promulgation$64465$ - traduzione in greco
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promulgation$64465$ - traduzione in greco

OFFICIAL RELIGION OF THE JAPANESE EMPIRE, EMPHASIZING THE DIVINITY OF THE JAPANESE EMPEROR
State Shintoism; Shintoist Rites Research Council; State Shintō; Kokka Shinto; National Shinto; Mikadoism; Great Promulgation Campaign
  • Empire of Japan's 50 sen banknote, featuring Yasukuni Shrine
  • Emperor Hirohito and General MacArthur, at their first meeting, at the U.S. Embassy, Tokyo, 27 September 1945
  • Portrait of Atsutane Hirata, hanging scroll
  • A torii gate at Yasukuni shrine
  • Yasukuni Shrine

promulgation      
n. δημοσίευση, διάδοση, διακήρυξη

Definizione

promulgate
['pr?m(?)lge?t]
¦ verb promote or make widely known.
?put (a law or decree) into effect by official proclamation.
Derivatives
promulgation noun
promulgator noun
Origin
C16 (earlier (C15) as promulgation): from L. promulgat-, promulgare, from pro- 'out, publicly' + mulgere 'cause to come forth' (lit. 'to milk').

Wikipedia

State Shinto

State Shintō (国家神道 or 國家神道, Kokka Shintō) was Imperial Japan's ideological use of the Japanese folk religion and traditions of Shinto.: 547  The state exercised control of shrine finances and training regimes for priests: 59 : 120  to strongly encourage Shinto practices that emphasized the Emperor as a divine being.: 8 

The State Shinto ideology emerged at the start of the Meiji era, after government officials defined freedom of religion within the Meiji Constitution.: 115  Imperial scholars believed Shinto reflected the historical fact of the Emperor's divine origins rather than a religious belief, and argued that it should enjoy a privileged relationship with the Japanese state.: 8 : 59  The government argued that Shinto was a non-religious moral tradition and patriotic practice, to give the impression that they supported religious freedom.: 59 : 120  Though early Meiji-era attempts to unite Shinto and the state failed,: 51  this non-religious concept of ideological Shinto was incorporated into state bureaucracy.: 547  Shrines were defined as patriotic, not religious, institutions, which served state purposes such as honoring the war dead;: 91  this is known as Secular Shrine Theory.

The state also integrated local shrines into political functions, occasionally spurring local opposition and resentment.: 120  With fewer shrines financed by the state, nearly 80,000 closed or merged with neighbors.: 98 : 118  Many shrines and shrine organizations began to independently embrace these state directives, regardless of funding.: 114  By 1940, Shinto priests risked persecution for performing traditionally "religious" Shinto ceremonies.: 25 : 699  Imperial Japan did not draw a distinction between ideological Shinto and traditional Shinto.: 100 

US military leaders introduced the term "State Shinto" to differentiate the state's ideology from traditional Shinto practices: 38  in the 1945 Shinto Directive.: 38  That decree established Shinto as a religion, and banned further ideological uses of Shinto by the state.: 703  Controversy continues to surround the use of Shinto symbols in state functions.: 428 : 706