Jingming-Daoismus
The Jingming Daoism (Chinese 淨 明道, Pinyin Jìngmíng Dào, purity-and-light Daoism ') or Jingming-zhongxiao-Daoism (淨 明 忠孝 道, Jingming zhongxiao dao, Daoism of purity and light, loyalty and filial piety, was a daoist school, which dates back to the time of the Southern Song Dynasty. It was founded by He Zhengong (周 真 公) and emerged from the Daoist Lingbao direction (Lingbao pai). Xu Xun (239-374) from the time of the Jin Dynasty was revered as her first patriarch. It was influential in the Mongol and Ming Dynasty, especially in the Jiangnan area. south of the lower reaches of the Yangtze River. Their center was the Xi Shan ("Westberg") in Nanchang, Jiangxi Province. Edit source text Weblinks Edit sourcetext Eight schools
daode | xiantian | lingbao | zhengyi | qingwei | jingming | yutang | tianxin Schools of Daoism
Acht Schulen des Daoismus | Chinesische Alchemie | Chongxuan | Fangxian | Himmelsmeister-Daoismus | Huanglao | Jingming | Longmen | Lingbao | Qingtan | Qingwei | Quanzhen | Shangqing | Taiping dao (Gelbe Turbane) | Wudoumi dao (Fünf Scheffel Reis) Shenxiao | Tongchu | Wenshi | Wu-Liu-Schule | Xuanxue | ives in Washington, D.C. where on March 4, 1825, he succeeded William Woods. He then left the Congress after March 3, 1827.
After his congress, he went to work as an attorney in Olean. Between 1828 and 1831 he sat again in the Senate of New York and in the years 1838 and 1840 in the New York State Assembly. He died on the 16th of December 1845 in the Olean Township near the city of Olean. His body was then buried at Mount View Cemetery in Olean. Edit source text Weblinks Edit sourcetext Members of the House of Representatives of the United States for New York 28th to 30th district
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