Paganism

History of Paganism
The Renaissance of the 1500s reintroduced
the Ancient Greek concepts of Paganism. Pagan symbols and traditions
entered European art, music, literature, and ethics.
The Reformation of the 1600s put a temporary halt to Pagan thinking.
Greek and Roman classics, with their focus on Paganism, were accepted
again during the Enlightenment of the 1700s. Paganism experienced
another rise in the 1800s and 1900s when modern forms of Buddhism and Hinduism
were growing in popularity. Like those religions, Paganism revered
nature. The 1900s also sparked the spread of indigenous religions and
religions with indigenous bases, like Candomble and Santeria. Hinduism and Taoism
influenced modern Paganism during the 1960s and 1970s. With the hippie,
ecological, and feminist movements of those times, more and more people
turned to Paganism.
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