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Daoshi

A daoshi (Chinese: 道士, lit. "scholar of the Tao"), translated as Taoist priest, Taoist monk, or Taoist professional is a priest in Taoism. The courtesy title of a senior daoshi is daozhang (道长, meaning "Tao master"), and a highly accomplished and revered daoshi is often called a zhenren (真人, "perfected person").

Shao Yuanjie, the taoist priest of the Jiajing Emperor of mid-Ming Dynasty.

Along with Han Chinese priests, there are also many practicing ethnic minority priests in China.[1] Some orders are monastic (Quanzhen orders), while the majority are not (Zhengyi orders). Some of the monastic orders are hermitic, and their members practice seclusion and ascetic lifestyles in the mountains, with the aim of becoming xian, or immortal beings. Non-monastic priests live among the populace and manage and serve their own temples or popular temples.

The activities of the Taoists tend to be informed by materials which may be found in the Daozang, or Daoist Canon; however, Taoists generally choose, or inherit, specific texts which have been passed down for generations from teacher to student, rather than consulting published versions of these works.

Traditionally, they were not thought to be able to manipulate fate on their or their followers' behalf nor could they grant miracles or inflict divine punishment on people in the afterlife or the mortal world.[2]

Orders Edit

Taoist orders are conventionally categorised into two main branches: Quanzhen and Zhengyi.

Quanzhen Taoism Edit

Quanzhen Taoism, which is present almost exclusively in the north of China, includes all Taoist orders which have a monastic institution. Their lifestyle is comparable to that of the Buddhist monks in that they are celibate, vegetarian, and live in monasteries. The White Cloud Temple in Beijing is the main monastery of the Longmen school of Quanzhen, and is also the main headquarters of mainland China's official Taoist Church.

Zhengyi Taoism Edit

The other main branch of the priesthood is Zhengyi Taoism, in which priests may marry, eat meat, live in their own homes, and found and manage their own temples or serve in existing folk religious temples. They are mostly part-time and hold other jobs. Their lineages are transmitted through training and ordination by another priest, although historically they received formal confirmation in their role by the Celestial Master, the highest priest. Fragmentation of the lineage of the Celestial Masters has made Zhengyi priests more independent. In mainland China, the Taoist Church has in theory taken over the power to govern the priesthood (although only a minority are registered with the Church). Zhengyi orders are present all over China, although with different names according to the local lineages. For example, in northern China there are the Yinyang masters of the Lingbao sub-tradition.[3]

By Period Edit

Pre-Ming Period Edit

During the Period of Division, officials were divided into nine different ranks; the lower the Grade, the higher status they were. Daoist priests were given Grade Five status and above, and were permitted to participate in formal rituals (keyi 科仪) since they were educated in internal cultivation (neigong 內功). Daoist priests not trained in neigong were relegated to Grade Six status or lower, and bore the title of "Three-Five Surveyor of Merit” (sanwu dugong 三五度公).[4]

Ming (1368–1644) Edit

Classification and Outside View Edit

During the Ming Dynasty, Taoism and Buddhism were state-sponsored religions, with all others banned.[5] Taoist priests were often classified by two categories, zhu guan (住觀, zhù guān) priests live in designated temples, while you guan (遊觀, yóu guān) priests drifted around with no fixed residence. During the period, Taoist priests were largely viewed positively by the public, though some were skeptical about the credibility of their alchemy, fortune-telling, and divination.[6]

Taoist priests organized themselves into different categories, and assigned themselves different jobs based on their rankings. Both Taoist priests and priestesses performed rituals. Their rankings were included when Taoist priests signed records for rituals which would be burned for certain rituals, such as the Yellow Register Zhai (黃籙齋) rituals, or burial rituals, and Golden Register Jiao (金籙醮), or temple renewal-type rituals. Some scholars tasked themselves with copying down the manuscripts before they were burned in the ritual.[7][8]

The Taoist belief system was also seen as legitimate by many during the middle Ming period when, with the growth of commerce in the state, it became a trend for different industries to worship their own Taoist patron gods. For example, ink makers would worship Wenchang Dijun (文昌帝君, wén chāng dì jūn), ironsmiths would worship Taishang Laojun (太上老君, tài shàng lǎo jūn), and prostitutes and thieves would worship Guan Zhong (管仲, guǎn zhòng) and Shi Qian (時遷, shí qiān), in many ways to prove the legitimacy of their occupations.[5]

Regulation and examinations Edit

As previously mentioned, in 1374, the Ming government banned all religions other than Buddhism and Taoism. This was good for Taoism, as it meant that it could continue to exist above ground, but this also brought with it much government regulation. That same year, an examination system was introduced, whereby would-be priests had to sit an exam in the capital, held once every three years. Only those having sufficient knowledge of Taoist literature and who passed the test were licensed by the government as official priests. Upon passing, the newly qualified priests would receive a dudie (度牒, dù dié) clerical certificate, which served as their state license to practise.[5]

In 1392, during the reign of Taizu, a minimum age was decreed, with only men over 40 years old and women over 50 years old being allowed to become priests.[9] These restrictions, however, changed over time, as in 1419 laws stated that only those above 14 and below 20 years old, and whose parents both approved, would be allowed to study Taoist classics in temples and sit for the examination after five years, resulting in priests being younger than was previously required. Those who passed would be given the dudie, while the others would have to secularize. Teenagers whose parents or grandparents did not have other offspring to depend on were not allowed to become monks or priests. Those older than 30 or younger than 40 years old, who were once monks or priests but later secularized, were not allowed to become priests again.[10]

In 1380, the government also restricted the number of priests by imposing regional quotas for both Buddhist and Taoist priests, 40 for each prefecture Fu (府, fǔ), 30 for each independent department Zhou (州, zhōu), and 20 for each county Xian (縣, xiàn).[5] These quotas were not strictly enforced in the remote provinces which had been loosely regulated until the Yongle reign (1403-1425), during which Taoist regulatory agencies were established in these provinces and quotas were enforced. During the Yingzong reign (1435-1464), the quotas as well as other regulations started to be undermined, with counts of priests far exceeding their regional quotas and dudie being sold to priests who had not passed the official examination.[9]

Ming criminal law also had some very strict regulations for priests. Since 1398, the Ming law books stated that owning a dudie was the only valid proof of identity for Buddhist monks and Taoist priests. Falsely claiming to be a priest without this identification was punishable with 80 lashings. If self-declared priests were tonsured by their family members, those family members were also guilty. If a priest managing a temple accepts unlicensed priests, they would be charged with the same crime and then forced to secularize.[10]

Despite the threat of these punishments, the regulations started to degrade and enforcement became increasingly loose during the mid to late Ming. After 1435, dudie abuse became widespread, while the quota system was increasingly ignored. In the mid to late Ming, more than 10,000 dudie were issued every period, compared to the mere hundreds issued in the early Ming. The three-year issuing period was also often changed depending on the will of the government.[10]

The government itself was partly to blame for the increasing abuse. For instance, after 1487, in the wake of famines or other natural disasters, the government would often issue large numbers of dudie as a way of increasing state income. Sometimes during famine, a dudie could be acquired not only with a monetary purchase, but even by trading in grains to the state.[10]

Daily life and clothing Edit

During the late Ming, morning and evening study sessions had become a daily practice in most Taoist temples, especially those of the Quanzhen (全真, quán zhēn) branch. This daily study of the Taoist classics was likely influenced by similar Buddhist scholastic practices at the time.[11]

Taoist dress during the Ming Dynasty was said to not have changed much from that of previous dynasties. In a book written by the Prince of Ning Zhu Quan (朱權, zhū quán), he states that the clothing of Taoist priests in Ming was not too different from the “ancient” style of the Northern and Southern dynasties (420-589 AD).[11]

Laws from 1382 regulated the dress of Taoist priests of different rankings. Those who worked as officials in the capital were to wear red robes with golden embroidery, those who worked as officials elsewhere were to wear un-ornamented red robes, and common priests were to wear teal robes.[10]

Rituals and practices Edit

During the Ming dynasty, some Taoist priests were hired to create and perform musical performances where they often danced or played musical instruments for their patrons.[12] Taoist priests also participated in death rituals. However, some wealthy families objected to hiring Taoist priests for their funerals due to their Confucian beliefs that argued against the lavish musical performances of Taoist funerals.[13] Taoist priests also chose whether to marry or not; to continue the hereditary title, the Celestial Master had to be married to pass the title to an eligible male heir.[12]

Taoist priests were also expected to perform various kinds of exorcisms and rituals for people who wanted a cure disease, resolve drought, etc. Such processes were detailed in Thunder Magic texts, which detailed which and when certain ritual items were needed and place, such as placing a talisman on some rice.[8][14] Such rituals were performed near or at temples and other pure areas away from the public eye,[15] and if the homeowners allowed it, the priests were able to enter their homes and erect a sacred space to perform the ritual.[16] It is believed that the shortage of such texts from earlier periods were due to the high standards of the officials that approved them and the biased beliefs that these rituals were related to shamanistic ideas and rituals.[14]

Qing (1644-1911) Edit

Along with ritualistic services, Taoist priests also were visited by people for fortune-telling, explanations for events, and healing services which consisted of using medicine or acupuncture. Some Taoist priests devised new medicinal recipes to which some saw favorable outcomes.

Taoist temples were used as places people could donate to fund new communal structures like bridges or roads.[17]

Clothing Edit

In popular culture Edit

Taoist priest and monk characters have appeared in many movies, including the following...

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Kohn, Livia; Roth, Harold David (2002). Daoist identity: history, lineage, and ritual. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN 9780824824297. OCLC 47893514.
  2. ^ Li, Dun J. (1965). The Ageless Chinese: A History. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 358.
  3. ^ Jones, 2007. p. 5
  4. ^ Saso, Michael (2015). "The Daoist Jiao Celebration". Journal of Daoist Studies. 8 (1): 204–211. doi:10.1353/dao.2015.0011. ISSN 1941-5524.
  5. ^ a b c d 晁中辰 (2004). "明朝皇帝的崇道之风". 文史哲. 2004 (5) – via China Academic Journals Full-text Database.
  6. ^ 秦国帅 (2011). "道与庶道:蒲松龄心目中的道教形象". 蒲松龄研究. 2011 (2) – via China Academic Journals Full-text Database.
  7. ^ Saso, Michael (2002). "Review of Daoism Handbook. Handbook of Oriental Studies. Handbuch der Orientalistik. Section Four". Monumenta Serica. 50: 670–675. ISSN 0254-9948. JSTOR 40727517.
  8. ^ a b Saso, Michael (2015). "The Daoist Jiao Celebration". Journal of Daoist Studies. 8 (1): 204–211. doi:10.1353/dao.2015.0011. ISSN 1941-5524.
  9. ^ a b 张小平 (2002). "明代道教与政治的关系". 井冈山师范学院学报. 2002(S1) – via China Academic Journals Full-text Database.
  10. ^ a b c d e 余来明 (12 November 2015). "从"方外之人"到"宇内之民"——明代国家体制中的道士". 学术交流. 2015 (9): 161–168 – via Wanfang Data.
  11. ^ a b 金天明 (3 September 2007). "道教宫观文化及其功能研究". Wanfang Data.
  12. ^ a b TS'UN-YAN, Liu (1971-01-01). "The Penetration of Taoism Into the Ming Neo-Confucianist Elite". T'oung Pao. 57 (1): 41, 43. doi:10.1163/156853271x00066. ISSN 0082-5433.
  13. ^ Goossaert, Vincent (2017). The Taoists of Peking, 1800–1949: A Social History of Urban Clerics. Harvard University Asia Center. pp. 240–242, 246–247.
  14. ^ a b Reiter, Florian (2014). "The Taoist Canon and the Representation of Taoist Exorcist Traditions". Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft. 164 (3): 801–803. JSTOR 10.13173/zeitdeutmorggese.164.3.0789.
  15. ^ Reiter, Florian (2017). "The Amulet in Thunder Magic Rituals as Prism of Taoist Exorcist Power. The Amulet of Comprehensive Support due to the Commands of Thunders and Thunderclaps 雷霆號令總攝符". Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft. 167 (2): 488–489. doi:10.13173/zeitdeutmorggese.167.2.0477. JSTOR 10.13173/zeitdeutmorggese.167.2.0477.
  16. ^ Lagerwey, John (1995). "Taoist Ritual Space and Dynastic Legitimacy". Cahiers d'Extrême-Asie. 8: 87–94. doi:10.3406/asie.1995.1089.
  17. ^ Goossaert, Vincent (2017). The Taoists of Peking, 1800–1949: A Social History of Urban Clerics. Harvard University Asia Center. pp. 240–242, 246–247.

Sources Edit

  • Jones, Stephen. 2007. Ritual and Music of North China: Shawm Bands in Shanxi. Ashgate. ISBN 0754661636

daoshi, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, schola. For other uses see Daoshi disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Daoshi news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message A daoshi Chinese 道士 lit scholar of the Tao translated as Taoist priest Taoist monk or Taoist professional is a priest in Taoism The courtesy title of a senior daoshi is daozhang 道长 meaning Tao master and a highly accomplished and revered daoshi is often called a zhenren 真人 perfected person Shao Yuanjie the taoist priest of the Jiajing Emperor of mid Ming Dynasty Along with Han Chinese priests there are also many practicing ethnic minority priests in China 1 Some orders are monastic Quanzhen orders while the majority are not Zhengyi orders Some of the monastic orders are hermitic and their members practice seclusion and ascetic lifestyles in the mountains with the aim of becoming xian or immortal beings Non monastic priests live among the populace and manage and serve their own temples or popular temples The activities of the Taoists tend to be informed by materials which may be found in the Daozang or Daoist Canon however Taoists generally choose or inherit specific texts which have been passed down for generations from teacher to student rather than consulting published versions of these works Traditionally they were not thought to be able to manipulate fate on their or their followers behalf nor could they grant miracles or inflict divine punishment on people in the afterlife or the mortal world 2 Contents 1 Orders 1 1 Quanzhen Taoism 1 2 Zhengyi Taoism 2 By Period 2 1 Pre Ming Period 2 2 Ming 1368 1644 2 2 1 Classification and Outside View 2 2 2 Regulation and examinations 2 2 3 Daily life and clothing 2 2 4 Rituals and practices 2 3 Qing 1644 1911 3 Clothing 4 In popular culture 5 See also 6 References 7 SourcesOrders EditTaoist orders are conventionally categorised into two main branches Quanzhen and Zhengyi Quanzhen Taoism Edit Quanzhen Taoism which is present almost exclusively in the north of China includes all Taoist orders which have a monastic institution Their lifestyle is comparable to that of the Buddhist monks in that they are celibate vegetarian and live in monasteries The White Cloud Temple in Beijing is the main monastery of the Longmen school of Quanzhen and is also the main headquarters of mainland China s official Taoist Church Zhengyi Taoism Edit The other main branch of the priesthood is Zhengyi Taoism in which priests may marry eat meat live in their own homes and found and manage their own temples or serve in existing folk religious temples They are mostly part time and hold other jobs Their lineages are transmitted through training and ordination by another priest although historically they received formal confirmation in their role by the Celestial Master the highest priest Fragmentation of the lineage of the Celestial Masters has made Zhengyi priests more independent In mainland China the Taoist Church has in theory taken over the power to govern the priesthood although only a minority are registered with the Church Zhengyi orders are present all over China although with different names according to the local lineages For example in northern China there are the Yinyang masters of the Lingbao sub tradition 3 By Period EditPre Ming Period Edit During the Period of Division officials were divided into nine different ranks the lower the Grade the higher status they were Daoist priests were given Grade Five status and above and were permitted to participate in formal rituals keyi 科仪 since they were educated in internal cultivation neigong 內功 Daoist priests not trained in neigong were relegated to Grade Six status or lower and bore the title of Three Five Surveyor of Merit sanwu dugong 三五度公 4 Ming 1368 1644 Edit Classification and Outside View Edit During the Ming Dynasty Taoism and Buddhism were state sponsored religions with all others banned 5 Taoist priests were often classified by two categories zhu guan 住觀 zhu guan priests live in designated temples while you guan 遊觀 you guan priests drifted around with no fixed residence During the period Taoist priests were largely viewed positively by the public though some were skeptical about the credibility of their alchemy fortune telling and divination 6 Taoist priests organized themselves into different categories and assigned themselves different jobs based on their rankings Both Taoist priests and priestesses performed rituals Their rankings were included when Taoist priests signed records for rituals which would be burned for certain rituals such as the Yellow Register Zhai 黃籙齋 rituals or burial rituals and Golden Register Jiao 金籙醮 or temple renewal type rituals Some scholars tasked themselves with copying down the manuscripts before they were burned in the ritual 7 8 The Taoist belief system was also seen as legitimate by many during the middle Ming period when with the growth of commerce in the state it became a trend for different industries to worship their own Taoist patron gods For example ink makers would worship Wenchang Dijun 文昌帝君 wen chang di jun ironsmiths would worship Taishang Laojun 太上老君 tai shang lǎo jun and prostitutes and thieves would worship Guan Zhong 管仲 guǎn zhong and Shi Qian 時遷 shi qian in many ways to prove the legitimacy of their occupations 5 Regulation and examinations Edit As previously mentioned in 1374 the Ming government banned all religions other than Buddhism and Taoism This was good for Taoism as it meant that it could continue to exist above ground but this also brought with it much government regulation That same year an examination system was introduced whereby would be priests had to sit an exam in the capital held once every three years Only those having sufficient knowledge of Taoist literature and who passed the test were licensed by the government as official priests Upon passing the newly qualified priests would receive a dudie 度牒 du die clerical certificate which served as their state license to practise 5 In 1392 during the reign of Taizu a minimum age was decreed with only men over 40 years old and women over 50 years old being allowed to become priests 9 These restrictions however changed over time as in 1419 laws stated that only those above 14 and below 20 years old and whose parents both approved would be allowed to study Taoist classics in temples and sit for the examination after five years resulting in priests being younger than was previously required Those who passed would be given the dudie while the others would have to secularize Teenagers whose parents or grandparents did not have other offspring to depend on were not allowed to become monks or priests Those older than 30 or younger than 40 years old who were once monks or priests but later secularized were not allowed to become priests again 10 In 1380 the government also restricted the number of priests by imposing regional quotas for both Buddhist and Taoist priests 40 for each prefecture Fu 府 fǔ 30 for each independent department Zhou 州 zhōu and 20 for each county Xian 縣 xian 5 These quotas were not strictly enforced in the remote provinces which had been loosely regulated until the Yongle reign 1403 1425 during which Taoist regulatory agencies were established in these provinces and quotas were enforced During the Yingzong reign 1435 1464 the quotas as well as other regulations started to be undermined with counts of priests far exceeding their regional quotas and dudie being sold to priests who had not passed the official examination 9 Ming criminal law also had some very strict regulations for priests Since 1398 the Ming law books stated that owning a dudie was the only valid proof of identity for Buddhist monks and Taoist priests Falsely claiming to be a priest without this identification was punishable with 80 lashings If self declared priests were tonsured by their family members those family members were also guilty If a priest managing a temple accepts unlicensed priests they would be charged with the same crime and then forced to secularize 10 Despite the threat of these punishments the regulations started to degrade and enforcement became increasingly loose during the mid to late Ming After 1435 dudie abuse became widespread while the quota system was increasingly ignored In the mid to late Ming more than 10 000 dudie were issued every period compared to the mere hundreds issued in the early Ming The three year issuing period was also often changed depending on the will of the government 10 The government itself was partly to blame for the increasing abuse For instance after 1487 in the wake of famines or other natural disasters the government would often issue large numbers of dudie as a way of increasing state income Sometimes during famine a dudie could be acquired not only with a monetary purchase but even by trading in grains to the state 10 Daily life and clothing Edit During the late Ming morning and evening study sessions had become a daily practice in most Taoist temples especially those of the Quanzhen 全真 quan zhen branch This daily study of the Taoist classics was likely influenced by similar Buddhist scholastic practices at the time 11 Taoist dress during the Ming Dynasty was said to not have changed much from that of previous dynasties In a book written by the Prince of Ning Zhu Quan 朱權 zhu quan he states that the clothing of Taoist priests in Ming was not too different from the ancient style of the Northern and Southern dynasties 420 589 AD 11 Laws from 1382 regulated the dress of Taoist priests of different rankings Those who worked as officials in the capital were to wear red robes with golden embroidery those who worked as officials elsewhere were to wear un ornamented red robes and common priests were to wear teal robes 10 Rituals and practices Edit During the Ming dynasty some Taoist priests were hired to create and perform musical performances where they often danced or played musical instruments for their patrons 12 Taoist priests also participated in death rituals However some wealthy families objected to hiring Taoist priests for their funerals due to their Confucian beliefs that argued against the lavish musical performances of Taoist funerals 13 Taoist priests also chose whether to marry or not to continue the hereditary title the Celestial Master had to be married to pass the title to an eligible male heir 12 Taoist priests were also expected to perform various kinds of exorcisms and rituals for people who wanted a cure disease resolve drought etc Such processes were detailed in Thunder Magic texts which detailed which and when certain ritual items were needed and place such as placing a talisman on some rice 8 14 Such rituals were performed near or at temples and other pure areas away from the public eye 15 and if the homeowners allowed it the priests were able to enter their homes and erect a sacred space to perform the ritual 16 It is believed that the shortage of such texts from earlier periods were due to the high standards of the officials that approved them and the biased beliefs that these rituals were related to shamanistic ideas and rituals 14 Qing 1644 1911 Edit Along with ritualistic services Taoist priests also were visited by people for fortune telling explanations for events and healing services which consisted of using medicine or acupuncture Some Taoist priests devised new medicinal recipes to which some saw favorable outcomes Taoist temples were used as places people could donate to fund new communal structures like bridges or roads 17 Clothing EditHan Chinese clothing Daojiao fushi DaopaoIn popular culture EditTaoist priest and monk characters have appeared in many movies including the following The 1960 The Enchanting Shadow The 1979 Legend of the Mountain The 1980 Clan of the White Lotus The 1983 Zu Warriors from the Magic Mountain The 1987 A Chinese Ghost Story The 1990 A Chinese Ghost Story II The 1991 A Chinese Ghost Story III The 2004 Kill Bill Volume 2 the character Pai Mei The 2015 Monk Comes Down the MountainSee also EditChinese ritual mastery traditions Fulu Talisman Ten precepts Taoism Taoism Xian Taoism ZhenrenReferences Edit Kohn Livia Roth Harold David 2002 Daoist identity history lineage and ritual Honolulu University of Hawai i Press ISBN 9780824824297 OCLC 47893514 Li Dun J 1965 The Ageless Chinese A History New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 358 Jones 2007 p 5 Saso Michael 2015 The Daoist Jiao Celebration Journal of Daoist Studies 8 1 204 211 doi 10 1353 dao 2015 0011 ISSN 1941 5524 a b c d 晁中辰 2004 明朝皇帝的崇道之风 文史哲 2004 5 via China Academic Journals Full text Database 秦国帅 2011 道与庶道 蒲松龄心目中的道教形象 蒲松龄研究 2011 2 via China Academic Journals Full text Database Saso Michael 2002 Review of Daoism Handbook Handbook of Oriental Studies Handbuch der Orientalistik Section Four Monumenta Serica 50 670 675 ISSN 0254 9948 JSTOR 40727517 a b Saso Michael 2015 The Daoist Jiao Celebration Journal of Daoist Studies 8 1 204 211 doi 10 1353 dao 2015 0011 ISSN 1941 5524 a b 张小平 2002 明代道教与政治的关系 井冈山师范学院学报 2002 S1 via China Academic Journals Full text Database a b c d e 余来明 12 November 2015 从 方外之人 到 宇内之民 明代国家体制中的道士 学术交流 2015 9 161 168 via Wanfang Data a b 金天明 3 September 2007 道教宫观文化及其功能研究 Wanfang Data a b TS UN YAN Liu 1971 01 01 The Penetration of Taoism Into the Ming Neo Confucianist Elite T oung Pao 57 1 41 43 doi 10 1163 156853271x00066 ISSN 0082 5433 Goossaert Vincent 2017 The Taoists of Peking 1800 1949 A Social History of Urban Clerics Harvard University Asia Center pp 240 242 246 247 a b Reiter Florian 2014 The Taoist Canon and the Representation of Taoist Exorcist Traditions Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenlandischen Gesellschaft 164 3 801 803 JSTOR 10 13173 zeitdeutmorggese 164 3 0789 Reiter Florian 2017 The Amulet in Thunder Magic Rituals as Prism of Taoist Exorcist Power The Amulet of Comprehensive Support due to the Commands of Thunders and Thunderclaps 雷霆號令總攝符 Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenlandischen Gesellschaft 167 2 488 489 doi 10 13173 zeitdeutmorggese 167 2 0477 JSTOR 10 13173 zeitdeutmorggese 167 2 0477 Lagerwey John 1995 Taoist Ritual Space and Dynastic Legitimacy Cahiers d Extreme Asie 8 87 94 doi 10 3406 asie 1995 1089 Goossaert Vincent 2017 The Taoists of Peking 1800 1949 A Social History of Urban Clerics Harvard University Asia Center pp 240 242 246 247 Sources EditJones Stephen 2007 Ritual and Music of North China Shawm Bands in Shanxi Ashgate ISBN 0754661636 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Daoshi amp oldid 1180942882, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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