manichaeism in English

noun
1
a dualistic religious system with Christian, Gnostic, and pagan elements, founded in Persia in the 3rd century by Manes ( circa 216– circa 276). The system was based on a supposed primeval conflict between light and darkness. It spread widely in the Roman Empire and in Asia, and survived in eastern Turkestan (Xinjiang) until the 13th century.
The kings converted to Manichaeism , the ‘religion of light’, imported by refugees from the Middle East.

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "manichaeism" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "manichaeism", or refer to the context using the word "manichaeism" in the English Dictionary.

1. Says The New Encyclopædia Britannica: “Manichaeism arose out of the anguish inherent in the human condition.”

2. The Bogomils: A Study in Balkan Neo-Manichaeism traces the development of this little-understood heresy from its Middle Eastern roots

3. Priscillian's emphasis on celibacy, however, ran Afoul of the church, which confused his teaching with Manichaeism and condemned his doctrines at the Council of Sargossa in 380

4. Under the 8th-century Abbasids, Arabic zindīq and the adjectival zandaqa could "denote many different things, though it seems primarily (or at least initially) to have signified a follower of Manichaeism."

5. Albigensianism (a Christian movement considered to be a medieval descendant of Manichaeism in southern France in the 12th and 13th centuries; characterized by dualism (asserted the coexistence of two mutually opposed principles, one good and one evil); was

6. Aeon, (Greek: “age,” or “lifetime”), in Gnosticism and Manichaeism, one of the orders of spirits, or spheres of being, that emanated from the Godhead and were attributes of the nature of the absolute; an important element in the cosmology that developed around the central concept of Gnostic d