Candomblé Ketu
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Candomblé Ketu (or Queto in Portuguese) is the largest and most influential branch (nation) of Candomblé, a religion practiced in Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay. Its liturgical language, known as Iorubá or Nagô, is a dialect of Yoruba.
History
Queto is a system of beliefs that merges the Yoruba mythology (brought to the New World by Yoruba slaves) with Christianity and Indigenous American traditions.[1] Queto developed in the Portuguese Empire. Yoruba slaves carried with them various religious customs, including a trance and divination system for communicating with their ancestors and spirits, animal sacrifice, and sacred drumming and dance.[2][3] Its origins are entwined with the religious and beneficent brotherhoods (irmandades) organized by the Roman Catholic Church among ethnic Yoruba slaves; the Order of Our Lady of the Good Death (Nossa Senhora da Boa Morte), for women, and the Order of Our Lord of the Martyrdom (Nosso Senhor dos Martírios), for men.
Pantheon
- Olódùmarè
- Olórun
- Olofi
- Exú
- Ogúm
- Oxossí
- Osún
- Oxalá
- Orumilá
- Xangô
- Yemanjá
- Oxúm
- Ossaím
- Oyá
- Obaluaiê
- Nanã
- Oxumaré
- Obá
- Ewá
- Ibejí
- Logunedê
- Irocô
See also
References
External links
- Santeria.fr :: Todo lo que siempre quiso saber sobre la Santeria
- Santeria.fr :: Everything you wanted to know about Santeria
- Candomblé Ketu
- Ilê Opó Afonjá[dead link], a major Ketu house in Salvador
- Ama, A Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade