A spirituális közvetítő

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Weitere Verfasser: Vassányi, Miklós (HerausgeberIn), Sepsi Enikő (HerausgeberIn), Voigt Vilmos (HerausgeberIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:Hungarian
Veröffentlicht: Budapest Károli Gáspár Református Egyetem [2014]
Budapest [2014]
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adam_text  Bakos, Áron Ihe Figure of the Shaman in Boas’s Ihe Central Eskimo and Some Reflections on the Place of his Monograph in the History of Anthropology In this paper I analyze Franz Boas’s early work, Ihe Central Eskimo (1888). I focus on the information offered by the monograph concerning the angakuq, the shaman, thus hoping to gain a basic understanding of his figure. Boass book is deeply influential on the popular image of Inuit culture even today, and, more importantly, it still constitutes one of the chief sources for scientific discussion about Inuit religious life. After sketching an image of the Inuit shaman according to Boas’s description, I move on to discussions about Boas’s early legacy. By reviewing some features of his study, I try to position it in the history of anthropology and reflect on the different debates that still surround his work. Biographical Notes Áron Bakos (1988), MA student in Religious Studies at Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary, and MA student in Ethnography at the University of Pécs. E-mail: bakosaron@gmail.com Fields of Research: Inuit religion; relationship between orality and literacy; written forms of folklore. Publications in the Field: Az inuit (eszkimó) vallás [Inuit (Eskimo) Religion] (co-authored with K. Barta), in Székely, A. (ed.): Lélek-Enciklopédia (forthcoming), Budapest, Kossuth Kiadó, 2014. Some Reflections on How the Inuit Relate to their Environment, and on How We Relate to their Relation, in Fülöp, J.—Mimics, Zs.-Vassányi, M. (eds.): Kapcsolatban (forthcoming), Budapest, L’Harmattan-Károli, 2014. Birtalan, Agnes Shamanic Slang? A Linguistic Analysis of Mongolian Shamanic Narratives My study aims at discussing the narratives told by and about Mongolian shamans, namely those belonging to the ethnic groups of the Darkhads and Oirads (Khowsgol and Uws province of Mongolia, respectively). I focus on the activity of shamans who started their practice either long before the political changes or at the time of these changes (i.e. in the early nineties). The examination is based on the materials of a field research which has been carried out by me in the frame of the Hungarian-Mongolian Joint Expedition since 1991. The corpus ♦ 369 ♦ ABSTRACTS of oral testimony recorded from the shamans and told about them offers the possibility of multilateral studies involving serial approaches. I have already carried out an investigation of ritual texts as sacred genres, and of shamanic ways of verbal and non-verbal communication. In the present paper I am offering an examination of life narratives and narrative parts of rituals as linguistic sources, focusing on such peculiarities of the shamans use of language as the honorific aspects, the presence of dialectal forms, the presence of a female language and the possible formation of a shamanic slang or sociolect, etc. The model of the linguistic investigation of the text corpus is as follows: 1. The presence of literary language in the vernacular; 2. The presence of an honorific level in the narratives (the vocabulary and the grammatical means of the honorific and pejorative styles); 3. The presence and proportion of dialectal forms; 4. The presence and proportion of non-Mongolian utterances (i.e. linguistic traces of Turkic-speaking Tuwas in Darlchad or Oirad dialects). 5. As both dialects include a so-called female language (special usage of various levels of the language: phonetics, morphology, syntax, intonation), I also tried to detect its characteristics in the language use of female shamans. 6. As the shamans are from two distinct ethnic groups, the following question arose as well: Is their language use territory-specific and ethnicity-specific? Are there any common traits in the language usage of shamans with different ethnic traditions? 7. The existence (?) of a kind of shamanic slang or sociolect among Mongo- lian shamans. Biographical Note: Professor Dr habil. Agnes Birtalan (1961), Associate Professor, head of the Department of Inner Asian Studies of Eötvös Lorånd University (ELTE). Website: birtalan.innerasia.hu E-mail: birtalan.agnes@btk.elte.hu , birtalan@hotmail.hu Fields of Research: Mongolian philology, multilateral elaboration of materials (e.g. on Shamanism and Buddhicised folk religion) recorded during field research among various Mongolian ethnic groups. Publications in the Field: Die Mythologie der mongolischen Volksreligion, in Schmalzriedt, E.-Haussig, H. W. (Hrsg.): Wörterbuch der Mythologie 34, Stuttgart, Klett-Cotta Verlag, 2001, 879-1097. ♦ 370 ABSTRACTS Dyekiss, Virág “If Our People are Starving, We Cannot be Called Shamans In the Nganasan belief system, shamans play an important role. The stories about them and especially about their great acts constitute an important part of common memory. The shamans help the community and the individuals face crises which they cannot cope with on their own. The most frequent problem is starving, as lack of food is always imminent. In case of serious epidemics, unfavourable weather, and several kinds of personal crises, the community may apply to the shaman for help, as he has the traditional symbolic system at his disposal in order to solve these problems. Biographical Note: Virág Dyekiss (1981), Research Fellow at the Institute of Ethnology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. E-mail: dyekiss@etnologia.mta.hu Fields of Research: Nganasan traditional belief system and folklore. Publications in the Field: The Role of Strong Winds in the Folk Belief of the Nganasans of Northern Siberia, Cosmos, XXL, 2005, 113-֊126. A természetfelettivel való kapcsolat a nganaszan hitvilágban [The Connection with the Supernatural in Nganasan Folk Belief.], in Bereczki A.-Csepregi M.-Klima L. (eds.): Ünnepi írások Bereczki Gábor 80. születésnapjára, Budapest, Uralisztikai Tanulmányok 19., 2008, 131-138. Дёйба Нгуо, сын Лакуны и ’дочери нганасански’ - три типа на нганасанского героя, in Рябчикова, 3. C.-Надь, К.-Дмитриева, Т. Н. (eds.): С любовью и болью... К 60-летию со дня рождения Евы Шмидт, Ханты-Мансийск, Полиграфист, 2008, 216-225. A Book about Changes in Religion of the Vasyugan Khanty, in Folklore, An Electronic Journal of Folklore, Tartu, 2009, 190—195. Sihirtes, Sigies, Olasnes - Mythical Creatures of North֊Samoyed Peoples, in Csúcs, S. (ed.): CIFU, 11, Pars 3., 2010, 103-107. Gyojba nguo és Gyajku - kultúrhős és trickster a nganaszan folklórban [Djojba Nguo and Djajku: Hero and Trickster in Nganasan Folklore], Ethno-Lore, XXVII., Editor- in-Chief: Balogh, В., eds. Báti, A.—Sárkány, M., Budapest, MTA ВТК NI 2010,261-280. А környezet értelmezésének hagyományos módjai az avami nganaszoknál [Traditional Ways of Interpreting the Environment among the Avam Nganasan], Ethno-Lore XXIX., Editor-in-Chief: Balogh В., eds. Báti A.-Sárkány M., Budapest, MTA ВТК NI 2012, 19-34. 371 ♦ ABSTRACTS Gyimesi, Júlia Spiritualist Mediums in the History of Hungarian Psychology In the early 20th century modern spiritualism reached its peak in Hungary The investigation of spiritualist mediums became an important field of research for several representatives of medicine and early psychology. Although contemporary scientists usually stay away from the subject of spiritualism, researchers of psychoanalysis have conducted remarkable investigations concerning spiritualistic phenomena and mediums. The aim of the present paper is to outline the relationship between early Hungarian psychology and spiritualism. Biographical Note: Júlia Gyimesi (1981), PhD, Assistant Professor at the Teacher Training Centre of Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary. E-mail: juliagyimesi@gmail.com Fields of Research: the connection between psychology and modern occult movements. Publications in the Field: Pszichoanalízis és spiritizmus [Psychoanalysis and Spiritualism], Budapest, Typotex, 2011. Sándor Ferenczi and the Problem of Telepathy, History of the Human Sciences, XXV., 2012, 131-148. Hamar, Imre Mediating Buddha s Teaching: Mahayana Sutras, Chinese Apocryphal Scriptures, Tibetan Gtermas The Buddha had cultivated a spiritual path for many lifetimes and finally reached complete enlightenment under the bodhi tree. He did not need a spiritual mediator as he himself was the source of all knowledge which his followers had to be endowed with to practise his teaching. However, after his nirvana, this source was lost and only the memory of his disciples served as a way to reconstruct his teachings. With the rise of Mahayana Buddhism, Buddha began to be regarded as an ever abiding transcendental being who can give teaching to people in visions or dreams. Mediators appeared, who were dedicated to Buddha s teaching and were able to receive his intimations. The Mahayana sutras were taught to be Buddha s authentic teachings transmitted by these mediators. When Buddhism spread to China and was adopted by Chinese culture, Chinese believers became enthusiastic followers of Buddha s teaching, and were thought to be in immediate contact with the Buddha and transmit his teachings. These scriptures, named ♦ 372 ♦ ABSTRACTS apocryphal sutras, were very popular in Chinese society. In Tibetan Buddhism, then, the so-called gterma texts were thought to have been hidden for a long time, to be discovered only by accomplished masters. Biographical Note: Professor Dr habil. Imre Hamar (1967), head of the Department of Chinese Studies, director of the Institute of East Asian Studies, head of the Department of Japanese Studies, and director of the Confucius Institute of Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE). E-mail: hamar.imre@btk.elte.hu Fields of Research: the history and philosophy of the Chinese Huayan Buddhist school; the history of Chinese religions; classical Chinese literature and Chinese Buddhism. Publications in the Field: Kínai buddhizmus a középkorban - Cseng-kuan élete és filozófiája [Chinese Buddhism in the Middle Ages: The Life and Philosophy of Chengguan], Budapest, Balassi Kiadó, 1998. Buddha megjelenése a világban [The Appearance of the Buddha in the World], Budapest, Balassi Kiadó, 2002. A Religious Leader in the Tang: Chengguan s Biography, Tokyo, The International Institu- te for Buddhist Studies, 2002, Reflecting Mirrors: Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism (editor), Wiesbaden, Harrassowitz Verlag, 2007. Hoppál, Mihály The Shaman as Mediator There is some kind of obscurity around shamans in the minds of most scholars and the broad public. Shamanism is a complex system of beliefs centred around the figure of the shaman or shamaness who can mediate between the world of mankind and the supernatural world of spirits or gods. Shamans have different functions in their communities, but their common characteristic is mediation between the respective states of sickness and health, life and death, known and unknown, past and present, individual and community. The shamans bring this mediation into effect with the support of their helping spirits and by using different objects. This paper outlines the main types of the representations of helping spirits used by Eurasian and Siberian shamans. Biographical Note: Professor Dr Mihály Hoppál DSc (1942), former director of the Institute of Ethnology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences; founder-editor of the journal Shaman and ♦ 373 ♦ ABSTRACTS publication series Bibliotheca Shamanistica, president of the International Society for Shamanistic Research; producer of a series of documentary films on Yakut, Nanay, Buryat, Manchu, Kirghiz, Daur, Korean, Tuvan, Manshi and Nganasan shamans. E-mail: hoppal.mihaly@btk.mta.hu Fields of Research: comparative mythology (especially Finno-Ugric) and shamanism (with fieldwork in Siberia, Korea and China). Publications in the Field: Shamanism in Siberia (co-edited with V. Diószegi), Budapest, Akadémiai Kiadó, 1978. Shamanism: Past and Present, 1-2. (co-edited with O. Sadovszky O), Budapest — Los An- geles / Fullerton, ISTOR Books, 1989. Sámánok: Lelkek és szimbólumok [Shamans: Spirits and Symbols], Budapest, Helikon Kiadó, 1992. Schamanen und Schamanismus, Augsburg, Pattloch, 1994. (also published in Japanese and Chinese) Shamans and Traditions, Budapest, Akadémiai Kiadó, 2007. Studies on Mythology and Uralic Shamanism, Budapest, 2000. DasBuch der Shamanen: Europa und Asien, München, Uüstein, 2002. (also published in Finnish and Estonian: 2003, enlarged edition in Hungarian: 2005, in Polish: 2009, in Turkish: 2012) Uralic Mythologies and Shamans, Budapest, Institute of Ethnology, 2010. Shaman Songs (co-authored with J. Sipos), Budapest, ISSR, 2010. The Shaman in Eurasia (ethnographic film produced together with Marcell Jankovics; prize for the best scientific documentation in Estonia, Pärnu 1990) Imregh, Monika Astrological and Magical Aspects in Marsilio Ficino s De vita libri tres Ficino published the united edition of the Three Books on Life in 1489, and dedicated it to Lorenzo de Medici. The book really needed protection because of the magical and astrological aspects present in the whole work but especially dominating the end of the second book (De vita longa - On Long Life) and very prominent throughout the third book (De vita coelitus comparanda — How Can We Get Life from the Heavens). Each book has its purpose: to give advice to his literate friends on how they can live healthily (Book 1) and longer (Book 2), and to explain how human life is connected to the life of the Universe (Book 3). Lately I have been working on a translation of Ficino’s De Vita from Latin into Hungarian. In my paper I examine the philosophical background of Ficino’s astrological, hermetical and magical approaches. ♦ 374 ABSTRACTS Biographical Note: Monika Imregh PhD (1966), classical philologist, Renaissance expert, Assistant Profes- sor at the Institute of History of Károii Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary. E-mail: imreghmonika@gmail.com Fields of Research: ancient and Renaissance Neoplatonism, works of Marsilio Ficino and Giovanni Pico della Mirandola. Publications in the Field: Ficino; A szerelemről, Kommentár Platón a Lakoma c. müvéhez [Ficino: On Lőve, Commentrary to Plato s Symposium] (translation and introduction), Budapest, Arcticus, 2001. Ficino: Három könyv az életről [Three Books on Life] (translation), Orpheus Noster, IIL, 2011/2,63-78. A vallás fogalma Marsilio Ficino Lakoma-kommentárjában [The Concept of Religion in Marsilio Ficino’s Commentary on the Symposium], in KendefFy, G.-Kopeczky, R. (eds.): A vallásfogalmak sokfélesége [The Variety of Concepts of Religion], Budapest, LHarmattan, Károii Könyvek, 2012, 111-121. K* Gábor, János The Desert Fathers as Mediators in the Coptic Apophthegmata Patrum The Apophthegmata patrum is a collection of the sayings and deeds of Egyptian ascetics, the majority of whom lived in late antique Scetis (northern Egypt). The descriptions were first transmitted orally in Coptic, then recorded in Greek, and later on translated into various languages, including Coptic, Latin, Syriac and Ge’ez. In the present paper I offer a translation and analysis of some Coptic stories, and explore the role these desert fathers played as spiritual mentors, exorcists and visionaries, and thus I demonstrate that they functioned as spiritual mediators in the contemporary society. Biographical Note: K. Gábor János PhD, Senior Lecturer at Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE). E-mail: kgaborjanos@gmail.com Fields of Research: Coptic religious texts. Publication in the Field: A lángoló remete. Víziók és jelenések a kopt Apophthegmata patrumban [The Monk Aflame. Visions and Apparitions in the Coptic Apophthegmata Patrum], Vallástu- dományi Szemle, VIL, 2011/4, 95-124. ♦ 375 ABSTRACTS Korpics, Márta The Visionary as a Mediator Medjugorje is a small village, once unknown even in Bosnia and Hercegovina, situated 30 kilometers Southeast of Mostan It is one of the places of Mary s visitations: the Blessed Virgin appears to a couple of young people, and transmits messages to them every month. My presentation aims at exploring the role of the “mediator” at a concrete place of pilgrimage. The “mediators” between God and man play a very important role in the Catholic Church. These seers, who often take part in the programmes of the place of pilgrimage, are of special importance to the pilgrims. Biographical Note: Márta Korpics PhD (1966), linguist and researcher in communication. E-mail: korpics@gmaíl.com Fields of Research: sacred communication, religion and communication, the pilgrimage in modernity. Publications in the Field: Szakrális kommunikáció [Sacred Communication] (co-edited with D. P. Szilczl), Budapest, 2007. Religions and Churches in a Common Europe, Hungary (co-authored with J. Wildmann), Budapest, 2010. Lázár, Imre The Rosary of Sacrifice: The Documents of a Private Revelation In this paper I present the diary of the revelations of a Hungarian mother of five, having the charisma of glossolalia and receiving messages from Christ. I discuss the way in which religious, political and biomedical authorities treat charismatic phenomena in general, and I also set forth the phenomenological, linguistic and psycho-physiological aspects of glossolalia. Through the narrative of the spiritual mediator, we follow her way of self-exploration achieved by contact with other female prophets who receive divine messages in Transylvania and Italy so that we can better understand the mysterious phenomenon she has been experiencing since 2001 in her charismatic Catholic religious context. I classify the messages, prayers and rituals of the diary, e.g. the texts about the secrets of the Rosary of Sacrifice, petitions, calvary texts, thanksgivings, dedications and invocations ♦ 376 · ABSTRACTS she was given via internal locution during her prophetic and hierophanic period between 2005 and 2007. Biographical Note: Imre Lazar PhD (1957), head of the Department of Medical Anthropology in the Insti- tute of Behavioral Sciences, Semmelweis University, Reader at the Institute of Social and Communication Sciences, Faculty of Humanities at Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church, Budapest. E-mail: lazar.imre@kre.hu Fields of Research: medical pluralism, spiritual healing and charismatic phenomena. Publications in the Field: Leviathan vizein [On the Waters of Leviathan], Ökotáj, XLI-XLIL, 2009, 47-58. A Mária-korszak kérdései [Questions of the Age of the Virgin Mary], at: www.forrasgaleria. hu/download.php Embodied and Displaced History: Spiritual Empowerment in Post-Communist Hunga- ry, inLuse, A.-Lázár, I. (eds.): Cosmologies of Suffering: Post-Communist Transformation, Sacral Communication and Healing, Newcastle upon Tyne, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2007,129-158. Táltos Healers, Neoshamans and Multiple Medical Realities in Postsocialist Hungary, in Johannessen, H.-Lázár, I. (eds.): Multiple Medical Realities, Oxford, Berghahn, 2006, 35-54. Spirituális gyógyítás egykor és ma [Spiritual Healing Once and Today], in Lázár, I.-Pikó, B. (eds.): Orvosi antropológia, Budapest, Medicina, 2012, 275-293. Lovasz, Iren Hama Medium”: A Female Spiritual Agent Today in Budapest The topic of this article is similar to my previous research on a Hungarian peasant healer and female visionary. I show the similarities and differences in the characters and activities of the two female spiritual healers. At the centre of the present article is Eniko, a contemporary spiritual agent, working in an urban context. She regards herself a medium who receives messages from the “Supreme Self” through her “spiritual channel”. Due to her spiritual agency she is able to promote, among other things, mental and physical healing, the ability to get pregnant and to overcome the fear of death. She is able to influence a person s energy levels and to turn tired energies into creative ones. She says, “the Creator uses me when I get the messages.” She is aware of the exact date when her “spiritual channel” opened up. ♦ 377 ABSTRACTS The method of research was anthropological fieldwork; I made interviews with Enikő, the religious specialist or spiritual agent, and also with people she had been “working” with, that is, people who had asked for her spiritual agency in order to get rid of their mental or bodily problems. This case study demonstrates the anthropological thesis that the figure of spiritual agent can appear in several forms in different circumstances and in several different social strata as a person reflecting on major problems in the values of the ethical and religious systems. Such spiritual agents can surely fulfill their clients personal needs, probably have a social function, and they might be an interesting subject of further anthropological research of our contemporary culture. Biographical Note: Dr Irén Lovász PhD, ethnographer, Associate Professor at the Department of Communication and Media Studies, Institute of Social and Communication Sciences, Faculty of Humanities at Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary Website: www.lovasziren.hu E-mail: lovasz.iren@chello.hu Fields of Research: anthropology of religion, ethnography of religion, folklore studies, sacral communication, language and performativity, communication in art, art therapy, music therapy, voice therapy. Publications in the Field: Sacred Language and Secret Speech, in Hoppál, M.-Pentikainen, J. (eds.): Northern Religions and Shamanism, Budapest-Helsinki, 1992, 39-45. Boundaries between Language and World in the Archaic World Concept, (Paper for the X Congress of the International Society of Folk Narrative Research), in Petzold, L. (ed.): Folk Narrative and World View, Innsbruck, 1992, 463-469. Oral Christianity in Hungary: Interpreting Interpretations, in Davies, J.-Wollaston, I. (eds.): The Sociology of Sacred Texts, Sheffield Academic Press, 1993, 72-82. Power of Sustainable Heritage through the Healing Voice of Traditional Singing, in Hoppál, M. (ed.): Sustainable Heritage, Budapest, EFI, 2010, 227-238. Szakrális kommunikáció [Sacred Communication], Budapest, EFI, 2002. (2nd edition: Budapest, L’Harmattan Kiadó, Károli Könyvek, 2011.) 378 ♦ ABSTRACTS Mimics, Zsuzsanna-Vass, Zoltán-Kövi, Zsuzsanna Attachment in Close Relationships and the Image of God We have studied visual representations of God-Self and significant Other-Self relationship patterns in the Sixty-Second Drawing Test on a sample of 200 young adults. In 75 percent of the participants, no other relationship was comparable to the Self-God pattern, suggesting either that the latter has unique characteristics or that it carries multiple relationship features simultaneously. Relationship similarity to parents was more remarkable in a small subgroup (16%) in which the God-Man relationship had an intersective” pattern, suggesting a collaborative” attitude to God. The containing pattern” of the Self-God relationship was unique, with no similarity to other relationship patterns, but comparable to the visual pattern of the attitude towards nature (17%). The “containing” quality of the Self-God relationship can perhaps be explained by the integrative effects of spirituality, as well as by the continuing experience of the Sacred in a life period when parental relationships become symmetrical and lose part of their influence. Biographical Mote: Dr Zsuzsanna Mimics PhD (1973), clinical psychologist, hypnotherapist, art therapist, Associate Professor at the Institute of Psychology, Department of Personality and Clinical Psychology at Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary. E-mail: mirnics.zsuzsa@gmail.com Fields of Research: personality psychology, spirituality, health psychology. Publication in the Field: Transzperszonális pszichológia és pszichoterápia [Transpersonal Psychology and Psychotherapy] (co-authored with E. Bagdy and E. Nyitray), Budapest, Kulcslyuk, 2011. Biographical Note: Professor Dr hábil. Zoltán Vass (1970), Associate Professor, head of the Institute of Psychology and the Department of General Psychology and Methodology at Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary, also head of the Work Gro- up for the Psychology of Visual Expression. E-mail: vass.zoltan@kre.hu Fields of Research: the psychological interpretation of drawings and paintings, the Seven- Step Configuration Analysis (SSCA), psychodiagnostics. ♦ 379 ABSTRACTS Publications in the Field: A Psychological Interpretation of Drawings and Paintings, The SSCA Method: A Systems Analysis Approach, Budapest, Alexandra, 2012. A rajzvizsgálat pszichodiagnosztikai alapjai [Psychodiagnostical Foundations of Examination of Drawings], Budapest, Flaccus, 2006. A képi kifejezéspszichológia alapkérdései - szemlélet és módszer [Basic Questions of the Psychology of Visual Expression: Approach and Methodology], Budapest, L’Harmattan, 2011. ESPD: 2008 Expert System for Projective Drawings (computer software, ISBN 9789639412439) A rajzvizsgálat pszichológiai alapjai [Psychological Foundations of Examination of Drawings], Budapest, Flaccus, 2003. Dynamikpsychischer Prozesse in Diagnose und Therapie beim Zeichnen undMalen, Wirken und Gestalten, Erzählen und Erfin den, Festschriftfür István Hárdi (co-edited with W. Sehringer), Budapest, Flaccus, 2004. A New Method for Configuration Analysis in Psychology, In 20 years: 1989-2009. The Sasakawa Young Leaders Fellowship Fund in Hungary (CD-ROM), Budapest, The Hungarian Academy of Sciences-Sasakawa Young Leaders Fellowship Fund, 2009. Egyéni és közös rajzvizsgálat [Individual and Common Examination of Drawings] (co- authored with V. Vass), in Császár-Nagy, N.֊Demetrovics, Zs.-Vargha, A. (eds.): A klinikai pszichológia horizontja, Budapest, L’Harmattan, 2011, 201-248. The Inner Formal Structure of the H-T-P Drawings: An Exploratory Study, Journal of Clinical Psychology, LIV., 1998, 1-9. A kinetikus iskolarajz [Kinetic School Drawing] (co-authored with M. Perger), Budapest, ELTE Eötvös Kiadó, Iskolapszichológia 32., 2011. Biographical Note: Dr Zsuzsanna Kövi PhD (1979), Assistant Professor at the Institute of Psychology, Department of General Psychology, of Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary. E-mail: zsuzsanna.suranyi@gmail.com Fields of Research: person-oriented analysis in the area of personality and health psychology, examination of the different spirituality and psychological well-being patterns, art therapy or adventure therapy. Publications in the Field: Examining Spirituality, Sense of Coherence, Mindfulness and Well-being with Person and Variable Oriented Methods, (Paper at MPT XXI. Hungarian Psychological Association Annual Meeting 30th May-lst June 2012, Szombathely, co-authored with Zs. Mimics, M. Szondy, M. Albu and A. Vargha) Mindfulness and Mental Health: Relation between Mindfulness and Emotional States, Life Satisfaction, Depression, Anxiety and Sense of Coherence, (Paper at MPT XXI. Hungarian Psychological Association Annual Meeting 30th May-lst June 2012, Szombathely, co-authored with M. Szondy, M. Albu and K. Hevesi) ♦ 380 * ABSTRACTS Person and Variable Oriented Approach in Examining the Contribution of Religiosity to Mental Health, (Paper at the 12th International Congress of Behavioural Medicine, 29th August-lsi September 2012, Budapest, co-authored with M. Szondyand A. Vargha) Nagypál, Szabolcs The Notion of Mediator in Christian Thought The author of this paper makes an attempt at systematizing the notion of mediator in Christian thought. Six levels of mediation can be discerned in Christian theology: that of Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, the angels, the Blessed Virgin Mary, the saints, and finally the Church. The three offices of Jesus Christ as a prophet, priest and pastor (or king) are the backbone of Christian mediation: since apart from the third person of the Holy Trinity, only Jesus Christ can properly be called mediator, all the other forms and levels should, rather, be named intercessors. The role of these intercessors is to help re-establish the destroyed relationship between God the Father and human beings. Biographical Note: Dr Szabolcs Nagypál PhD, ThD (1974), Assistant Professor at the Centre for the Theory of Law and Society at Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE), Faculty of Law and Political Sciences; Senior Research Fellow in the Benedictine Békés Gellert Ecumenical Ins- titute (BGÖI), Pannonhalma. E-mail: nagypalszabi@ajk.elte.hu Fields of Research: ecumenical theology and interreligious dialogue, mediation and alternative conflict resolution, legal ethics. Editor-in-chief of Békés Gellert Ecumenical Series (BGÖK) at UHarmattan Publishing House. Publication in the Field: Párbeszédtükör: A vallásközi találkozások módszertana [A Mirror for the Dialogue: The Methodology of Interreligious Engagements], Budapest, UHarmattan, 2013. Poes, Eva Communication with the Fairies in South-Eastern Europe In this paper I discuss the topic of mediating connection between humans and the fairy world. It is my goal thereby to place certain accepted research categories of supernatural communication (e.g. shamanism, possession), more precisely ♦ 381 * ABSTRACTS the way in which they are applied to such phenomena of European cultures, into a new perspective. My analysis of the data is confirmed by the material of Hungarian, Croatian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Romanian, Greek and Albanian folklore collections of the 20th and 21st century, and by documents of Hungarian and Croatian witchcraft trials from the early modern period. These data refer to the following phenomena: there existed 1) rites and beliefs of magicians communicating with the fairies, who gained their knowledge in the otherworld from fairies (they seem to be double beings who sometimes take human and sometimes fairy form); 2) societies of people in mutual contact with fairies (women who had half turned into fairies), who sometimes ‘travel’ to the fairies in a dream/trance, at other times the fairies visit them on earth as helping, healing supernatural beings who take shape in a female human form; 3) groups of fairies who fight soul battles with witches. My view is that contacts between humans and fairies form a special type of supernatural communication which belongs to the broad range of the most archaic layer of the communication with the dead. This unique archaic communication system shows the following main characteristics. There is no sharp boundary between this world and the other, the two parallel worlds merge into each other and their diffuse boundaries can easily be crossed. Communication between the human world and the otherworld takes place among typical double beings: humans who had half turned into demons and demons who occasionally put on a human shape. Differences between this world and the otherworld and switches between levels of existence by people travelling both ways are expressed in folklore narratives in unique ways, by metaphors characteristic of human-fairy communication. Biographical Note: Professor Dr Éva Pócs DSc (1936), Professor Emeritus at the University of Pécs (Hunga- ry), Department of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology, leader of the “East-West” Research Center on the Ethnology of Religion, in the frame of the ERC project Vernacular religion on the boundary of Eastern and Western Christianity: continuity, changes and interactions. E-mail: pocse@chello.hu Fields of Research: general concepts and phenomena of religious anthropology (such as the cult of the dead, divination, supernatural communication, shamanism and witchcraft); the comprehensive analysis of folk religion, folk beliefs and mentality in the early modern and modern period. Publications in the Field: Author of 10 books (including Fairies and Witches at the Boundary of South-Eastern and Central Europe, 1989, and Between the Living and the Dead: a Perspective on Witches 382 * ABSTRACTS and Seers in the Early Modern Age, 1998); editor of 26 books, and series editor of two series of sourcebooks and of the religious anthropological series Studies on the Transcendent” Schiller, Vera The Pythia as a Spiritual Mediator In several ancient religions prophetesses, and in general, priestesses mediate between two spheres. The Shamash-naditums of Sippar (who might be considered Shamash s wives) mediate between divinity and man, and pray for the well-being of their fathers house. In Egypt, the “divine consort is the princess who guarantees - as Amon’s spouse and presenter of his cult - the pharaoh s right to the throne. In ancient Hellas, the chief mediator was the Pythia. The means of her mediation is represented by an “air current , gas or vapour rising from Mount Parnassus. This claim, unambiguously attested in the primary sources, is not supported by geological measurements. About the way in which the Pythia was selected we only know that she must have come from Delphi. Also, there is little doubt that the candidate needed to have some specific talent or sensibility which enabled her to fulfill her special function. She sat on a high chair of prophecy and was caught by divine ecstasy. From parallel Greek religious traditions the following details seem probable: 1. Drinking blood was necessary before the beginning of the ceremony. Gaia s priestess from Aigeira also drank bull s blood before getting down to the cave of prophecies, while the priestess of Apollo Pythius or, again, of Apol- lo Deiradiotes drank lamb s blood. 2. The second step was the use of the holy spring. In Delphi, the priestess drank from the spring of Castalia, and wet her hair in its water. (According to Pausanias, the holy spring gave inspiration; according to Lucian, the priestess drank from it; while according to the scholia to Euripides, she wet their hair in it.) 3. Thereafter the prophetess was crowned with laurel leaves, or alternatively she chewed a few of them. 4. The next step was the descent into the depths of the cave where the inspiring vapour rose from. 5. Thereafter followed the contact with the holy breath: as the prophetess was sitting on the tripod or near it, she was shining in the light of the fire breaking out from the depths of the mountain. The tripod was made of ore, and in a groove of its surface, prophesying stones jumped about and rattled when the tripod itself was shaken. ♦ 383 ABSTRACTS 6. The prophetess informed people of the prophecies in a divine trance, in songs, poems or prose. 7. The prophetess (Pythia), weakened by the divine breath, descended from the tripod, and rested in silence and tranquillity. We also know about the prophetess that she led a withdrawn life, had no contact with people unknown to her (Plutarch states that she was kept away from any contact and had to remain intact, i.e. virgin, for her whole life). It was not the prophetess who announced the prophecies to those asking for them but some inhabitants of Delphi who sat near the tripod during the act of prophecy. These were second-order mediators who explained the mysterious messages suggested by the divinity. Biographical Note: Dr Vera Schiller PhD, retired lecturer of the Semmelweis University of Medicine. E-mail: karoghy@freemail.hu Fields of Research: history of antiquity, religious studies, ethnography. Publication in the Field: Az ókori templom építészet alkalmazkodása a rítus változásaihoz, Tanulmányok a Ter- mészettudományok a Technika és az Orvoslás történetéből [Adaptation of Ancient Temple Building to the Changes in Rites, Studies intő theHistory of Sciences, Technology andMedicine], XVII., 2010,123-128. Sepsi, Enikő Divination and Synchronicity as Spiritual Mediation This paper deals with the interconnection between some forms of divination, such as I-Ching or radix horoscope analysis, and synchronicity as described in Marie-Louise von Franz s book entitled On Divination and Synchronicity: The Psychology of Meaningful Chance. Marie-Louise von Franz was a disciple of Jung, but she was more advanced in mathematical and especially arithmetical thinking than her master. These forms of divination can be approached through the Jungian concept of (unus mundus the unity of physical and psychic world, instead of Western European causal thinking (where an effect is always preceded in time by the cause). Synchronicity is a fundamental order of the psychic and physical realms coinciding within a unique and unpredictable event. Mandalas, and, first and foremost, double mandalas are the basis of many techniques of divination and ♦ 384 * ABSTRACTS are also the inner psychic equivalents of the inus mundusrepresenting a double concept of time, where ‘doubleness’ is a sign for an unclarified concept of time that modern physicists are concerned with. Biographical Note: Dr Enikő Sepsi PhD (1969), Dean, Associate Professor, head of the Institute of Arts Studies and General Humanities, Faculty of Humanities, Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary. E-mail: sepsi.eniko@kre.hu Fields of Research: modern and contemporary French and Hungarian poetry, modern French philosophy of religion, theatre studies, theory of translation, artistic communication. Publications in the Field: Theatrum philosophicum du dépassement du moi, in Simone Weil - philosophic, mystique, esthétique (co-edited with G. Gutbrod and J. Janiaud), Paris, Archives Karélíne, 2012, 35-53. Décréation et poétique immobile (Alain, Mallarmé, Simone Weil et Pilinszky), in Simone Weil et le poétique (co-edited with Jerome Thélot and Jean-Michel Le Lannou), Paris, Editions Kimé, 2007,167-188. Notes sur la politesse et quelques autres sujets, in Murat, Michel-Worms, Frederic (eds.): Alain, littérature et philosophic mélées, Paris, Editions rue d’Ulm, 2012,119-128. Co-edition of the volume Indigenous Perspectives of North America, with Nagy J., Vassányi M., and Kenyeres, J, to appear at Cambridge Scholars Publishers, Newcastle-upon- Tyne, 2014. Spannraft, Marcellina The Poet as a Spiritual Mediator We can grasp spirituality in one s poetry not simply by analysing certain topics, symbols or metaphors of the texts, but also in the true relationship of the poet with God and his or her neighbours. Spiritual mediators live permanently in a close I-Thou personal relationship with God and with the other humans. They have to give up their ego and private life to be ready for the mediation. We can characterize the poetry of the 20th-century Hungarian poet János Pilinszky as resulting from dialogical thinking and deep personal experience. Each of his poems is a real prayer - from the point of view of the I-Thou encounter -, expressing different messages of human existence, turning to the Absolute Thou. The way a poet can leave the so-called T-solitude* is by finding the true words, and with this help one can begin a dialogue and approach the spiritual realities (F. Ebner). ♦ 385 ♦ ABSTRACTS Biographical Note: Dr Marcellina Spannraft PhD (1958), Associate Professor at the Institute of Social and Communication Sciences, Department of Communication and Media Studies, Faculty of Humanities, Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary E֊mail: mspannraft@gmail.com Fields of Research: semantics, stylistics, communication and the sacred, interpersonal communication. Publications in the Field: Lélekmetaforák — kognitív szemantikai megközelítésben [Metaphors of Spirit and Soul - in a Cognitive Approach], in Kemény, G. (ed.): A metafora grammatikája és stilisz- tikája, Budapest, Tinta Könyvkiadó, Segédkönyvek a nyelvészet tanulmányozásához X, 2001, 244-252. Költészet és szakralitás, Egy Goethe-vers és fordításai [Poetry and the Sacred. One of Goethe’s Poems and its Translations], Studia Caroliensia, 2008/2, 120-127. A Szűz Maria-litániák szemantikai megközelítése [A Semantic Approach to Virgin Mary’s Litanies], Vallástudományi Szemle, VIL, 2011/3, 106-114. Spât, Eszter Those Who Tall into Books’: Yezidi Seers in Modern Northern Iraq The kocheks or Yezidi seers of Northern Iraq constitute a very special group of spiritual mediators. Among the Yezidis, a socially marginalized religious minority, because of the existence of a hereditary caste system, religious leaders are born into their position regardless of their spiritual abilities. Instead of them, the role of spiritual mediators is fulfilled by the seers who act outside the formal religious establishment. Anyone can become a seer, regardless of gender, age, caste or religious knowledge; in fact, seers often come from a lowly background. However, being direct channels of communication between the spiritual and the material world, seers enjoy a great social prestige. During the Baath regime, Yezidi seers, who were seen as potential rivals of the centralized power, nearly disappeared. However, since the fall of the Saddam regime their number has started growing again. Biographical Note: Dr Eszter Spat PhD, Research Fellow at the Central European University, Department of Medieval Studies, Budapest. E-mail: spateszter@yahoo.com Fields of Research: Middle East, Kurds, religious minorities, Yezidis. ♦ 386 ♦ ABSTRACTS Publications in the Field: Late Antique Motifs in Yezidi Oral Tradition, Piscataway (NJ), Gorgias Press, 20Í0. Yezidis, London, Saqi Books, 2005. On Soil and Jinn: Ritual Practices and Syncretism among the Yezidis of Iraq, in Pries, A֊֊Martzolff, L.—Ambos, C. (eds.); Rituálé ah Ausdruck von Kulturkontakt: uSynkretismusf zwischen Negation undNeudefinitiön, Wiesbaden, Harrassowitz, Studies in Oriental Religions 67, 2003. Ima helyett: jezidi szentélyek Észak-Irakban [In lieu of Prayer: Yezidi Shrines in Northern Iraq], in Hoppál, B. ֊Szilágyi, Zs.—Vassányi, M. (eds.): Áldozat és ima, Budapest: L’Harmattan, Vallástudományi Könyvtár V, 2011,154-169. Egy gnósztikus mítosz a modern Közel-Keleten: a jezidi Korsó Gyermeke és Séth [A Gnostic Myth in the Modern Middle East: Seth and the Yezidi Son of the Jar’], Ókor, X., 2011,14-24. The Role of the Peacock Sanjak” in Yezidi Religious Memory, in Choyke, A.—Rasson, J.-Barbiera, L (eds.): Materializing Memory: Archeological Material Culture and the Semantics of the Past, Oxford, Archeopress, BAR International Series 1977, 2009, 105-116. Religious Oral Tradition and Literacy Among the Yezidis of Iraq, Anthropos, CIIL, 2008/2, 393-404. Vassånyi, Miklos The First Systematic Description of the Inuit Shaman (angekkok): Hans Egedes New Description of Ancient Greenland (1741) In this paper the author presents the probably earliest systematic description of Inuit shamanism, which is to be found in Greenland pastor Hans Egede s Det gamle Grønlands nye Perlustration (published in Copenhagen in 1741). This text, written in early modern Danish and hardly read today, offers a wealth of information on the figure and functions of the Inuit shaman (angekkok), on the native terminology referring to his practices, and gives us a review of the most important religious beliefs in the context of which the shamanistic practice was embedded. In this manner, the Danish Egede, also called Greenland s Apostle, discusses the concept of Torngarsuk, the primary spiritual being the Inuit identify in the natural world; that of the torngak, which is the personal helping spirit of the shaman; and the inua, which is a controlling spirit of a particular natural area or phenomenon as, for instance, the sea or the rocks. The paper presents and analyses Egedes description, cites the evidence of then-contemporary Inuit dictionary definitions, and compares Egede s report with modern sources, like Knud Rasmussens reports. The conclusion is that Egede s description is based on first-hand experience and is reliable enough even according to modern 387 ♦ ABSTRACTS standards, although its attitude towards shamanism and the Inuit in general is quite condemnatory. Biographical Note: Dr Miklós Vassányi PhD (1966), philosopher and scholar in Religious Studies at Károii Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary; Associate Professor and Deputy Dean for Research at the Faculty of Humanities of the same university. E-mail: vassanyi.miklos@gmaiI.com Fields of Research: metaphysics, philosophy of religion, history of modern philosophy, history of early medieval theology (St Denys the Areopagite, St Maximus the Confessor, Johannes Scottus Eriugena), Inuit shamanism, human sacrifice in the Aztec and Inca religion. Publications in the Field: Co-edition of the volume Aidozat és ima [Sacrifice and Prayer], with K. B. Hoppál and Zs. Szilágyi, Budapest, UHarmattan, Vallástudományi Kiskonyvtár [Library of Religious Studies/ series of the Hungarian Association for Religious Studies] 5., 2011. “Szellemhivók” - Knud Rasmussen és az inuit sámánizmus. Vallástudomány-tôrténeti bevezetõ és forráskôzlés [“Conjurers”: Knud Rasmussen and Inuit Shamanism. An Introduction into the History of Inuit Religious Studies, and Communication of Source Materials. With select bibliography]. Vallástudományi Szemle, V., 2009/3, 135-155. Arctic America through Medieval European Eyes: North-East America in the Old Icelandic Annals and Greenland Deeds. Forthcoming in the volume Indigenous Perspectives of North America, to appear at Cambridge Scholars Publishers, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 2014. Co-edition of the volume Indigenous Perspectives of North America, with J. Kenyeres, J. Nagy and E. Sepsi, to appear at Cambridge Scholars Publishers, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 2014. Az elsõ beszámoló a grönlandi inuit vallásról: Hans Egede Gronland-monográfiája (1741) [The First Report on Greenland Inuit Religion: Hans Egede’s Greenland Monograph, 1741]. Philological introduction, translation of Chapter 19 of Egede’s monograph, notes, bibliography. Forthcoming in Vallástudományi Szemle (Budapest), 2014. Voigt, Vilmos Buile Suibhne: an Old Irish Spiritual Mediator? (and some Parallels) BuileSuibhne ( The Frenzy of S/) is a well-known Old Irish text, representing the narrative genre “baile-buile” ( frenzy )- The known text variants go back to the 17th century. The events mentioned here are connected with the Battle of Moira ♦ 388 * ABSTRACTS (Mag Rath), A.D. 637, where King Suibhne, irritated by the noise of the battle, went insane, left human society, and lived as a madman in the forest, jumping from tree to tree. At the end of his life, however, he was accepted by the Chris- tian Church. The full story in prose, with many verses included, may date back to about 1200 A.D. There were several studies devoted to the analysis of its motifs. Recently Alexandra Berghoim examined the possible connection with “Old Irish shamanism” Her rather sceptical results are further elaborated in my paper, bringing some parallels to persons who went mad, lived as wild men in the forest and finally got baptized by the Church. The Cymro stories about Myrddin~Merlin as well as the Caledonian narratives about Lailoken follow the same pattern. Both (non-historical) heroes had been referred to from the 6th century A.D. onwards. Madmen erring in the forest were also popular motifs later, e.g. in the works of Shakespeare. The case of King Charles VI of France is an interesting parallel (described by contemporary chronicles). He was driven mad during a military march in 1392 by the sound of the weapons. After some time he recovered. But half a year later, when fire broke out during a court masquerade where the King had also dressed up as a forest madman, he relapsed into madness on account of the shocking experience. There are a few religious sects which want to travel to the heavens. Some of them jump upwards . In 1936 the Russian poet Osip Mandelstam saw in a Russian village Nilcolaevskoe the unsuccessful jumping by the group of priguns~skakuns. In world literature both the hero Suibhne (in English: Sweeney) and the plot became popular. Joseph Heller in his novel Catch 22 refers to it, too. An Italian writer, Italo Calvino wrote a famous novel in a similar vein, The Baron in the trees, in which the protagonist lives among the branches of the trees. But neither B.S., nor the parallels mentioned above belong to the shamanic complex of ideas, and the protagonists are not mediators, either. Biographical Note: Professor Dr Vilmos Voigt DSc (1940), Professor Emeritus of Eötvös Lorand University (ELTE), Department of Folklore. E-mail: voigt.vilmos@btk.elte.hu Fields of Research: folklore, theory of literature, semiotics, comparative religion. Publications in the Field: A magyar ősvallás problémái [Problems of the “Ancient Religion“ of the Hungarians], Budapest, Magyar Vallástudományi Társaság, 2003. ♦ 389 * ABSTRACTS A vallási élmény története, Bevezetés a vallástudományba [The History of Religious Experience, An Introduction to Religion], Budapest, Timp, 2004. A vallás megnyilvánulásai, Bevezetés a vallástudományba [Forms of Religion, An Introduction to Religion], Budapest, Timp, 2006. Zsirosné Seres, Judit-Vass, Zoltán-Mirnics, Zsuzsanna Drawings of Human Figures and Places as Mediators of Spirituality The study explored various representations of spirituality in children s drawings. According to Fowler’s theory of spiritual development, different types of spiritual representations are found in different developmental stages. Kindergarten children chose an anthropomorphic figure of God which reflected care, omnipotence, defense and fulfilment of infantile wishes. From adolescence on, an increasingly self-reflective, symbolic representation was found, related to the increasing receptiveness of spiritual values. Independently of the age, the most frequent motifs were the church and the cross. By preference, kindergarten children also represented angels in their drawings. Biographical Note: Judit Zsirosné Seres MA, special needs teacher, graduate student in psychology from Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary. E-mail: zs.s.judit@gmail.com Field of Research: the psychology of visual expression. Dr Zoltan Vass PhD; see above. Dr Zsuzsanna Mimics PhD; see above.
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genre (DE-588)4135952-5 Quelle gnd-content
genre_facet Quelle
id DE-604.BV043277713
illustrated Illustrated
indexdate 2024-07-10T07:22:05Z
institution BVB
isbn 9789632368603
language Hungarian
oai_aleph_id oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-028699190
oclc_num 953245011
open_access_boolean
owner DE-12
owner_facet DE-12
physical 389 Seiten Illustrationen 22 cm
publishDate 2014
publishDateSearch 2014
publishDateSort 2014
publisher Károli Gáspár Református Egyetem
record_format marc
series2 Károli könyvek
spelling A spirituális közvetítő szerkesztette Vassányi Miklós, Sepsi Enikő, Voigt Vilmos
Budapest Károli Gáspár Református Egyetem [2014]
389 Seiten Illustrationen 22 cm
txt rdacontent
n rdamedia
nc rdacarrier
Károli könyvek
Zusammenfassungen Seiten 369-390
Geschichte gnd rswk-swf
Spiritualizmus / tanulmányok
Vallásosság / népi
Vallási néprajz / tanulmányok
Geistheiler (DE-588)4262893-3 gnd rswk-swf
Spiritualität (DE-588)4116568-8 gnd rswk-swf
Schamanismus (DE-588)4052062-6 gnd rswk-swf
(DE-588)4135952-5 Quelle gnd-content
Schamanismus (DE-588)4052062-6 s
Spiritualität (DE-588)4116568-8 s
Geistheiler (DE-588)4262893-3 s
Geschichte z
DE-604
Vassányi, Miklós edt
Sepsi Enikő edt
Voigt Vilmos edt
Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen 19 - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028699190&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Abstract
spellingShingle A spirituális közvetítő
Spiritualizmus / tanulmányok
Vallásosság / népi
Vallási néprajz / tanulmányok
Geistheiler (DE-588)4262893-3 gnd
Spiritualität (DE-588)4116568-8 gnd
Schamanismus (DE-588)4052062-6 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4262893-3
(DE-588)4116568-8
(DE-588)4052062-6
(DE-588)4135952-5
title A spirituális közvetítő
title_auth A spirituális közvetítő
title_exact_search A spirituális közvetítő
title_full A spirituális közvetítő szerkesztette Vassányi Miklós, Sepsi Enikő, Voigt Vilmos
title_fullStr A spirituális közvetítő szerkesztette Vassányi Miklós, Sepsi Enikő, Voigt Vilmos
title_full_unstemmed A spirituális közvetítő szerkesztette Vassányi Miklós, Sepsi Enikő, Voigt Vilmos
title_short A spirituális közvetítő
title_sort a spiritualis kozvetito
topic Spiritualizmus / tanulmányok
Vallásosság / népi
Vallási néprajz / tanulmányok
Geistheiler (DE-588)4262893-3 gnd
Spiritualität (DE-588)4116568-8 gnd
Schamanismus (DE-588)4052062-6 gnd
topic_facet Spiritualizmus / tanulmányok
Vallásosság / népi
Vallási néprajz / tanulmányok
Geistheiler
Spiritualität
Schamanismus
Quelle
url http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028699190&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
work_keys_str_mv AT vassanyimiklos aspiritualiskozvetito
AT sepsieniko aspiritualiskozvetito
AT voigtvilmos aspiritualiskozvetito