Soil and grain

Soil and grain (Chinese: ; pinyin: sheji; Japanese: 社稷; rōmaji: shashoku; Korean: 사직; romaja: sajik) was a common political term in East Asia for the state. Altars of soil and grain (millet) were constructed alongside ancestral altars. Local kings performed ceremonies of soil and grain to affirm their sovereignty at Beijing Shejitan and Seoul Sajiktan.[1] It has also been rendered "gods of soil and grain" in English, owing to its associations of prayer and supernatural possibilities.[2]

During the Warring States period, ministers defied their rulers by claiming a greater loyalty to the "soil and grain".[3]

Tu Di

A similar concept to sheji is that of Tu Di, the Earth Deity.[4]

gollark: We have a Samsung TV. It seems to have a screen about 30" in size and is ancient (not CRT-ancient, but quite old).
gollark: Doesn't mean *you* should.
gollark: By which I mean both manufacturers and users.
gollark: Security is an issue too, because nobody really cares to update them.
gollark: Smart TVs tend to be buggy and unreliable, and you can't swap out the "smart" bit when something inevitably breaks or stops working or stops receiving updates or has some component stripped out because [random stupid licensing issue], and the reason they're cheap and prevalent is *monetization via data mining*.

See also

Notes

References

  • Yang, C. K.. Religion in Chinese Society : A Study of Contemporary Social Functions of Religion and Some of Their Historical Factors (1967 [1961]). Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.