Rediscovered London and New York T amp T Clark Ibscher Hugo 1938 Allberry Charles R C ed Manichaean Manuscripts in the Chester Beatty Collection Vol II part II A Manichaean Psalm Book Stuttgart W Kohlammer Beatty Alfred Chester 1938 Charles Allberry ed A Manichean Psalm Book Part II Stuttgart Beausobre de Isaac 1734 1739 Histoire critique de Manichee et du Manicheisme Amsterdam Garland Pub ISBN 978 0 8240 3552 5 BeDuhn Jason David 2002 The Manichaean Body In Discipline and Ritual Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 7107 8 Cross F L E A Livingstone 1974 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church London Oxford UP Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 211545 4 Favre Francois 5 May 2005 Mani the Gift of Light Renova symposium Bilthoven The Netherlands Foltz Richard 2010 Religions of the Silk Road New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 62125 1 Foltz Richard 2013 Religions of Iran From Prehistory to the Present London Oneworld publications ISBN 978 1 78074 308 0 Gardner Iain Lieu Samuel N C 2004 Manichaean Texts from the Roman Empire Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 56822 7 Gardner Iain 2020 The Founder of Manichaeism Rethinking the Lives of Mani Cambridge Cambridge University Press Giversen Soren 1988 The Manichaean Coptic Papyri in The Chester Beatty Library Vol III Psalm Book part I Facsimile ed Geneva Patrick Crammer Cahiers D Orientalism XVI 1988a Giversen Soren 1988 The Manichaean Coptic Papyri in The Chester Beatty LibraryVol IV Psalm Book part II Facsimile ed Geneva Patrick Crammer Cahiers D Orientalism XVI 1988b Grousset Rene 1939 tr Walford Naomi 1970 The Empire of the Steppes A History of Central Asia New Brunswick N J Rutgers ISBN 978 0 8135 1304 1 Gulacsi Zsuzsanna 2001 Manichaean art in Berlin Collections Turnhout Original Manichaean manuscripts found since 1902 in China Egypt Turkestan to be seen in the Museum of Indian Art in Berlin Heinrichs Albert Ludwig Koenen Ein griechischer Mani Kodex 1970 ed Der Kolner Mani Codex P Colon Inv nr 4780 1975 1982 La Vaissiere Etienne de Mani en Chine au VIe siecle Journal Asiatique 293 1 2005 p 357 378 Legge Francis 1964 1914 Forerunners and Rivals of Christianity From 330 B C to 330 A D New York University Books LC Catalog 64 24125 reprinted in two volumes bound as one Lieu Samuel N C 1992 Manichaeism in the Later Roman Empire and Medieval China Tubingen Mohr Siebeck ISBN 978 0 7190 1088 0 Ma Xiaohe Wang Chuan 2018 On the Xiapu Ritual Manual Mani the Buddha of Light Religions 9 7 212 doi 10 3390 rel9070212 Mani 216 276 7 and his biography the Codex Manichaicus Coloniensis CMC Melchert Norman 2002 The Great Conversation A Historical Introduction to Philosophy McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 19 517510 3 Runciman Steven 1982 1947 The Medieval Manichee a study of the Christian dualist heresy Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 28926 9 Skjaervo Prods Oktor 2006 An Introduction to Manicheism Towers Susanna 2019 Constructions of Gender in Late Antique Manichaean Cosmological Narrative Brepols Turnhout Welburn Andrew 1998 Mani the Angel and the Column of Glory Edinburgh Floris ISBN 978 0 86315 274 0 Widengren Geo 1965 Mani and Manichaeism London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson Wurst Gregor July 2001 Die Bema Psalmen Journal of Near Eastern Studies 60 3 203 204 doi 10 1086 468925 Further reading EditScheftelowitz J Is Manicheism an Iranic Religion Part I 1924 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Manichaeism Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Manichaeism Outside articles Edit Catholic Encyclopedia Manichaeism public domain published 1917 International Association of Manichaean Studies Manichaean and Christian Remains in Zayton Quanzhou South China Religions of Iran Manichaeism by I J S Taraporewala 专题研究 摩尼教研究 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine 光明皇帝 明尊教背景书 1 Manichaean sources in English translation Edit A summary of the Manichaean creation myth Manichaean Writings Manicheism Complete bibliography and selection of Manichaean source texts in PDF format A thorough bibliography and outline of Manichaean Studies A number of key Manichaean texts in English translation The Book of the Giants by W B Henning 1943 Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies NHMS series from Brill various volumes containing English translations of Manichaean texts Secondary Manichaean sources in English translation Edit St Augustine Against the Fundamental Epistle of Manichaeus Acta ArchelaiManichaean sources in their original languages Edit Photos of the Entire Koeln Mani Kodex Greek The Syriac Manichaean work quoted by Theodor bar Khonai Photos of the Original Middle Persian Manichaean Writings Fragments Discovered at Turpan The index of this German site can be searched for additional Manichaean material including photos of the original Chinese Manichaean writings Sermon of the Soul in Parthian and Sogdian Archived 24 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Middle Persian and Parthian Texts D N MacKenzie Mani s Sabuhragan pt 1 text and translation BSOAS 42 3 1979 pp 500 34 1 pt 2 glossary and plates BSOAS 43 2 1980 pp 288 310 2 Chinese Manichaean Scriptures 摩尼教殘經一 Incomplete Sutra one of Manichaeism amp 摩尼光佛教法儀略 The Mani Bright Buddha teaching plan amp 下部讚 The Lower Part Praises Secondary Manichaean sources in their original languages Edit Augustine s Contra Epistolam Manichaei Latin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Manichaeism amp oldid 1134601168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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