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Q: What religious events did your ancestors observe with deremonial dances?
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What did Petrarch believe?

Petrarch believed many things. Petrarch was called the father of humanism because he taught the people of the renaissance how to be "human" in other words how to enjoy life by dancing, being creative, or being curious without having to worry about not following the rights of the bible or not being christian. Petrarch told them that they could be "human" and still be good Christian's. He introduced to them the importance of education and made people think about new things like different music and dances. Because Petrarch made everyone curious about inventing or being creative, now we have our modern dances like shuffling or jerking and music like rapping, have you ever heard the saying "curiosity killed the cat, and satisfaction brought it back"? Well in this case of the curiosity in the renaissance, we have our modern music, dances, and even clothe styles.


What is the history of the Punu tribe?

Not a lot is known about the history of the Punu people. They seem to have moved south to the Ogowe River Basin, but it is not certain from where, or how much history they share with other groups in the area.They also represent the idealised beauty of punu women and should only be carved by punu men.The indigenous religion of the Punu people is concentrated on spiritual "dances" for healing, appeasing ancestral spirits or for rejoicing after good news such as the birth of a child. Some of the spiritual "dances" include MABANZI, MOUKUIDJI (which includes a "spirit" on stilts who lives in the forest nearby) and others.


What do yanomami believe in?

Yanomami eat what the jungle and their gardens can offer:snakeswild pigsmonkeysdeerjaguarsinsectslarvaefishcrabswild honeyplantainsweet potatopalm fruits


What are the different kind of pirouette?

In dance, pirouette means to "whirl or spin." A pirouette is a complete turn of the body on one foot and it can be performed "en dedans" (inward) or "en dehors" (outward). A pirouette can also be performed en pointe or demi-point (on the ball of your feet). There are many different kinds of pirouettes. On a basic level, you can think of a "ballet pirouette" as being a turn where the leg is turned out (the foot is connected at the supporting leg's knee and turned out) or the "jazz pirouette" where the leg is turned in (the foot is connected as the supporting leg's knee and turned parallel). You can also pirouette in the following positions: 1) Sur le cou-de-pied 2) En attitude 3) En arabesque 4) A la seconde


What are the six major religions?

BábismBahá'í FaithChristianityCatholicismAnglicanismAssyrian Church of the EastEastern Orthodox ChurchOriental Orthodox ChurchRoman Catholic ChurchProtestantismPre-Lutheran Protestant HussitesWaldensiansAdventismAfrican Initiated ChurchAnabaptistsBaptistsBrethrenBritish IsraelismCatholic Apostolic Church (Irvingites)Charismatic movementChristian Israelite Church (Southcottites)Congregational ChurchLutheranismMethodismPentecostalismPietism and Holiness movementPresbyterianismReformed ChurchesReligious Society of Friends (Quakers)Restoration MovementUnited and uniting churchesOther groupsBible Student movementChristian UniversalismLatter Day Saint movementNontrinitarianismSwedenborgianismUnitarianismGnosticismChristian GnosticismEbionitesCerdonians Marcionism (not entirely Gnostic)ColorbasiansSimoniansEarly GnosticismBorboritesCainitesCarpocratiansOphitesHermeticismMedieval GnosticismCatharsBogomilsPaulicianismTondrakiansPersian GnosticismMandaeanismManichaeism BagnoliansSyrian-Egyptic GnosticismSethians BasilidiansThomasinesValentinians BardesanitesIslamKalam SchoolsAsh'ariKalamMaturidiMurji'ahMu'taziliKharijiteIbadi (Only surviving sect)AzraqiHarūriyyaSufriShia IslamIsmailism Mustaali / BohraNizariJafari TwelversAlawitesAlevi / BektashiZaidiyyahSufismBektashiChishtiMevleviNaqshbandiTariqahQuadiriyyahSuhrawardiyyaTijaniUniversal Sufism Dances of Universal PeaceSunni IslamHanafi BerailviDeobandiHanbaliMalikiShafi'iOther Islamic GroupsAhl-e Haqq (Yarsan)AhmadiyyaDruzeMoorish Science Temple of AmericaNation of IslamUnited Submitters InternationalZikriJudaismRabbinic JudaismOrthodox Judaism Haredi JudaismHasidic JudaismModern Orthodox JudaismConservative Judaism MasortiConservadox Judaism Union for Traditional JudaismReform JudaismProgressive Judaism Liberal JudaismKaraite JudaismModern Non-Rabbinic JudaismAlternative JudaismHumanistic Judaism (not always identified as a religion)Jewish RenewalReconstructionist JudaismHistorical groupsEssenesPharisees (ancestor of Rabbinic Judaism)Sadducees (possible ancestor of Karaite Judaism)Zealots SicariiSects that believed Jesus was a prophetEbionitesElkasitesNazarenesSabbateans FrankistsRastafari movementMandaeans and SabiansMandaeismSabians Sabians of HarranMandaean Nasaraean SabeansSamaritanismUnitarian UniversalismIndian religionsHinduismLingayatismShaivismShaktismTantrism Ananda MargaSmartismVaishnavism Gaudiya Vaishnavism ISKCON (Hare Krishna)Hindu reform movements Arya SamajBrahmo SamajHinduism in IndonesiaMajor schools and movements of Hindu philosophyNyayaPurva mimamsaSamkhyaVaisheshikaVedanta (Uttara Mimamsa) Advaita VedantaIntegral YogaVishishtadvaitaDvaita VedantaYoga Ashtanga YogaBhakti YogaHatha yogaSiddha YogaSurat Shabd YogaTantric YogaSahaja YogaBuddhismNikaya schools (which have historically been called Hinayana in the West) Theravada Sri Lankan Amarapura NikayaSri Lankan Siam NikayaSri Lankan Ramañña NikayaBangladeshi Sangharaj NikayaBangladeshi Mahasthabir NikayaBurmese Thudhamma Nikaya Vipassana tradition of Mahasi Sayadaw and disciplesBurmese Shwekyin NikayaBurmese Dvaya NikayaThai Maha Nikaya Dhammakaya MovementThai Thammayut Nikaya Thai Forest Tradition Tradition of Ajahn ChahMahayana Humanistic BuddhismMadhyamaka PrāsangikaSvatantrikaSanlun (Three Treatise school) SanronMaha-Madhyamaka (Jonangpa)Nichiren Nichiren ShūNichiren ShōshūNipponzan MyōhōjiSoka GakkaiPure Land Jodo ShuJodo ShinshuTathagatagarbha Daśabhūmikā (absorbed into Huayan)Huayan school (Avataṃsaka) HwaeomKegonTiantai TendaiCheontaeYogācāra Cittamatra in TibetWei-Shi (Consciousness-only school) or Faxiang (Dharma-character school) BeopsangHossōChan / Zen / Seon / Thien Caodong Sōtō Keizan lineJakuen lineGiin lineLinji RinzaiŌbakuFuke ZenWon Buddhism: Korean Reformed BuddhismKwan Um School of ZenSanbo KyodanVajrayana Shingon BuddhismTibetan Buddhism BönGelukpaKagyupa Dagpo Kagyu Karma KagyuBarom KagyuTsalpa KagyuPhagdru KagyuDrikung KagyuDrukpa KagyuShangpa KagyuNyingmapaSakyapa JonangpaNew Buddhist movements Aum Shinrikyo (now known as Aleph)Diamond WayFriends of the Western Buddhist OrderNew Kadampa TraditionShare InternationalTrue Buddha SchoolVipassana movementJainismDigambaraShvetambaraSikhismKhalsa NihangNamdhari or Kuka SikhsSahajdhari SikhRavidasiAyyavazhiDin-i-IlahiPersian religionsBábismBahá'í FaithMandaeismManichaeismMazdakismYazdânism AleviYarsaniYazidiZoroastrianism ZurvanismEast Asian religionsConfucianismNeo-ConfucianismNew ConfucianismShintoTaoismOtherCaodaismChinese folk religionChondogyoFalun GongI-Kuan TaoJeung San DoLegalismMohismOomotoSeicho-No-IeTenrikyoAfrican diasporic religionsBatuqueCandombléDahomey mythologyHaitian mythologyKuminaMacumbaMami WataObeahOyotunjiQuimbandaSantería (Lukumi)UmbandaVodouAfricanWest AfricaAkan mythologyAshanti mythology (Ghana)Dahomey (Fon) mythologyEfik mythology (Nigeria, Cameroon)Igbo mythology (Nigeria, Cameroon)Isoko mythology (Nigeria)Yoruba mythology (Nigeria, Benin)Central AfricaBushongo mythology (Congo)Bambuti (Pygmy) mythology (Congo)Lugbara mythology (Congo)East AfricaAkamba mythology (East Kenya)Dinka mythology (Sudan)Lotuko mythology (Sudan)Masai mythology (Kenya, Tanzania)Southern AfricaKhoikhoi mythologyLozi mythology (Zambia)Tumbuka mythology (Malawi)Zulu mythology (South Africa)AmericanAbenaki mythologyAnishinaabeAztec mythologyBlackfoot mythologyCherokee mythologyChickasaw mythologyChoctaw mythologyCreek mythologyCrow mythologyGhost DanceGuarani mythologyHaida mythologyHo-Chunk mythology (aka: Winnebago)Hopi mythologyHuron mythology (aka: Wyandot)Inca mythologyInuit mythologyIroquois mythologyKuksuKwakiutl mythologyLakota mythologyLeni Lenape mythologyLonghouse religionMapuche mythologyMaya mythologyMidewiwinMiwokNative American ChurchNavajo mythologyNootka mythologyOhlone mythologyOlmec mythologyPomo mythologyPawnee mythologySalish mythologySelk'nam religionSeneca mythologyTsimshian mythologyUrarinaUte mythologyZuni mythologyEurasianAsianBönChinese mythologyJapanese mythologyKoshintoSiberian ShamanismTengriismEuropeanEstonian mythologyEskimo religionFinnish mythology and Finnish paganismHungarian folk religionSami religion (including the Noaidi)TadibyaOceania/PacificAustralian Aboriginal mythologyAustronesian beliefs Balinese mythologyJavanese beliefsMelanesian mythologyMicronesian mythology ModekngeiNauruan indigenous religionPhilippine mythology AnitoGabâKulamPolynesian mythology Hawaiian mythologyMaori mythology Maori religionRapa Nui mythology MoaiTangata manuCargo cultsJohn FrumJohnson cultPrince Philip MovementVailala MadnessAncient Near EasternAncient Egyptian religionAncient Semitic religionsMesopotamian mythology Arabian mythology (pre-Islamic)Babylonian and Assyrian religion Babylonian mythologyChaldean mythologyCanaanite mythology Canaanite religionHittite mythologyPersian mythologySumerian mythologyIndo-EuropeanProto-Indo-Iranian religion Historical Vedic religionZoroastrianismBaltic polytheismCeltic polytheism Brythonic mythologyGaelic mythologyGermanic polytheism Anglo-Saxon religionContinental Germanic religionNorse religionGreek polytheismFinnish polytheismHungarian polytheismRoman polytheismSlavic polytheismHellenisticMystery religions Eleusinian MysteriesMithraismOrphismPythagoreanismGallo-Roman religionNew Age, Esotericism, MysticismNew AgeNeoshamanismReikiEsotericism and mysticismAnthroposophyChristian mysticismEsoteric ChristianityHindu mysticism TantraVaastu ShastraMartinismMeher BabaRosicrucian Ancient Mystical Order Rosae CrucisAncient Order of the RosicruciansRosicrucian FellowshipSufismTheosophyOccult and magical (or magickal)Ceremonial magic Enochian magicGoetic magicChaos magickHoodoo (Rootwork) New Orleans VoodooKulam - Filipino witchcraftNational Socialism and OccultismPow-wowSeiðr - Norse sorceryThelemaWitchcraftLeft-Hand PathDemonolatryLuciferianismSatanism Church of SatanSetianismShinshukyoChurch of World MessianityKonkokyoOomotoPL KyodanSeicho-No-IeTenrikyoParody or mock religionsChurch of EuthanasiaChurch of the Flying Spaghetti MonsterChurch of the SubGeniusIglesia MaradonianaInvisible Pink UnicornLandover Baptist ChurchLast ThursdayKibologyOthersDeismDiscordianismEthical CultureFellowship of ReasonHumanismJediismJucheSecular HumanismSubudUnitarian Universalism

Related questions

Classification of folk dances?

There are 5 types of folk dances.These are..1. National and Regional Dances2. Occupational Dances3. Religious and Ceremonial Dances4. Courtship Dances[and]5. Festival Dances


What are the classifications of folk dances and give examples?

Folk dances are classified into five types. They are festival dances, courtship dances, religious and ceremonial dances, occupational dances and national and regional dances.


What religious events did our ancestors observe with ceremonial dances ?

Folk dance Or doxology if I'm correct copy it☺☺😊😊


What are classification of dances?

Originally dances are for religious practices and entertainment. At present, dances served as medium for competitions mainly for entertainment. Classifications are Ceremonial dances like the folk dances, Ballroom Dances, and contemporary dances.


What are some dances of Mexico?

cumbia, duranguese, racheras, etc. Older traditional dances are the folk dances danced in religious celebrations.


What dances did they do in Sparta?

They danced to the gods in religious festivals.


Who do the ghosts represent in the ghost dances?

The so called "ghosts" in the Ghost Dance are the spirits of our ancestors.


What traditions did the Mojave Indians have?

They had ceremonies, dances, and religious ceremonies/ dances. One of the dances was the snake dance


What dances did the plains Indians do and why were they important?

Because they were religious and important


What are the elements of Philippine folkdances?

B. Nature1. Occupational dances - depict actions of a labor of a specific occupation, industry or human labor2. Religious Ceremonial dances - dances with religious vows and ceremonies3. Comic dances - depict funny movements intended for entertainment4. Game dances - done with play elements5. Wedding dances - performed during wedding feasts6. Courtship dances - depict the art of courtship or dances with love themes7. Festival dances - suitable for special occasions or any social gathering8. War dances - show imaginary combat or duel


What dances do the Shoshone Indians do?

It's a really religious dance of belief.


What are the seven classification of Philippines folk dances according to nature?

1.occupational 2.religious or ceremonial 3.comic dances 4.wedding dances 5.game dance 6.courtship dances 7.festival dances 8.war dance