Satyism

Revision as of 22:58, 30 December 2019 by Finium (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Satyism''' is the observation of '''Satya''' (सत्य) or "truth" which was revealed to Adripathi Adhikari and are collected in the holy text, the ''Jivani''. The mixe...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Satyism is the observation of Satya (सत्य) or "truth" which was revealed to Adripathi Adhikari and are collected in the holy text, the Jivani. The mixed cultural mesh of 6th century BCE Phula birthed Satyism through Hyndo-Rygyalic cultural. It was, however, a counter-culture in its birth, fighting against the raider-culture of the Hyndics from which it originated. It taught that violence was not the way to happiness, but instead promoted humility as the supreme virtue. The philosophy of Adripathi became a highly organized religion under the auspices of the First Phuli Empire, which spread the religion and established monastic outposts throughout central Coius.

In the 9th century CE, Satyism was adopt by the Tao court in Xiaodong, which had a strong influence on its practices and worldview. Although pockets of traditionalism remain throughout the world, the Tao support of a new strain of monasteries ended the international dominance of the Maharanis.

Beliefs

Practices

History

Demographics

Population of Satyists by Nation