- fled to
Louguan,
which quickly became an
important religious center. The
Northern Celestial Masters survived as a
distinct school at
Louguan until the...
- (靈寳派 Língbǎo pài, "School of the
Numinous Treasure")
Louguan Taoism (樓觀派
Lóuguān pài or 樓觀道
Lóuguān dào, "School [or Way] of the
Contemplation Place") Jurchen...
- policy. The
first reign of the
dynasty saw the
state promoting the
Northern Louguan school of Taoism,
while the
second reign instead promoted the Southern...
-
Lingbao and
Celestial Masters may have
overlapped in
customs with the
Daoist Louguan ceremonies.
Building temples,
effigies and
fasting was
practiced by Daoists...
- in its
promotion of "universal salvation" (pudu).
During this period,
Louguan, the
first Taoist monastic institution (influenced by
Buddhist monasticism)...
-
religious activity.
Permission was
granted and,
under the
leadership of the
Louguan Tai Temple,
where Lao Zi is said to have
written the Tao Te Ching, the...
-
prior incarnations of the
Celestial Masters, like the
school based at
Louguan, the
Zhengyi Taoists did not
venerate Laozi as a god. Instead, he was viewed...
-
Masters were
expelled from the Wei
court and re-established
themselves at
Louguan where they
survived into the Tang dynasty. The
Southern Celestial Masters...
- text with
provenance at the
Louguan 樓觀 "Tiered Abbey" of The
Northern Celestial Masters.
According to
Daoist tradition,
Louguan (the
eastern terminus of...
-
Leslie Camhi,
Ruins of an Old
Christian Church on Lao-Tzu's Turf, New York Times, 24
February 2002
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