Spirit tablet
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Spirit_tablet"
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Spirit tablet

A spirit tablet for the earth god in Hong Kong
Chinese name
Chinese: 神主牌
Literal meaning: spirit master sign
alternative Chinese name
Chinese: 神位
Literal meaning: spirit seat
Japanese name
Kanji: 位牌

A Spirit tablet, Spirit seat or Ancestor post[1] is a placard used to designate the seat of a deity or past ancestor as well as to enclose it. It was originally created from traditional Chinese culture.

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General usage

A spirit tablet is often used for various deities and ancestors, with shrines found in households or in temples, where there are specific rooms for individual spirit tablets for ancestors. A spirit tablet acts as an effigy of a specific deity or ancestor. In Taoism, spirit tablets are often used for the spirits ancestors and sometimes such tablets are found under deities, which represent the enclosed spirit of the deity. This practice influenced the Buddhist faith, where tablets are found in many temples; however a tablets usage are not limited to ancestors, but to wandering spirits, demons, and preta as well.

When used, incense sticks are usually burned before the tablet. Sometimes fruits, tea and pastries are placed near the tablet to offer food to the spirit.

In Chinese folk religion for example, a household will have one or at least more tablets for specific deities:

  1. One outside the house at the front door (A shrine either to the Jade Emperor or the earth deity, the latter is placed above the door and one below it, respectively)
  2. One in the kitchen (A shrine to Zao Jun, the kitchen god)
  3. Two in the house, usually at least one in the living room (A shrine to any other deity or family ancestors)

Spirit tablets can be found not just amongst the Chinese but in other East Asian cultures, such as Japan, Korea, and Vietnam.

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Yeasia.com Using this as a quick reference to a Chinese name and English name match. It also conclude this is not something made up.

See also

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