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====Popular religion==== [[Chinese folk religion]] was centred around the patriarchal family and [[Shen (Chinese religion)|shen]], or spirits. Common practices included [[Ancestor veneration in China|ancestor veneration]], [[filial piety]], [[Chinese communal deity religion|local gods and spirits]]. Rites included [[Ancestral veneration in China#Practices|mourning, funeral, burial, practices]].<ref>Richard J. Smith (2007). ''[http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/cosmos/prb/journey.htm Settling the Dead: Funerals, Memorials and Beliefs Concerning the Afterlife] {{Webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927095758/http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/cosmos/prb/journey.htm |date=27 September 2011}}''. ''Living in the Chinese Cosmos: Understanding Religion in Late-Imperial China''</ref> Since they did not require exclusive allegiance, forms and branches of [[Confucianism]], [[Buddhism]], and [[Daoism]] were intertwined, for instance in the syncretic [[Three teachings]].<ref>"Living in the Chinese Cosmos: Understanding Religion in Late Imperial China (1644β1911)" (Columbia University) [http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/cosmos/ort/teachings.htm Institutional Religion: The Three Teachings] {{Webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170508234058/http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/cosmos/ort/teachings.htm |date=8 May 2017}}</ref> Chinese folk religion combined elements of the three, with local variations.{{sfnp|Lagerwey|2010|pp=6β7}} County magistrates, who were graded and promoted on their ability to maintain local order, tolerated local sects and even patronised local temples as long as they were orderly, but were suspicious of [[Chinese salvationist religions|heterodox sects]] that defied state authority and rejected imperial doctrines. Some of these sects indeed had long histories of rebellion, such as the [[Way of Former Heaven]], which drew on Daoism, and the White Lotus Society, which drew on millennial Buddhism. The White Lotus Rebellion (1796β1804) confirmed official suspicions as did the Taiping Rebellion, which drew on millennial Christianity.
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