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Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary

A Wisdom Archive on Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary

A selection of articles related to Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary

We recommend this article: Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary - 1, and also this: Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary - 2.
Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary

ARTICLES RELATED TO Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Harp - History of Sacred Harp singing

The earliest roots of Sacred Harp singing are found in the American colonial era. At that time, singing schools were created to provide instruction in choral singing, especially for the use of churches. In 1801, a book called The Easy Instructor1 by William Smith and William Little was published for the use of this movement; it was the first book printed in shape notes. There was, however a rival shape system: Andrew Law (1749-1821) introduced a shape note system in his The M ...

See also:

Sacred Harp, Sacred Harp - The music and its notation, Sacred Harp - Singing Sacred Harp music, Sacred Harp - Sacred Harp music as participatory music, Sacred Harp - History of Sacred Harp singing, Sacred Harp - Early history of The Sacred Harp, Sacred Harp - Origin of the modern editions, Sacred Harp - Other Sacred Harp books, Sacred Harp - The spread of Sacred Harp singing in modern times, Sacred Harp - Origins of the music, Sacred Harp - Other books with the title Sacred Harp, Sacred Harp - Books and scholarly articles, Sacred Harp - Footnotes

Read more here: » Sacred Harp: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Harp - History of Sacred Harp singing

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Harp - Singing Sacred Harp music

Sacred Harp groups always sing a cappella, that is to say, without accompanying instruments. The singers arrange themselves in a square, with a row of chairs or pews on each side assigned to each of the four parts: treble, alto, tenor, and bass. The treble and tenor sections are usually mixed, with men and women singing the notes an octave apart. Typically, there is no single leader or conductor; rather, the participants take turns in leading. The leader for a particular round selects a song from the book, and "calls" it by its page number. Leading is done in an open-palm style ...

See also:

Sacred Harp, Sacred Harp - The music and its notation, Sacred Harp - Singing Sacred Harp music, Sacred Harp - Sacred Harp music as participatory music, Sacred Harp - History of Sacred Harp singing, Sacred Harp - Early history of The Sacred Harp, Sacred Harp - Origin of the modern editions, Sacred Harp - Other Sacred Harp books, Sacred Harp - The spread of Sacred Harp singing in modern times, Sacred Harp - Origins of the music, Sacred Harp - Other books with the title Sacred Harp, Sacred Harp - Books and scholarly articles, Sacred Harp - Footnotes

Read more here: » Sacred Harp: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Harp - Singing Sacred Harp music

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred game - Ancaria

The whole of Sacred takes place in the continent of Ancaria, where there are several towns and villages. Even when you begin the game, more than 70% of Ancaria is already available to be traveled on. To the south of Ancaria, there is a vast desert, and lava-ridden plains. In the north, there is a wall of mountains and an icy backdrop. To both the east and the west, there are large forests, blocking the way for further travel. In the game, there is an option to buy horses, that can be used for faster travel, ...

See also:

Sacred game, Sacred game - Characters, Sacred game - Story Line, Sacred game - Graphics, Sacred game - Ancaria, Sacred game - Items, Sacred game - Skills, Sacred game - Enemies

Read more here: » Sacred game: Encyclopedia II - Sacred game - Ancaria

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred game - Items

Sacred features a vast array of items that can be found from shops, dead monsters, or "magical hiding places" in many of the rocks and bushes throughout Ancaria. Many of the items can be only equipped by one type of character, like wings can only be equipped by a Seraphim. There are also several potion types, such as the typical mana-heal or health heal, but there are other types, like Potion of Undead death, which stops Undead from reviving once you kill them. Also, monsters occasionally drop a rune that increases a certain ski ...

See also:

Sacred game, Sacred game - Characters, Sacred game - Story Line, Sacred game - Graphics, Sacred game - Ancaria, Sacred game - Items, Sacred game - Skills, Sacred game - Enemies

Read more here: » Sacred game: Encyclopedia II - Sacred game - Items

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred game - Skills

Every character in Sacred has a different set of skills that are available to him/her. The only way to obtain them is to find a rune of that particular skill, and use it to make it available to use for you. Each character has about 10 different skills that can be unlocked and used. To increase your level in a skill, you must find another rune for that skill and use it. You can take a skill, and drag it to one of the empty circl ...

See also:

Sacred game, Sacred game - Characters, Sacred game - Story Line, Sacred game - Graphics, Sacred game - Ancaria, Sacred game - Items, Sacred game - Skills, Sacred game - Enemies

Read more here: » Sacred game: Encyclopedia II - Sacred game - Skills

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred game - Characters

Upon beginning the game, you are given a choice to start with one of six different character types-the Gladiator, the Dark Elf, the Wood Elf, the Vampiress, the Battle-Mage, and the Seraphim. Each character begins in a different part of Ancaria (the continent that Sacred takes place in), and with a different starting quest. For example, the Gladiator starts in a colosseum, enslaved by his master, while the Seraphim starts in a church. Throughout the game, the ch ...

See also:

Sacred game, Sacred game - Characters, Sacred game - Story Line, Sacred game - Graphics, Sacred game - Ancaria, Sacred game - Items, Sacred game - Skills, Sacred game - Enemies

Read more here: » Sacred game: Encyclopedia II - Sacred game - Characters

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Harp - Origins of the music

The music used in Sacred Harp singing is eclectic. Most of the songs can be assigned to one of four historical layers. The oldest layer comes from 18th century New England, and represents a rendition in shape notes of the work of outstanding early American composers such as William Billings and Daniel Read, who worked as singing masters. A second layer comes from about 1830, following the migration of the shape note tradition to the rural South. Many of the songs in this layer are believed to be originally se ...

See also:

Sacred Harp, Sacred Harp - The music and its notation, Sacred Harp - Singing Sacred Harp music, Sacred Harp - Sacred Harp music as participatory music, Sacred Harp - History of Sacred Harp singing, Sacred Harp - Early history of The Sacred Harp, Sacred Harp - Origin of the modern editions, Sacred Harp - Other Sacred Harp books, Sacred Harp - The spread of Sacred Harp singing in modern times, Sacred Harp - Origins of the music, Sacred Harp - Other books with the title Sacred Harp, Sacred Harp - Books and scholarly articles, Sacred Harp - Footnotes

Read more here: » Sacred Harp: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Harp - Origins of the music

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred art - Christian European sacred art

Sacred art was common in the European Middle Ages, but many of the greatest masters commissioned by the Roman Catholic Church lived during the Renaissance. It was during this time that Michelangelo Buonarotti painted the Sistine Chapel and carved the Pietà, Gianlorenzo Bernini created the massive columns in St. Peter's Basilica, and Leonardo da Vinci painted the Last Supper. Most Christian art is allusive, or built around themes familiar to the intended observer. One of the most common Christian themes is that of a woman (the Virgin Mary) holding a chil ...

See also:

Sacred art, Sacred art - Christian European sacred art, Sacred art - Tibetan Buddhist sacred art, Sacred art - Muslim sacred art

Read more here: » Sacred art: Encyclopedia II - Sacred art - Christian European sacred art

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred cow - Origins

There is no consensus on whether the cow was sacred and forbidden in the Hindu diet from ancient vedic times. Depending on the interpretation of terminology used for a cow, the cow may have been protected or offered as a sacrifice and eaten. It was possibly revered because the largely pastoral Vedic people and subsequent generations relied so heavily on the cow for dairy products, tilling of fields and fuel for fertiliser that its status as a 'caretaker' led to identifying it as an almost maternal figure (so the term gau mata). Those ...

See also:

Sacred cow, Sacred cow - Origins, Sacred cow - Etymology Cow in Sanskrit, Sacred cow - Cow in the Hindu Scriptures, Sacred cow - In today's world, Sacred cow - Historical significance, Sacred cow - The law in India

Read more here: » Sacred cow: Encyclopedia II - Sacred cow - Origins

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Harp - The music and its notation

The name of the tradition comes from the title of the shape note book from which the music is sung, The Sacred Harp. This book exists today in various editions, discussed below. "Shape note" music means that the notes are printed in special shapes that help the reader fluently identify them on the musical scale. Each of the four shapes is connected to a particular syllable: fa, sol, la, and mi; and these syllables are employed in singing the notes, just as in the more familiar system that uses do< ...

See also:

Sacred Harp, Sacred Harp - The music and its notation, Sacred Harp - Singing Sacred Harp music, Sacred Harp - Sacred Harp music as participatory music, Sacred Harp - History of Sacred Harp singing, Sacred Harp - Early history of The Sacred Harp, Sacred Harp - Origin of the modern editions, Sacred Harp - Other Sacred Harp books, Sacred Harp - The spread of Sacred Harp singing in modern times, Sacred Harp - Origins of the music, Sacred Harp - Other books with the title Sacred Harp, Sacred Harp - Books and scholarly articles, Sacred Harp - Footnotes

Read more here: » Sacred Harp: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Harp - The music and its notation

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Mysteries - Sacraments

The term is used in the Eastern Christian Churches to refer to what the Western Christian Church calls Sacraments and Sacramentals. In the Early Church they were kept hidden from the pagans, lest they become objects of ridicule. As the Age of Persecution shifted from persecution of Christians to persecution by Christians, the secrecy was gradually relaxed. But the term continued to be used. The terms Sacrament and Sacramental are terms, which the Western Church has carefully defined in Canon Law. Thus, for instance, the ...

See also:

Sacred Mysteries, Sacred Mysteries - Pre-Christian religious mysteries, Sacred Mysteries - Sacraments

Read more here: » Sacred Mysteries: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Mysteries - Sacraments

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred king - In Roman religion

Frazer borrowed an image for his concept from Roman religion. When the Roman Republic overthrew the Roman Kingdom in 510 BC, the notion persisted that a king of Rome had to be installed in order to perform certain rituals that the king of Rome traditionally presided over. The Romans therefore appointed a rex sacrorum, literally king of the sacred rites, in order to discharge the religious duties of the king. The rex sacrorum was, of course, a patrician, appointed to the priesthood for life by the pontifex maxim ...

See also:

Sacred king, Sacred king - In Roman religion, Sacred king - In the Golden Bough

Read more here: » Sacred king: Encyclopedia II - Sacred king - In Roman religion

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Love - Extra tracks

There have been multiple editions of this album. Some of them, such as the Japanese edition, feature various extra songs/remixes. Although the tracklist on the official Sting website includes a remix of Send Your Love and a live version of Shape Of My Heart, these are not always available. Depending on the edition, the following bonus tracks may be included: Send Your Love (Dave Audé Remix) Shape Of My Heart (Live) Like A Beautiful Smile (with Stolen Car (Take Me Dancing) as the sixth track) Moon Over Bourbon Street [Cornelius ...

See also:

Sacred Love, Sacred Love - Tracklist, Sacred Love - Extra tracks, Sacred Love - Musicians

Read more here: » Sacred Love: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Love - Extra tracks

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Realm - The Sacred Realm in the story of Ocarina of Time

Sacred Realm - The realm sealed. The realm remained sealed off from the physical world by a seal that can only be opened with a unique collection of items: The three Spiritual Stones (belonging to different races in the game and also representing one of the goddesses: The Kokiri Emerald represents Farore, the Goron's Ruby represents Din, and the Zora's Saphire represents Nayru), the Ocarina of Time (which opens the seal of the Temple of Time, gateway to the Sacred Realm), and the Master Sword (which was created to defeat evil and can only be ...

See also:

Sacred Realm, Sacred Realm - The Triforce, Sacred Realm - The Golden Land in the story of A Link to the Past, Sacred Realm - The Sacred Realm in the story of Ocarina of Time, Sacred Realm - The realm sealed, Sacred Realm - The seal broken, Sacred Realm - The realm restored, Sacred Realm - Dark World

Read more here: » Sacred Realm: Encyclopedia II - Sacred Realm - The Sacred Realm in the story of Ocarina of Time

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred cow - In today's world

Today, in heavily Hindu nations like India and Nepal, bovine milk continues to hold a central place in religious rituals. In honor of their exalted status, cows often roam free. In some places, it is considered good luck to give one a snack, or fruit before breakfast. In holy places where there is a ban on cow slaughter, a citizen can be sent to jail for killing or injuring a cow. With injunctions against eating the cow, a system evolved where only the pariah fed on dead cows and treat their leather. With the introductio ...

See also:

Sacred cow, Sacred cow - Origins, Sacred cow - Etymology Cow in Sanskrit, Sacred cow - Cow in the Hindu Scriptures, Sacred cow - In today's world, Sacred cow - Historical significance, Sacred cow - The law in India

Read more here: » Sacred cow: Encyclopedia II - Sacred cow - In today's world

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred cow - The law in India

It used to be illegal in India to kill a member of the genus Bos, but now, many slaughterhouses operate in big cities like Bombay/Mumbai or Kolkata/Calcutta. While there are approximately 3,600 slaughterhouses operating legally in India, there are estimated to be over 30,000 illegal slaughterhouses. The efforts to close them down have so far been largely unsuccessful. The export trade in Indian leather is worth about $1.7 billion and India's export share of the leather market has been on the increase. Germany is the largest importer of ...

See also:

Sacred cow, Sacred cow - Origins, Sacred cow - Etymology Cow in Sanskrit, Sacred cow - Cow in the Hindu Scriptures, Sacred cow - In today's world, Sacred cow - Historical significance, Sacred cow - The law in India

Read more here: » Sacred cow: Encyclopedia II - Sacred cow - The law in India

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Basilica of the Sacré Cœur - History

The site is traditionally associated with the beheading of the city's patron, Saint Denis, in the 3rd century. Legend says that upon being slain, the bishop Denis picked up his severed head and carried it several miles to the north where the city of Saint Denis stands today. More recently, during the Commune of 1871, hundreds of Communards hid in the chalk mines of the butte Montmartre, and were forever imprisone ...

See also:

Basilica of the Sacré Cœur, Basilica of the Sacré Cœur - History, Basilica of the Sacré Cœur - The Basilica, Basilica of the Sacré Cœur - More recent history, Basilica of the Sacré Cœur - Footnote

Read more here: » Basilica of the Sacré Cœur: Encyclopedia II - Basilica of the Sacré Cœur - History

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Basilica of the Sacré Cœur - The Basilica

Sacré Cœur is built of Château-Landon (Seine-et-Marne) stone, a frost-resistant travertine that constantly weathers out its calcite, so that it bleaches with age to a chalky whiteness. Since 1885, when it was partially built, the Blessed Sacrament (a consecrated host which Catholics believe is turned into the Body and Blood of Jesus during a Mass) has been continually on display in a monstrance above the high altar. Perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrament has continued uninterrupted in the Basilica since 1885. The mosaic of Chr ...

See also:

Basilica of the Sacré Cœur, Basilica of the Sacré Cœur - History, Basilica of the Sacré Cœur - The Basilica, Basilica of the Sacré Cœur - More recent history, Basilica of the Sacré Cœur - Footnote

Read more here: » Basilica of the Sacré Cœur: Encyclopedia II - Basilica of the Sacré Cœur - The Basilica

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - The Sacred Fount - Plot summary

As he waits for the train to take him to a weekend party in the country, the narrator notices that Gilbert Long seems much more assured and lively than before. He also sees Mrs. Brissenden (nicknamed "Mrs. Briss") as much younger-looking than her husband, though she's actually ten years older. The narrator begins to theorize that Long and Mrs. Briss are getting their vitality, vampire-like, from the "sacred fount" of their sexual partners' energy. At first the narrator theorizes that the source of Long's newfound a ...

See also:

The Sacred Fount, The Sacred Fount - Plot summary, The Sacred Fount - Key themes, The Sacred Fount - Critical evaluation

Read more here: » The Sacred Fount: Encyclopedia II - The Sacred Fount - Plot summary

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - The Sacred Fount - Key themes

While the narrator is often exasperating about his rather prurient interest in his fellow-guests' sex lives, he does seem similar to other central characters in James' fiction who try to discover the truth from often misleading bits of information. But after a while his theories begin to drive everybody, including the reader, a little nuts, as those theories constantly shift and grow incredibly complex. So when Mrs. Briss dismisses the narrator as crazy, she might gain some sympathy from many readers. Of course, it's possible that Mrs ...

See also:

The Sacred Fount, The Sacred Fount - Plot summary, The Sacred Fount - Key themes, The Sacred Fount - Critical evaluation

Read more here: » The Sacred Fount: Encyclopedia II - The Sacred Fount - Key themes

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Proportion architecture - Sacred Proportions

Among the Cistercians, Gothic, Renaissance, Egyptian, Semitic, Babylonian, Arab, Greek and Roman traditions; the harmonic proportions, human proportions, cosmological/astronomical proportions and orientations, and various aspects of sacred geometry (Vesica Piscis, the Pentagram, Golden Ratio and small whole-number ratios) were all applied as part of the practice of Architectural design. Proportion architecture - Feng Shui. Part of the practice of Feng Shui is a proportional system based on the double tatami mat. Feng Shui also includes within it the ideas of cosmic orienta ...

See also:

Proportion architecture, Proportion architecture - Sacred Proportions, Proportion architecture - Feng Shui, Proportion architecture - Classical Orders, Proportion architecture - Vitruvian Proportion, Proportion architecture - Renaissance Orders, Proportion architecture - Le Modulor, Proportion architecture - The Plastic Number

Read more here: » Proportion architecture: Encyclopedia II - Proportion architecture - Sacred Proportions

Sacred Geometry And Sacred Space Dictionary: Encyclopedia II - Sacred cow - Cow in the Hindu Scriptures

According to Rig Veda, cow represents the maternal aspect of Earth. Vyasa said: Cows are sacred. They are embodiments of merit. They are high and most efficacious cleansers of all. Literature on Lord Krishna, one of the Hinduism's most important figures who is believed to have lived 5000 years ago, depict him as a cowherd. He is often described as bala-gopala, "the child who protects the cows." Another of Krishna's names, Govinda, means "one who brings satisfaction to the cows." Other scriptures identify the cow as the "mother" of all civilization, its milk nurturing the population. T ...

See also:

Sacred cow, Sacred cow - Origins, Sacred cow - Etymology Cow in Sanskrit, Sacred cow - Cow in the Hindu Scriptures, Sacred cow - In today's world, Sacred cow - Historical significance, Sacred cow - The law in India

Read more here: » Sacred cow: Encyclopedia II - Sacred cow - Cow in the Hindu Scriptures




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