it is a religion in china that teaches to value education and to respect elders. it was made by confucism
Confucism is not a religion, it is a philosophy. They have no god or place of a worship, also they have no holy day. Confucism is not a religion, it is a philosophy. They have no god or place of a worship, also they have no holy day.
Confucism is not a belief system in God but a set of rules and guidlines one should set his life by.
Around 500 B.C.who was the founder of confucism ?
how did shihuangdi try to limit people's freedom
Religion played no real role in the revolution of 1912, if you mean the overall populace, then 95%+ of the population is a mixed variation of Confucism / Daoism / Buddhism (Chinese don't striction differiant between them) along with traditional ancestral worship practices. with a small population of Muslims in the North West and South West, and a even smaller population of people converted to Christianity mostly along the Coast. AKA, not much different from today.
Im assuming that your talking about the 5 largest, but depending on what you define as "Major", this can be answered differently, but ill do my best. Chirstianity- Monotheistic Islam- Monotheistic Budism- Has no deity Hinduism- Polythistic Confucism- Has no formal deity Judaism- Monotheistic So if that's what you mean, techniquely 3.
China had a big impact on Korea and Vietnam mainly because they where so close to each other. japan picked up on the equal field system (system where the amount of land was spit up between different family's depending on how many family members there where),confucism and Buddhism Vietnam also began using imperial exams and also picked up on Chinese writing. Korea is kinda hard but they also did ancestor worship like china did. Hope this helps :)
the Chinese believed in Pa`anku as the creator of the universe and we are his remains Nowadays, although the governmental religion is Marxism, most Chinese people follow a traditional religion without a certain name. Most of them believe in God, calling it Laotian ( The Sky). They emphasize greatly on the family, following the rule of Zongfa ( the eldest son has a most important place) They think the real world is more important than the paradise.Confucius, who was the most admirable teacher in Chinese history, once said" I don't like study the strange things, superhuman forces, the afterlife."
A difficult question to answer fully, the Han dynasty saw the reversal of a lot of the rather harsh reforms of the Qin dynasty, although some of these reversal were positive, some positive aspect of the Qin reforms were also beganning to decline backwards because of this. The most obvious example is that the bureaucracy was once again being dominated by noble familes, where as the Qin was keen on selecting purely based on merits. but the condition that made it possible in the Qin was no longer avalible in the Han (constant war), though in this situation although the Han made some continued attempts to reform, the situation remained largely unchanged (with the exception of times of troubles) really all the way until the Tang dynasty many centuries later. Although the most serious change in the Han dynasty was the designation of Confucism as the primary state philosophy, the main reason for this change , although also was partially due to political struggles, was also because the Han emperors felt that there needs to be a single dominant philsophy supported by the state to improve central authority.
== == The main religion of Japan is Shintoism, which is more accurately described as being a way of living an harmonious life rather than a religion. The second largest religion in Japan is Buddhism, which exists in a slightly different from than elsewhere e.g. Buddhist monks may be married. There a number of different religions in Japan, and it is unusually difficult to come up with percentages of the population that follow each because many followers of Shinto and Buddhism follow both or various aspects of each. Hence the best figures available are that between 84% and 96% are followers of either Shinto or Buddhism, or both to varying degrees; while 4 to 16% follow other beliefs, with Bahai and Christianity being the most common. There is also a small population of Hindus, Muslims, Jews, Sikhs and followers of the Ryukuan religion. There have been Jews in Japan since 1835, and though the nation was allied to Germany during WW2, Japan never accepted the Nazi's recommendations to instigate a "final solution" of their own.