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==Practices==
==Practices==
===Temples and sacred groves===
===Temples and sacred groves===
[[File:Tsukiji Honganji 2006-05-02.jpg|200px|thumb|The ''[[Tempanggan a Sumpusin|Apoy a tempanggan nga Sumpusin]]'' (Fire-temple of [[Haripuya]]) in [[Sijang]], the center of the divine pyre in Min and the holiest temple in the Keṭthangapuya tradition.]]
{{main|Tambana|Kilingan}}
[[File:Great shrine of the triad paths.jpg|250px|thumb|The ''[[Great Temple of the Three Paths]]'' (''Dakang Tambana nu Tulung Matqa'') in [[Kraong Nam]], the holiest site in Khaturvism.]]




===Tantric magic===
===Tantric magic===
{{main|Khaturvic magic}}[[File:Madurai Meenakshi temple prayer.jpg|thumb|200px|something]]
{{main|Khaturvic magic}}
[[File:Madurai Meenakshi temple prayer.jpg|thumb|200px|something]]


===Mysticism===
===Mysticism===

Revision as of 09:55, 8 May 2019

Khaturvism (qatuluhan), or more commonly Khaturva or Cakrism (cakarayanah), is an East Borean religion comprising a diverse set of beliefs, traditions and spiritual practices revolving around Arta-Dharma, a cosmic energy that is the source of all coherent reality. Its traditionally ranged in Eastern and Southern Borea, overlapping with Kiaism, Taojiao and Kamism. Its adherents are called Khaturvans its adjective form being Khaturvic.

Much of Khaturvism's theological and terminological basis comes from Vedic and Monic traditions, but ultimately is born out of a formalized syncretism between Old Vedic religion and the animist traditions of the Boreo-Lahudic peoples. The gradual foundation of Khaturva as a concrete religious identity continued on up to the 14th to 18th centuries, eventually developing into a distinct body of thought from then on. Relative diffusion would later make rise to regional and doctrinal variants focused on the patronage of particular deities and their elemental qualities, such as in Min and Tinza, or towards an alternative understanding of the Khaturvi weltanschauung.

Khaturvism's relative lack of philosophical basis other than relating to the nature of the dual world has led both adherents and outsiders to view the faith as more of a spiritual understanding of reality. Seeing the world through the patterns of order and the lack of such in disorder, Khaturva throughout its history served as a proto-scientific and esoteric way of defining the universe, coherent and separate from the ideas of its eastern antecedents' thought, which it broke off during its late infancy.

Etymology

qa-tulu-an "principle of three", ie. the three righteous paths (matqa/marga)

Qatulu language, a pre-Makataung language more closely related to the Eteolahudic than the Boreolahudic branch of the Paleolahudic family

Theology and Cosmology

Dharma and the three paths

The concept of Dharma serves as the central focal point of the Khaturvic religions.

Deities

A Tinzan tapestry of Amadawa, the Yanqaniti of the Moon. The Yankanitu are the five highest gods in the Kalakantu.

Almost all Khaturvans worship or recognize a grand and complex hierarchy of gods, spirits and divine entities called the Kalakantu (from qāla-qanitu, "divine spirits", lit. "divinity"). Markedly distinct in character from its Dharmic cousin Hinduism, the Kalakanthu descended from the vast and diverse indigenous traditions of the Boreolahudic peoples, which was later organized into a formal pantheon by the 10th century CE.

The Kalakanthu are ascended creatures of Dharmic essence, and the fullest manifestation of Dharma's will. As Dharma personified, they work towards the preservation of creation and in turn themselves, through the turning of time.

Cosmology and chronology

Karibuhan - the thousand worlds, cosmology Katagalan - the great ages of time

Practices

Temples and sacred groves

The Great Temple of the Three Paths (Dakang Tambana nu Tulung Matqa) in Kraong Nam, the holiest site in Khaturvism.


Tantric magic

something

Mysticism

Sects, Schools and Denominations

Classical Khaturvism

Elemental cardinalism

State cults

Relations with other faiths

Kamism

Kiaism

Daoism

References

<references>