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BUDDHISM-MONEY (SOURCES (Edo period (Tokugawa Period) (State support,…
BUDDHISM-MONEY
SOURCES
Nara and Heian Period (710-1185)
funding came directly from imperial court or nobles
Private estates-shōen
Kamakura period
Donation Kampiagns
Confraternities
Edo period (Tokugawa Period)
State support
Offerings for services: funerals, weddings etc.
Strong temples developed confraternies which paid for the maintenence
Sale of medicine, charms etc.
Donations from local community members
Incomes from pilgrims
vegetarian restaurants
hotels
Conflict between buddhism and shinto
Yoshida Kanetomo ( 1435-1511)
the project of trying to establish a „pure” form of shinto (
Yuiitsu Shinto)
His school conducted funerals following their own formal style that did not involve Buddhist clergy.
Shinto priests began demanding such rites in earnest during the mid-Edo Period, when Buddhist temples became increasingly involved in funerals.
The shogunate did come to exempt priests and their legitimate offspring from temple registration provided
they first received permission from the Yoshida family, and condoned their performance of shinsõsai
Shinto priests had organized into a formal movement calling for their from the temple registration requirement.
Edo Period (Tokugawa Period) 1603-1868
all Japanese people, including Shinto priests, were required to belong to a Buddhist temple.
The temple kept track of the population, watched out for illegal Christians, and performed funerals and other rituals.
In 1785 the Edo bakufu
permitted Shinto funerals
for shinto priests and their male successors .
if they had received approval from the Yoshida Shinto officials
Other family members mostly had Buddhist funerals under the danka system .
After the Meiji Restoration in 1868 the government recognized
Shinto funerals for family members
of shinto priests.
PERSECUTION
Lord Nobunaga burned down temples on Mt. Hiei -1571
during Edo and Meji period Buddhists criticized for possesing too much wealth
Chinese Buddhists pesectuted by Confucian government