dominantReligionPolicy
P1428
predicate
Indicates the policy or stance an authority adopts toward the religion that holds dominant or majority status within a given context.
Aliases (2)
- religiousPolicy ×61
- religiousPolicyUnderAkbar ×1
Sample triples (64)
| Subject | Object |
|---|---|
| Almohad dynasty | enforcement of doctrinal conformity ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Almohad dynasty | persecution of non-Muslims ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Almohad dynasty | strict monotheism ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Asaf Jahi dynasty | patronage of Islamic institutions ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Asaf Jahi dynasty | support for multi-religious population ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Bengal Sultanate | patronage of Sufism ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Ceylon (Dutch Ceylon) | promotion of Dutch Reformed Church ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Colony of Pennsylvania | religious tolerance ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Constans | supported Nicene Christianity ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Constitutional Act 1791 | affected status of the Church of England in the Canadas ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Continental Freemasonry | often does not require the Volume of the Sacred Law to be open on the altar ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Continental Freemasonry | often removes explicit references to a personal God from rituals ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Declaration of Indulgence | toleration of Protestant Nonconformists ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Declaration of Indulgence | toleration of Roman Catholics ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Democratic Republican Alliance | secular ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Deutsches Jungvolk | anti‑clerical tendency ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Directory (France) | secularism ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Dominion of New England | toleration for Anglicans in Puritan New England ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Dutch colonial government | Christian missionary support ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Dutch colonial government | regulation of Islam ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Edo period | suppression of Christianity ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Franks | support of Latin Church ("religiousPolicy") → |
| French First Republic | Civil Constitution of the Clergy (continuation of its effects) ("religiousPolicy") → |
| French First Republic | dechristianization campaign ("religiousPolicy") → |
| French Revolution | Civil Constitution of the Clergy ("religiousPolicy") → |
| French Revolution | dechristianization campaign ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Heraclius | promotion of Monothelitism ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Hitler Youth | anti-Christian tendencies ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Korea under Japanese rule | suppression of Korean nationalist religious movements ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Licinius | initial support for Christian church ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Licinius | legalization of Christianity ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Lodi dynasty | Sunni Islam ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Mamluk dynasty of Delhi | Sunni Islam ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Meiji era | State Shinto promotion ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Montagnards | de-Christianization campaigns (in part of the faction) ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Mughal Empire | sulh-i kul ("religiousPolicyUnderAkbar") → |
| National Constituent Assembly | Civil Constitution of the Clergy ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Nguyễn dynasty | Confucian state ideology ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Pacification of Ghent | temporary religious peace ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Pacification of Ghent | toleration between Catholics and Protestants in most provinces ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Pala Empire | patronage of Mahayana Buddhism ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Pala Empire | tolerance towards Hinduism ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Personal Rule (1629–1640) | enforcement of ceremonial worship and uniformity ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Personal Rule (1629–1640) | promotion of Arminianism within the Church of England ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth | relative religious tolerance ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Qutb Shahi dynasty | Shia patronage with relative tolerance of Sunnis and Hindus ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Restoration (England) | Clarendon Code enforcement ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Restoration (England) | persecution of dissenters ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Restoration (England) | re-establishment of the Church of England ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Rump Parliament | toleration for many Protestant sects ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Samanid Empire | support for Sunni orthodoxy ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Sambhaji | patronage of Hindu temples and Brahmins ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Saudi Arabia | Islamic law as main legal basis ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Second Spanish Republic | separation of church and state ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Second Spanish Republic | strong anticlerical measures ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Soviet Union | state atheism → |
| Soviet government | state atheism → |
| Swedish Empire | state Lutheran church ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Tokugawa shogunate | persecution of Christianity ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Tokugawa shogunate | support for Buddhism ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Tokugawa shogunate | support for Shinto ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Union of Utrecht | provincial freedom of religion ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Union of Utrecht | toleration for different Christian denominations ("religiousPolicy") → |
| Zeno | attempt to reconcile Chalcedonian and Miaphysite factions ("religiousPolicy") → |