Results for 'Bon (Tibetan religion) History.'

5 found
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  1.  2
    Bon gyi rig gnas dang Bod spyi tshogs kyi ʼcham mthun. ʼbrug-Mo-Skyid - 2013 - Zi-ling: Mtsho-sngon Mi-rigs Dpe-skrun Khang.
    On Bon studies and communal harmony in Bon religion.
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  2.  3
    Introducing Tibetan Buddhism.Geoffrey Samuel - 2012 - Routledge.
    "Introducing Tibetan Buddhism is the ideal starting point for students wishing to undertake a comprehensive study of Tibetan religion. This lively introduction covers the whole spectrum of Tibetan religious history, from early figures and the development of the old and new schools of Buddhism to the spread and influence of Tibetan Buddhism throughout the world. Geoffrey Samuel covers the key schools and traditions, as well as Bon, and bodies of textual material, including the writings of (...)
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  3.  13
    Bø and Bön: ancient Shamanic traditions of Siberia and Tibet in their relation to the teachings of a Central Asian Buddha.Dmitry Ermakov - 2008 - Kathmandu: Vajra Publications.
    Comparative study between Tibetan Bon and Buryatian Bø religion of ancient Shamanic traditions.
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  4.  2
    Zhang Bod shes rig gnaʼ deng gsal baʼi me long. Tshul-Khrims-Bstan-ʼdzin - 2017 - Hubli: Rgyal-gshen dpe-skrun-khang.
    Doctrine of Bonpo religion; includes culture and history.
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  5.  5
    Jesus the World-Protector: Eighteenth-Century Gelukpa Historians View Christianity (1).Michael J. Sweet - 2006 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 26 (1):173.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Jesus the World-Protector:Eighteenth-Century Gelukpa Historians View Christianity1Michael J. SweetThe assumption that religion was so seamlessly woven into non-Western and preindustrial cultures that it was not even distinguished as a separate entity, let alone regarded as an object for study, has been a commonplace among Western scholars of religion for some decades.2 From this point of view, which can be broadly characterized as postmodernist and postcolonialist, the concept (...)
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