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Religion and Violence in China

Barrett, T.H.

Authors

T.H. Barrett



Contributors

Matthew S. Gordon
Editor

W. Kaeuper
Editor

Harriet Zurndorfer
Editor

Abstract

By the middle of the first millennium CE in China the notion that the unseen world, while capable of offering respite from the perils of our world, was itself full of danger was shared both by Daoists drawing on earlier local ways of thinking and by Buddhists who incorporated beliefs originating in South Asia. In reality the this-worldly economic success of the monastic establishments of the latter tradition attracted occasional episodes of forced, often violent laicization at the hands of the state, while eschatological ideas drawn from both traditions nourished for some alternative visions of the future that also triggered violent clashes with the authorities. Exhortations to devoutness meanwhile could spur self-inflicted violence, whereas the summoning of demons to injure others was recognised and forbidden in the legal code. As our sources become more plentiful from the end of the first millennium onward, we learn more of the sometimes sanguinary content of popular religious eschatology, while it also becomes clear that the imagery of violence was commonplace in a wide range of religious contexts and that in situations such as those of foreign invasion or political collapse fear of demons could prompt unrestrained and merciless violence against outsiders.

Citation

Barrett, T. (2020). Religion and Violence in China. In M. S. Gordon, W. Kaeuper, & H. Zurndorfer (Eds.), The Cambridge World History of Violence. Volume II: 500-1500 CE (349-367). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316661291.018

Publication Date Mar 13, 2020
Deposit Date Mar 20, 2025
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 349-367
Book Title The Cambridge World History of Violence. Volume II: 500-1500 CE
ISBN 9781107156388
DOI https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316661291.018