Navdarism: Difference between revisions

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===Architecture===
===Architecture===
<center>
<gallery widths="200px" heights="150px">
File:The_Monastery%2C_Petra%2C_Jordan8.jpg|[[Old Temple of Murash|The Old Temple]], in the [[Sifharan]] country of [[Saria]]
File:Sefadaba.png|[[Sefadaba Cave]], in the [[Sifharan]] country of [[Saria]]
</gallery>
</center>


===Art===
===Art===
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===Calendar===
===Calendar===
==Criticism, persecution, and apologetics==
===Criticism===
===Persecution===
===Apologetics===

Revision as of 21:20, 27 March 2020

stone relief of Nawdhar with halo and staff
Late 7th-century relief of Nawdhar at the Temple of the Buzdah, the earliest known representation.

Navdarism (translation) is the world's second-largest religion, and one of the world's oldest continuously practiced religions. Navdarism is a monistic faith, with elements of henotheism and atheism, centered on an eschatological cosmology dealing with self-salvation and spiritual liberation. It also encompasses a variety of traditions, beliefs and spiritual practices largely based on the original teachings of Nawdhar. It originated in ancient Poureman in the 11th century BCE, and, after a period of intense suppression, spreading through much of Sifhar, Arabekh, Majula, and Catai. Three major extant branches of Navdarism are generally recognized: Benayine (Pouremanian: lit. Seeing through the Mirror), Mehtaraina (Pouremanian:Order of the Elders), and Vasborya (Pouremanian:lit. Dancing on the Tower)

Terminology

Beliefs

Practices

Scriptures

History

Life of Nawdhar

Early Navdarism

Demographics

Schools

Society

Culture

Architecture

Art

Music

Poetry

Calendar

Criticism, persecution, and apologetics

Criticism

Persecution

Apologetics