5. The birth of Organized Daoism

Source 1

Taoist Priest

A photo of a Daoist Priest, taken in Wudang, a small mountain range in Hubei Province, easternmost part of Central China. A sacred place for Daoism.

Photo by Chris Bacigalupo
Public Domain
Retrieved in: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Taoist_priest_wudang.JPG (02/09/2014).

Source 2

Daoist investiture of a local god

This scroll of the Ming Dynasty ( 1368–1644) illustrates the investiture of a local god into the official Daoist pantheon.

Investiture of a Daoist Deity - Unidentified Artist
Period: Ming dynasty (1368–1644) - Date: inscription dated 1641
Culture: China
Medium: Handscroll; ink color, and gold on silk
Credit Line: Fletcher Fund, 1938 - Metropolitan Museum of Art

Source 3

The Three Pure Ones

A Daoist scroll depicting the Three Pure Ones, important Daoist deities which symbolize pivotal cosmological meanings

Yao, Three Pure Ones, from a set of 17 Daoist Scroll Paintings,
Date: 1845
Bates College Museum of Art