English:
Identifier: mythologyofall12gray (find matches)
Title: The Mythology of all races ..
Year: 1918 (1910s)
Authors: Gray, Louis Herbert, 1875- ed Moore, George Foot, 1851-1931, joint ed MacCulloch, J. A. (John Arnott), 1868-1950. joint ed
Subjects: Mythology
Publisher: Boston, Marshall Jones company
Contributing Library: Princeton Theological Seminary Library
Digitizing Sponsor: MSN
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ch the same underlying notion.^^ When the rains are verylate in coming, a huge rope of twisted rattan or bamboo isprepared, and the entire community, men, women, and chil-dren, pull at it. There is no attempt at choosing sides, or gettingequal numbers to pull against one another. It is usually a caseof the north of the village against the south, or of the east againstthe west. Occasionally it may be village against village, butthat is more common in the case of tugs of war which are heldto determine who shall have the right to set fire to a deadmonks funeral pyre. PLATE XIII Funeral Pyre of a Burmese Monk A Pongyi, or mendicant Buddhist monk, is in-variably cremated, and his pyre is always decorative,and sometimes very elaborate. It is not fired by amatch, but by rockets discharged by the villagersin the area of his ministry. These rockets are di-rected by guide-ropes, and the successful villageexpects good fortune, at least for the coming year.After a photograph by P. Klier, Rangoon.
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THE FESTIVALS OF THE INDO-CHINESE 327 The dragon head-pieces possibly hint at serpent-worship,which may have been brought from India with Brahmanism.In any case Brahman traces in Siam are far more conspicuousthan in Burma, even in Pagan or in Tharekettara, the ancientname of Prome. In many places on the coast of southern Siamhundreds of phra phim (stamped gods) have been found,some with the features of the Buddha on the obverse and Paliformulae on the reverse, and some impressed with one or otherof the Hindu divinities. Caves are the usual places where suchobjects are discovered, often underneath a layer of batsguano three feet thick. British Museum experts who haveexamined them pronounce them to date from the twelfthcentur) and to be the counterparts of the tablets found inKasmir, Tibet, and parts of north-west India. Besides thesethere are abundant remains of stone and bronze sacred imagesin all the ancient cities and the older pagodas. The Buddha isthe commonest, but great numbers
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