Search
Your search for 'dc_creator:( "Wißmann, Hans" ) OR dc_contributor:( "Wißmann, Hans" )' returned 13 results. Modify search
Sort Results by Relevance | Newest titles first | Oldest titles first
Dome of the Rock
(253 words)
[German Version] (Arab.
qubbat aṣ-ṣaḫra), in Jerusalem (VI), a domed structure on an octagonal foundation erected around a rock (
ṣaḫra), was constructed in 691–92 ce (72 in the Islamic calendar) under the Umaiyade caliph, ʿAbdalmalik (685–705 ce). A circular structure with four pillars, with three columns between each pair, supporting a dome of 20.44 m in diameter, was erected around the rock, which is holy according to Islamic tradition. A second circle of ei…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Winckler, Johannes
(152 words)
[German Version] (Jul 13, 1642, Golzern, Saxony – Apr 5, 1705, Hamburg). After studying in Leipzig and Jena, Winckler worked as a private tutor in Tübingen, then held pastoral office in Bad Homburg vor der Höhe (1671), Braubach (1672), Darmstadt (1676), Mannheim (1678), and Wertheim (1679); in 1684 ¶ he was appointed chief pastor of Sankt Michaelis in Hamburg, and in 1699 senior pastor of Hamburg. As one of P.J. Spener’s closest friends, he defended the
Collegia pietatis and was a spokesman for Pietism in the Hamburg controversies. He did, however, attack the chiliasm of…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Obelisk
(188 words)
[German Version]
Obelisk, a high, slender pillar found in Egypt from the time of the Old Kingdom (Gk ὀβελός/
obelós, “pointed column,” actually “skewer”), mostly with a square base and a pyramid-shaped top, often gilded. Its cultic significance, linked with the sun god Re, comes from the fact that the first rays of the sun reached the top and illuminated it. Pairs of obelisks were often set up in the temple of the sun god; their sides and plinth were usually inscribed with hieroglyphs. In antiquity it was already …
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Nahuatl
(133 words)
[German Version] is one of a group of languages in the Uto-Aztec linguistic family; also the collective name for the peoples who speak these languages in Central America (Mexico). According to their nominal ending, the languages are divided into those of the Nahuatl and the Nahuat̲ groups. The second group probably included the now extinct Toltecs in the highlands of Mexico, and Pipil in El Salvador, who died out only at the beginning of the 20th century; the first group probably included the language of the Aztecs (Aztec religion). Hans Wißmann Bibliography R. Siméon,
Dictionnaire de la…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Seasons
(386 words)
[German Version] Religions have a frequent tendency to rethink steady, continuous changes and developments in space and time from a religious perspective as a series of discontinuous sequential states, marked by distinct transitions; both the alternation and the transition are times of crisis, requiring a religious response, usually in some kind of ritual. The best-known example is the religious and ritual interpretation of continuously changing human life as a sequence of distinct stages. Depending ¶ on astronomical scale, the passage of time, too, is variously organi…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Pyramid
(365 words)
[German Version] Pyramid, a term borrowed from Greek (πυραμί ς/
pyramís) for monumental structures in various cultures and serving various religious functions, whose form ¶ approximates that of a geometrical pyramid (a solid on a polygonal base with edges that meet at a point above it). In Egypt pyramids served as tombs. Beginning in the early Old Kingdom they had rectangular ground plans; with King Snefru (c. 2570–2545 bce), the characteristic square ground plan became standard until the New Kingdom. A precursor of the true pyramid was the step pyramid, with si…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Weather
(623 words)
[German Version] Atmospheric phenomena and events such as wind, rain, lightning, thunder, clouds, and ¶ hailstones hold particular significance for agricultural societies on account of their potential to influence, increase, or destroy their chances of survival in the most elementary way. These meteorological conditions, which are widely believed to be hardly influenceable or predictable, are conducive to an anthropomorphic conceptualization of their causes (as in the expression “furious storm”). They also enc…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Parthenon
(273 words)
[German Version] The Parthenon is the temple of AthenaParthenos on the acropolis in Athens. It was built between 447 and 432 bce on the foundations of an earlier building destroyed by the Persians in 480. The rebuilding was supervised by Phidias, who also created the cultic statue of Athena Parthenos placed inside the temple (taken to Constantinople in 426 ce). The center or
cella of the Doric temple consisted of two rooms: one served as the treasury of the Delian League, the other held the statue of Athena. The peripheral columns of the temple (eight under…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
North America
(2,194 words)
[German Version]
I. General
1. Geography. The northern half of the American double continent (America) comprises the North American Arctic including Greenland (Danish), the Canadian Arctic Archipelago north of the mainland, the French overseas
Département Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon off the east coast of Canada, the British Bermuda Islands in the Atlantic, and the continent itself, divided today into the countries of Canada and the United States of America, south to the northern boundary of Mexico. The territory of North America covers 21.5 million km2 and has roughly 274 milli…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Human Sacrifice
(1,504 words)
[German Version] I. Religious Studies – II. Old Testament – III. New Testament
I. Religious Studies In many cultures, human beings have been ritually killed with religious intent. Human sacrifice is a particular kind of sacrifice, differing from other types only in the special nature of the victim; therefore any theory about human sacrifice must appear in the context of one of the many theories about the nature, purpose and meaning of sacrifice in general. In many cases, the sacrifice was followed by ritual …
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Ordeal, Trial by
(1,373 words)
[German Version] I. Religious Studies – II. Old Testament – III. Legal History
I. Religious Studies Trial by ordeal is a means of decision-making as to the guilt or innocence of a suspect in legal cases where there is no available evidence or testimony, and where no guilty plea has been entered. In place of an oath, but in ¶ line with the inherent logic of the oath, a conditional self-curse was sometimes employed; this would apply in cases where, for example, a slave was disqualified from a hearing under oath, and a divine declaration of the truth was so…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
America
(2,461 words)
[German Version] I. General – II. History of Religion
I. General Sometime after the Europeans became familiar with the New World, they gave it the name “America.” The German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller, who was apparently unaware of the great deeds of Christopher Columbus, proposed in 1507 that the hemisphere be named “America” in honor of the voyages of discovery of Amerigo …
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Tales and Legends
(3,589 words)
[German Version]
I. Literary History 1. Unlike fairy tales, which are set in a fictional world that takes wonders for granted, tales (Ger.
Sagen) and legends recount the irruption of miracles and wonders into the real world. Tales treat this irruption as a mysterious and terrifying experience, while legends embed it in a religiously structured explanatory context. 2. The etymology of the terms
tale and
legend points to two different forms of transmission: oral in the case of tales (“what is told”) and sagas (“what is said”), written in the case of legends (Lat.
legenda, “what is to be re…
Source:
Religion Past and Present