shamaness वाक्य
"shamaness" हिंदी में shamaness in a sentenceउदाहरण वाक्य
- 1990 The Oldest Shaman is a Shamaness : Spirit Journey with the Galgenberg Figurine . pp . 303 312 in the Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on the Study of Shamanism and Alternate Modes of Healing.
- There is a brief report of fieldwork conducted by Richard Noll and Kun Shi in 1994 of the life of the shamaness Dula'r ( Evenki name ), also known as Ao Yun Hua ( her Han Chinese name ).
- Its Mazu Hall ( " Masu-do " ) or Bodhisattva Hall ( " Bosa-do " ) is one of the few deified form of the medieval Fujianese shamaness Lin Moniang, located in Japan.
- There is a brief report of fieldwork conducted by Richard Noll and Kun Shi in 1994 of the life of the shamaness Dula'r ( Ewenki name ), also known as Ao Yun Hua ( her Han Chinese name ).
- Walther Heissig, describing shamans and their incantations in Hure Banner in the 1940s, remarks that one shamaness indicated that the toli contained " the white horses of the shamans "; the mirror itself was seen as a vehicle for the shamans.
- Kimberley Ann Wells claims that the most important feature of this genre is the presence of a female magic user, most commonly a witch or a shamaness, metaphorically representing the female protest against the male-dominated world order and an act of independence.
- A second published report of this fieldwork concerning the life and training of the Solon Ewenki shamaness Dula'r ( Ao Yun Hua ) ( born 1920 ) appeared in the journal " Shaman " in 2007 ( 15 : 167-174 ).
- In 1991, she collaborated with the prominent feminist scholar Chizuko Ueno from Tokyo University on a collection of essays and poetry called, which the two likened to the collaboration between an Okinawan shamaness and the figure who makes sense of her utterances for the outside world.
- The "'Tianhou Temple "', also known as the "'Kaitai Tianhou "'or "'Mazu Temple "', is a deified form of the medieval Fujianese shamaness Lin Moniang, located in the Anping District of Tainan on Taiwan.
- Martin Litchfield West, " The Orphic Poems ", p . 147 . " The Pythia resembles a shamaness at least to the extent that she communicates with her [ deity ] while in a state of trance, and conveys as much to those present by uttering unintelligible words . [ cf.