Hindu temple ( Mandir ), Delhi , India , 2005 ]]
, the Rosicrucian healing temple, Oceanside, California , United States , 1920 ]]
of the Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter-day Saints , Salt Lake City, Utah , 2003]]
The word has different meanings in the fields of Architecture , Religion , Geography , Anatomy , and Education .
The word is derived from the both more and less specific Latin word ''templum'' ("sacred place"). Initially, the templum was a section (from Greek temnein - to cut or divide) carved out of the heavens, used by the augurs for divination. - see Roman Temple . It is interesting to note that this spatial division has its temporal equivalent with ''tempus'' (the time) deriving from the same ''temnein'' origin, as a division of the duration.
A is a structure reserved for religious or spiritual activities, such as prayer and sacrifice, or analogous rites (as in masonry). It is a general term for house of Worship .
Some religions use the term temple, exclusively or alongside specific synonym(s):
, the Roman Catholic Church , Christian temple, Rome , Vatican City , 1506-1626 ]]
Hindu temple in the Tamil Nadu city of Madurai in southern India .]]
, an Islamic temple at the Temple Mount , Jerusalem , 687-691 ]]
, the Jewish temple in Jerusalem , 515 BCE ]]
, an Ancient Greek temple in Athens , 449 BCE ]]
Some religions refer to their temples by a unique word of their own:
- In Ancient Rome , only the native deities of Roman Mythology had a ; any equivalent structure for a foreign deity was called ''' Fanum '''.
- A Christian temple is called a . However, he does not live in a church but is omnipresent. As 1 Corinthians 6, verse 19 says Christians are the temple of God.
- ---In Western Christianity, some "private" temples are called , while major public ones are designated by a term reflecting its ecclesiastical status, such as ''' Cathedral ''' (i.e. seat of a diocesan bishop), ''' Basilica ''', or Minster , and/or proper to a cultural tradition, e.g. Kirk (Scottish, cognate with church) or Dom (Dutch and (German, English cognate Dome only used in architecture).
- ---In Orthodox Christianity (both Eastern and Oriental ) a temple is Church with base shaped like Greek Cross . See .
- --- Protestant denominations installed in France in the early modern era use the word "temple" (as opposed to "church," supposed to be Roman Catholic ); some more recently installed Christian denominations use "church."
- ---The Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter-day Saints (Mormons) uses both "church" and "temple" to denote different types of buildings. Normal worship services are held in churches while Mormon Temples are reserved for special Ordinances .
- A Jain temple is called a .
- A Hindu temple is variously called a ( Hindi ), a Kovil ( Tamil ), and an ''gudi''/''devalayam''/''kovela'' ( Telugu ).
- An Islam ic temple is called a (''masjid'' in Arabic )
- In in Jerusalem was the center of ancient Judaism and the most important Holy Site in the religion. The First Temple was built in the 10th Century BCE under King Solomon to replace the Tabernacle and was destroyed by the Babylon ians under Nebuchadnezzar in 586 BCE , marking the beginning of the Babylonian Exile . The Second Temple was constructed after the return from the Babylonian exile, from around 536 BCE to 515 BCE . Herod's Temple was a massive expansion of the Second Temple begun under Herod The Great around 19 BCE . It was almost entirely destroyed by Roman troops under Titus in 70 CE during the Siege Of Jerusalem of the First Jewish-Roman War , leaving only the Western Wall . Some , especially Reform synagogues, are called temples (as in Temple Emanu-El ; Temple Beth-El ), but Orthodox Judaism considers this inappropriate as they do not consider synagogues a replacement for the Temple In Jerusalem .
- A Sikh temple is called a .
- A Zoroastrian temple is called a .
- In Cambodia and Thailand , both Hindu and Buddhist temples are known as .
- Bahá'í Temples are known as "Mashriqu'l-Adhkárs"
- Masonic Temple s are meeting-places for Freemasons , who, though not a church, follow some religious practices in its external forms
- A Shintoist temple is called
In various historical periods, specific architectural styles were maintained strictly for major religious structures. These temple structures, along with military and palace structures, have often been the main surviving studied examples of certain kinds of architecture.
In particular, Greek and Roman temple architecture has been a major influence in Western public architecture. See List Of Ancient Temple Structures .
In Taiwan for non-Buddhist worship:
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