- The term was
introduced to the west
after Russian forces conquered the
shamanistic Khanate of
Kazan in 1552. The term "shamanism" was
first applied by Western...
-
their horses; ceremonially, for
burial rites in jade and
bronze and for
shamanistic ceremonies to
drive away evil spirits, to
remember the
faces of great...
-
trials reveal that some
features of
Hungarian folklore are
remnants of
shamanistic beliefs,
maintained from the deep past, or
possibly borrowed from Turkic...
-
anthropological scholars have
attempted to
discern which practices come from
Shamanistic roots, and
which are more
purely Confucian. Traditionally, the body will...
- spirits.
Unlike white magic, in
which Place sees
parallels with
primitive shamanistic efforts to
achieve closeness with
spiritual beings, the
rituals that...
-
believed to have
originated within the
religious tradition of Bon. In Bon,
shamanistic Bonpo used primary-colored
plain flags in Tibet.
Traditional prayer flags...
-
comprise a
variety of
ethnic groups, many of whom
continue to
observe shamanistic practices in
modern times. Many
classical ethnographers recorded the...
- industry, and were
quietly tolerated. The Sami
originally had
their own
shamanistic religion, but they were
converted to
Lutheranism by
Swedish missionaries...
- (ipšū or kišpū) in
ancient Mesopotamia were "comparable to the
archaic shamanistic stage of
European witchcraft".: 65–66 In this
early stage,
witches were...
- of the 14th century. The
first Tatar settlers tried to
preserve their shamanistic religion and
sought asylum amongst the non-Christian Lithuanians. Towards...