A political geography of deities: Space and the pantheon in Sinhalese Buddhism

The role of Sinhalese Buddhist deities within the long Sinhalese tradition of using Buddhism to legitimize political authority is examined. At the local level, the Sri Lankan deity system is built on a belief common in agrarian states: as people are located territorially, so are the gods who look af...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The journal of Asian studies
Main Author: Winslow, Deborah (Author)
Format: Print Article
Language:English
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Published: Cambridge Univ. Press 1984
In: The journal of Asian studies
Year: 1984, Volume: 43, Issue: 2, Pages: 273-291
Further subjects:B Human geography
B Sri Lanka Herrschaftsform Buddhism Cult Anthropogeographie Religion
B Buddhism
B Sri Lanka
B Religion
B Cult
B Ruling system
Description
Summary:The role of Sinhalese Buddhist deities within the long Sinhalese tradition of using Buddhism to legitimize political authority is examined. At the local level, the Sri Lankan deity system is built on a belief common in agrarian states: as people are located territorially, so are the gods who look after them. Field survey carried out by the author reveals that not only do people in Sri Lanka have this idea of gods but that deities do have discrete identifiable areas on the ground. Significant difference between the religious and political hierarchies
ISSN:0021-9118
Contains:In: The journal of Asian studies