Ma Tsu
English
    
    
Proper noun
    
Ma Tsu
- Alternative spelling of Matsu (goddess).
- 1987, P. Sangren, History and Magical Power in a Chinese Community, page 207:- Similarly, Ma Tsu is revered because she protected immigrants in The Social Construction of Power.
 
- 2006, James Miller, Chinese Religions in Contemporary Societies, page 127:- After all, it was Koxinga who freed Taiwan from the rule of the barbarian Dutch, and Ma Tsu [Mazu] is vernerated for having aided him in this endeavour. Moreover, at local Ma Tsu [Mazu] temples in Taiwan, on frequently hears stories of how the goddess intervened to save people from the Japanese, head-hunting aborigines, floods and American bombs.
 
- 2008, Shirley Fong-Torres, The Woman Who Ate Chinatown: A San Francisco Odyssey, page 100:- On the side street between Pacific and Jackson, this Taoist and Buddhist temple houses the Goddess Ma-Tsu, who looks after travelers and visitors.
 
- 2011, Raymond Barnett, The Return to Treasure Island:- I lit a fresh stick of incense in my altar to Ma Tsu the sea-goddess.
 
 
    This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.