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Image and Identity at El Santuario de Chimayo in Chimayo, New MexicoDeLoach, Dana Engstrom 05 1900 (has links)
El Santuario de Chimayo is a small community shrine that combines both native Tewa Indian and Christian traditions. This study focuses on the interaction between traditions through analysis of the shrine's two major artworks: a crucifix devoted to El Senor de Esquipulas (Christ of Esquipulas) and a statue of the Santo Nino (Holy Child). The shrine and its two primary artworks are expressions of the dynamic interaction between native and European cultures in New Mexico at the beginning of the nineteenth century. They frame the discussion of native and Christian cultural exchange about the
relationships between religious images, how they function, and how they are interpreted.
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Piety in peril : a religiously conservative sixteenth century school of church monuments in Sussex, Hampshire and the Isle of WightHutchinson, David Robert January 2011 (has links)
During approximately twenty-five years of the early to mid-sixteenth century, a hitherto largely unnoticed series of Caen stone tombs were erected in Sussex and Hampshire churches with designs that emphasized religious imagery. These crudelycarved but high-status monuments displayed the piety of those commemorated and included a transitional mixture of Gothic and Renaissance motifs. Strong circumstantial evidence suggests they were carved by masons in Chichester, employed within a cathedral ‘works organisation', who could offer lower transportation costs than those producing Purbeck marble tombs in London and Corfe, Dorset. The tombs satisfied the religiously conservative taste of local patrons with at least 14 tombs being designed as Easter Sepulchres. Later monuments appear incongruous when set against the backdrop of state-inspired change in religious doctrine and were among the last carved in the medieval tradition. As the pace of the Reformation quickened, the iconoclastic policies of the radically Protestant government of Edward VI constricted the masons' operations and probably brought their business to an end around 1550 - despite diversification into secular work. Employing archæological recording techniques and archival research, this project identifies and catalogues, for the first time, the 32 surviving examples of these masons' output, which demonstrate a much greater production rate and wider distribution than previously published. The project also investigates the destruction of the monuments' religious iconography by Protestant reformers, probably in 1548-53, and/or the erasure of devotional motifs by relatives in attempts to protect the tombs from damage. In addition, the project explores issues of patronage, the sources of the masons' designs, their construction methods and places them in the context of tomb production in London and the provinces in the mid-sixteenth century.
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Ṭûbâ : an African eschatology in IslamRoss, Eric, 1962- January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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An architectural comparative analysis of Borobudur, Indonesia and the Kumbum, Gyantse, TibetJean, Jane-Amanda. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M. Phil.)--Faculty of Architecture, University of Sydney, 2003. / Bibliography: leaves 231-239. Also available in print form.
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Yoruba shrine painting traditions : color, cosmos, process and aesthetics /Campbell, Bolaji. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 2001. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 310-320). Also available on the Internet.
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Beloved places (ukantaruḷin̄ilaṅkal) : the correlation of topography and theology in the Srīvaiṣṇava tradition of south IndiaYoung, Katherine K., 1944- January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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Ṭûbâ : an African eschatology in IslamRoss, Eric, 1962- January 1996 (has links)
The thesis "Tuba: an African eschatology in Islam" adopts afrocentric hypotheses for the study of Islam. First, the thesis demonstrates how certain phenomena specific to Islam in Africa, those usually qualified as products of religious syncretism, are on the contrary indicative of the ongoing process of synthesis and enrichment within Islam, and, secondly, that African spiritual tradition continues today as in the past to participate along with others in this constructive process. In order to demonstrate this hypothesis the spiritual significance of the modern Islamic holy city of Touba in Senegal will be analyzed. / Touba is named for the Tree of Paradise (Tuba) of Islamic tradition and the holy city has been constructed around the singular arboreal image. The spiritual meaning imparted by Touba, a deliberate creation, is expressed in the topography of the holy city, in its geographic configuration. The thesis adapts the methodologies of spatial analysis, and specifically the semiotic reading of landscape, to the study of a religious phenomenon, i.e., the creation of a holy city. / in order to explain the significance of this holy city for Islamic eschatology, the meanings which three distinct religious traditions (Islam, West Africa, Ancient Egypt) have attached to the image of the cosmic tree are inventoried. The tree as archetype here serves to establish the continuity of African religious thought from pharaonic Egypt to modern Muslim Senegal.
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Bet-El - Erinnerungen an eine Stadt Perspektiven der alttestamentlichen Bet-El-ÜberlieferungKöhlmoos, Melanie January 2006 (has links)
Zugl.: Göttingen, Univ., Habil.-Schr.
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Sacred worlds : an analysis of mystical mastery of North Indian Faqirs /Saniotis, Arthur. January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Anthropology, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 317-341).
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The pilgrimage phenomenon : an analysis of the motivations of visitors to Temple Square /Knapp, Jill W. January 1989 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Brigham Young University. Dept. of Geography. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 114-118).
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