Qat (deity) - definição. O que é Qat (deity). Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é Qat (deity) - definição

PRINCIPAL GOD IN THE ORAL MYTHOLOGY OF THE BANKS ISLANDS, NORTHERN VANUATU
Kpwet; Iqet; Ikpwet

Qat (deity)         
Qat (or Qet, Kpwet, Iqet, Ikpwet etc. – see below) is the principal god in the oral mythology of the Banks Islands, a small archipelago of northern Vanuatu, Melanesia.
Dying-and-rising deity         
  • Bronze figurine of [[Osiris]]
  • 160px
  • [[Odin]] whispering to a dead [[Baldr]] as he is to be sent out to sea
RELIGIOUS MOTIF IN WHICH A DEITY DIES AND IS RESURRECTED
Life-Death-Rebirth Deity; Dying and reviving god; Life-death-rebirth deities; Dying and rising god; Resurrection deity; Life-death-rebirth deity; Death-rebirth deity; Slain and risen god; Slain-and-risen god; Dying and rising deity; List of dying or rising deities; Resurrected god; Dying-and-rising god
A dying-and-rising, death-rebirth, or resurrection deity is a religious motif in which a god or goddess dies and is resurrected.Leeming, "Dying god" (2004)Burkert 1979, 99Stookey 2004, 99Miles 2009, 193 Examples of gods who die and later return to life are most often cited from the religions of the ancient Near East, and traditions influenced by them include Greco-Roman mythology.
Dema Deity         
  • [[Hainuwele]], whose dismembered body gave origin to various edible plants
DEITY
Dema deity
Dema Deity is a concept introduced by Adolf Ellegard Jensen following his research on religious sacrifice. Jensen was a German ethnologist who furthered the theory of Cultural Morphology founded by Leo Frobenius.

Wikipédia

Qat (deity)

Qat (or Qet, Kpwet, Iqet, Ikpwet etc. – see below) is the principal god in the oral mythology of the Banks Islands, a small archipelago of northern Vanuatu, Melanesia.

Although Qat was never formally worshipped as a deity, the folklore of these once animist populations traditionally referred, and still does, to Qat as the spirit to whom we humans owe several elements of our culture: the world itself (in the form of the Torres and Banks archipelagoes); Night; Death; women; marriage rules and incest prohibition; as well as the song language in use throughout the area, locally known as "the language of Qat".

This mythological figure has connections with the god known as Tagaro in other parts of Vanuatu.