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- Columbia University - Asia for Educators - Defining "Daoism": A Complex History
- Minnesota Library Publishing Project - World Religions: the Spirit Searching - Daoism
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Laozi
- Khan Academy - Daoism
- OpenStax - Introduction to Philosophy - Daoism
- Western Kentucky University - TopSCHOLAR - The Creation of Daoism
- Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Daoist Philosophy
- The Metropolitan Museum of Art - Daoism and Daoist Art
- National Geographic - Taoism
- Asia Society - Daoism
- Humanities LibreTexts - Daoism
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Taoism
- World History Encyclopedia - Taoism
- Pinyin romanization:
- Daoism
- Key People:
- Zhuang Zhou
- Laozi
- Liezi
- Zhao Youqin
- Kou Qianzhi
- On the Web:
- Columbia University - Asia for Educators - Defining "Daoism": A Complex History (Oct. 28, 2024)
Taoism under the Tang dynasty (618–907)
China’s reunification under the Tang marked the beginning of Taoism’s most spectacular success. The dynasty’s founder, Li Yuan (known by his temple name, Gaozu), claimed to be descended from Laozi; as his power increased, even the influential Maoshan Taoists came to accept him as the long-deferred fulfillment of messianic prophecy. This notion was built into the dynasty’s state ideology, and the emperor was commonly referred to as the sage (sheng). Prospective candidates for the civil service were examined in either the Lingbao “Classic of Salvation” (Durenjing) or the Maoshan “Classic of the Yellow Court” (Huangtingjing). Under a series of celebrated patriarchs, the Maoshan organization dominated the religious life of the age. One of the greatest of the line, Sima Chengzhen, initiated innumerable government officials and eminent men of letters and served as spiritual master to emperors. The personnel of the Maoshan revelations even entered into the formal framework of state religion. When Sima Chengzhen pointed out that the sacred peaks of the imperial cult were in reality under the superintendence of the perfected of Shangqing, officially sponsored shrines were erected to them there; and their propitiation was incorporated into the traditional rites.
The wide diffusion of Taoism throughout the vast Tang empire is reflected by the sizable proportion of Taoist texts discovered in the walled-up caves at Dunhuang (in Gansu province). This town in the far west of China was the gateway to Central Asia; and here Taoists came into contact not only with Buddhists of many different doctrinal persuasions but also with Nestorian Christians and Manichaeans. Copies of the Laozi were sent to the king of Tibet, and the book was translated into Sanskrit at the request of the ruler of Kashmir. It also reached Japan in the 7th century, as did texts of religious Taoism; reports of Taoism’s dominance on the continent may still be read in the diaries of Japanese Buddhist pilgrims. The geographic extension of the religion at this time was also represented, in the legendary sphere, by the systematic elaboration of its sacred mountains and the traditions attaching to each of them. They are described by the great hagiographer, Du Guangting, at the end of the Tang dynasty. In addition to the great “cavern-heavens” (dongtian), 10 holy mountains known to the original Maoshan revelations, he lists 36 lesser cavern heavens and 72 sanctuaries (fudi). Situated throughout the length and breadth of the empire, they are fitting spiritual guideposts across the dominions of the Tang, which saw itself as an essentially Taocratic realm.
Taoism under the Song and Yuan dynasties
Internal developments
The Song (960–1279) and Yuan (1206–1368) periods witnessed a great religious effervescence, stimulated in part, under the Song, by the menace of foreign invasion and, during the Yuan, by Tantric (esoteric) Buddhism that was in vogue among the new Mongol rulers of China. During the preceding centuries the Way of the Celestial Masters, centered at Longhushan (Dragon-Tiger Mountain, Jiangxi), had been eclipsed by the prestige of Maoshan. At the end of the Northern Song period, the 30th celestial master, Zhang Jixian, was four times summoned to court by the Song emperor Huizong, who hoped for spiritual support for his threatened reign. Zhang Jixian was credited with a renovation of the ancient sect, thereafter called the Way of Orthodox Unity (Zhengyidao), and with the introduction of the influential rites of the “five thunders” (wulei) into Taoist liturgy.
After the retreat of the Song government south of the Yangtze River (1126), a number of new Taoist sects were founded in the occupied North and soon attained impressive dimensions. Among them were the Taiyi (“Supreme Unity”) sect, founded c. 1140 by Xiao Baozhen; the Zhendadao (“Perfect and Great Tao”) sect of Liu Deren (1142); and the Quanzhen (“Perfect Realization”) sect, founded in 1163 by Wang Chongyang (Wang Zhe). This last sect came to the favorable attention of the Mongols, who had taken over in the North, and its second patriarch, Qiu Changqun, was invited into Central Asia to preach to Genghis Khan. The sect enjoyed great popularity, and its establishments of celibate monks continued to be active into the 20th century, with the famous White Cloud Monastery (Boyunguan) at Beijing as headquarters. In the South, Maoshan continued to prosper, while the Gezao sect flourished at the mountain of that name, in Jiangxi province. This was said to be the spot where the 3rd-century Immortal Ge Xuan had ascended to heaven; the sect looked to him as its founder, and it transmitted the Lingbao scriptures, which he was believed to have been the first to receive.
Literary developments
As early as c. 570, the need for a comprehensive collection of information on all the schools had resulted in the first great Taoist encyclopedia. Like other such works in China, it was made up of extracts from sundry books, classified by subject matter. The compilation of similar reference works flourished during the Song and Yuan periods. The most important is the Seven Slips from the Bookbag of the Clouds (Yunjiqiqian; c. 1022), made just after the first printing of the Taoist Canon in about 1016. It is a canon in miniature and contains many important works in their entirety. Hagiography continued to thrive. In addition to many local and sectarian compilations, there were huge general collections, containing the lives of both legendary and historical figures, such as the immense Comprehensive Mirror of the Immortals (Zhenxiantongjian; early 12th century). Sectarian historiography also developed; of particular interest are the extensive monographs devoted to the great mountain centers of Taoism. The Treatise on Maoshan (Maoshanzhi; 1329) is among the most monumental. It includes lives of the saints and patriarchs, notes on topography and history, and a valuable selection from 1,000 years of literary testimony and inscriptions on the mountain and its Taoism. The new Taoist movements, which took northern China by storm in the 12th and 13th centuries, also furnish their own very copious literature: biographies of their masters and collections of their sayings. Among them is the famous account of the travels (1220–24) of a patriarch of the Quanzhen sect into Central Asia in response to the summons of Genghis Khan. Short moral tracts for missionary purposes were yet another popular genre, and, finally, there are innumerable inscriptions from all periods that provide important data on Taoist establishments and their patrons over the centuries.
Alchemical developments
While learned specialists continued to refine alchemical theory, the period witnessed increasing interest in internal alchemy (neidan), in which the language of the laboratory was used to describe operations realized within the body. This, in a sense, was nothing new. Alchemical metaphors had very early been applied to physiology; Ge Hong, for example, called semen the “yin elixir.” By Song times, however, the systematic interiorization and sublimation of alchemy had become so widespread that all earlier texts of operative, external alchemy (waidan) were henceforth supposed to have really been written about neidan, and the attempt to compound a tangible chemical elixir was thought to have been no more than a hoax. Liturgy also provided its own sublimation of the older art: the liandu (“salvation by smelting”) funeral service was developed at this time, in which an “elixir of immortality” was compounded of written talismans and offered to the deceased.
Syncretism
With such prestigious examples as Chan Buddhism (emphasizing intuitive meditation) and Neo-Confucianism (emphasizing knowledge and reason) before them, Taoists did not long delay in constructing interesting syntheses of their own and other beliefs. Confucianism now joined Buddhism as a fertile source of inspiration. The revelations of Xu Sun, supposed to have lived in the 4th century ce, to one He Zhengong in 1131 inspired the “Pure and Luminous Way of Loyalty and Filial Obedience” (Jingmingzhongxiaodao). This sect preached the Confucian cardinal virtues as being essential for salvation, and consequently won a considerable following in conservative intellectual and official circles. Another highly popular syncretistic movement of Taoist origin was that of the Three Religions (sanjiao). Its composite moral teachings are represented by popular tracts, the so-called “books on goodness” (shanshu), which have been in extremely wide circulation since the Ming dynasty (1368–1644).