Abstract
The History of Religious Beliefs and Ideas represents the Eliadian opus
magnum, as the Romanian scholar notes in the pages of his Journal. The
work, published in three volumes, contains, from a historical perspective,
the ideas about the sacred and the profane that Eliade developed in previous
works from a phenomenological perspective. Although criticisms have been
leveled at Mircea Eliade’s presentation of religious data in this monumental
work, The History of Religious Beliefs and Ideas remains a point of
reference for both the study of the history of religions and the analysis of
Eliadian thought and contribution to the discipline.