The Religions Book

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more a philosophy than a religion, as
it concentrated on enlightenment
without the need for gods.
This focus on moral philosophy
was also prevalent in the religions
that evolved in China and Japan.
In the ordered society of the great
Chinese dynasties, religion and
political organization became
intertwined. Daoism, proposed
by the legendary scholar Laozi,
advocated a religious way of life
compatible with Chinese society.
Confucius built on this to develop
a new belief system based on a
reinterpretation of respect for
the hierarchy, and reinforced by
ritual. Later, in Japan, traditional
religions were unified to create the
state religion, Shinto, which showed
special reverence to ancestors and
encouraged followers to connect
with them through ritual practices.


By the 6th century BCE, the Greek
city-states had been established,
and classical Greek civilization was
exerting a strong influence on the
eastern Mediterranean region.
Religion (although the Greeks did
not have a specific word for it)
was very much a part of life, and,
although the gods were believed to
live separately from the people, they
were imagined to lead remarkably
similar lives. The history of the
Greek people, as interpreted by
Homer in his epic poems, was
also the history of their gods. The
hierarchy of deities, with their very
human lifestyles and tempestuous
relationships, mirrored Greek
society. As well as offering an
explanation for aspects of the
world, the deities gave reasons for
the vagaries of human behavior,
and with their help it was possible

to divine the future, choose
auspicious times for action, and
even defeat enemies. Most of the
time they existed alongside people,
unconcerned with human affairs,
but, to keep them happy, the
Greeks erected temples, performed
rituals, and held regular festivals.
As the early civilizations rose
and fell, many of their beliefs faded
away, or were incorporated into
the religions that replaced them;
the pantheon of Greek mythology,
for example, was absorbed into
Roman mythology, and along
with Celtic and other beliefs,
into Christianity. Some religions,
however, such as that of the
Norse, were still practiced until
the Middle Ages, and others,
including Shinto, Jainism, Daoism,
and Confucianism, have survived
into the modern age. ■

ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS


8 TH–7TH CENTURIES BCE


6 TH CENTURY BCE


599–27 BCE 5 TH–4TH CENTURIES BCE 9 TH–10TH CENTURIES


551 BCE 8 TH CENTURY CE 13 TH CENTURY


The Greek poet
Homer writes the
Iliad and Odyssey,
and Hesiod writes
his Theogony
(Origin of the Gods).

The Chinese sage Laozi
describes the dao, the
way, and establishes
Daoism in China.

The Indian sage
Mahavira establishes
the central tenets
of Jainism.

The classical period
of the Ancient
Greek civilization
begins in the eastern
Mediterranean.

The Vikings flourish,
spreading their religion
across northern Europe
and in Iceland and
Greenland.

Confucius, founder
of Confucianism, is
born in Zou, Lu
State, China.

Two collections of
Japanese mythology, the
Kojiki and the Nihon Shoki,
are compiled as a resource
to support Shinto as
national religion of Japan.

Icelandic epic
poems describing
Norse mythology
are composed and
recorded in
the Eddas.
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