Kumarajiva
Kumarajiva , 344-413, Buddhist scholar and missionary, b. Kucha, in what is now Xinjiang, China. When his mother, a Kuchean princess, became a nun, he followed her into monastic life at the age of seven. He grew up in centers of Hinayana Buddhism , but he was converted to Mahayana Buddhism in his teens and became a specialist in Madhyamika philosophy. In 383, Chinese forces seized Kucha and carried Kumarajiva off to China. From 401 he was at the Ch'in court in the capital Chang'an (the modern Xi'an), where he taught and translated Buddhist scriptures into Chinese. More than 100 translations are attributed to him. Of these only about 24 can be authenticated, but they include some of the most important titles in the Chinese Buddhist canon. Kumarajiva's career had an epoch-making influence on Chinese Buddhist thought, not only because he made available important texts that were previously unknown, but also because he did much to clarify Buddhist terminology and philosophical concepts. He and his disciples established the Chinese branch of the Madhyamika, known as the San-lun, or "Three Treatises" school.
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Many Petals of the Lotus, Five Asian Buddhist Communities in Toronto. (Book Reviews/Comptes Rendus).
Magazine article from: The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology; 2/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...Tibetan, Vietnamese, Cambodian and Chinese Buddhist communities, some of whom settled...permanent Buddhist monk until 1996. The Chinese Buddhist community, the largest by far, is...immigration. In Toronto there are numerous Chinese Buddhist temples representing a variety of...
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Donors of Longmen; faith, politics, and patronage in medieval Chinese Buddhist sculpture.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 2/1/2007; 125 words
; 9780824829940 Donors of Longmen; faith, politics, and patronage in medieval Chinese Buddhist sculpture. McNair, Amy. U. of Hawai'i Pr. 2007 230 pages $52.00 Hardcover NB1912 The Longmen Grottoes near Luoyang, China are the...
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Burning for the Buddha; self-immolation in Chinese Buddhism.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 5/1/2007; 143 words
; ...buddha-hood as distinct from meditation and learning, which stress practices of the mind. He examines the representations of Chinese Buddhist self-immolators, their motivations, and the literary crafting of their stories from the late fourth century to the early...
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The revival of Buddhist monasticism in medieval China.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 2/1/2007; 118 words
; ...religious studies, U. of the West, California) explores the phenomenon by taking as a case study one of the most important Chinese Buddhist monks, Daoxuan (596-667). Analyzing his writings, Chen focuses especially with his understanding of the crisis confronting...
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Suramgamasamadhisutra; the concentration of heroic progress, an early Mahayana Buddhist scripture. (reprint, 1998).(Brief article)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 2/1/2009; 151 words
; ...beginning in 186 CE. The final translation, by Kumarajiva at the beginning of the fifth century, survives as part of the modern Chinese Buddhist canon. It is this Chinese version that Lamotte translated and annotated into the French hroique, which was published by...
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An introduction to Chinese philosophy; from ancient philosophy to Chinese Buddhism.(book)(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 8/1/2006; 100 words
; ...here offer a full history of Chinese philosophy. Rather she introduces ancient Chinese philosophy in 600 to 200 BCE, and Chinese Buddhist in 300-900 AD. Her account could be used as a textbook in college course on Chinese or Asian philosophy, but she assumes...
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Vicissitudes of the Bhikkhuni Order.
Newspaper article from: Yasodhara-Newsletter on International Buddhist Women's Activities; 10/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...Bhikkhunis Order. When he got back to China he reported to the Chinese Buddhist leaders of the availability of Sinhalese bhikkhunis. At...and nuns became available. Mission to China Therefore the Chinese Buddhist leaders asked their Emperor to make a request to the Sinhalese...
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Heaven or Hell: Images of Chinese Buddhist and Daoist Deities and Immortals.(Beyond the exhibition)
Magazine article from: ROM Magazine; 6/22/2007; 56 words
; This exhibit features more than 20 Chinese religious paintings and prints from the 10th through the 20th century, many of which have never before been on view. Several works depict Buddhist and Daoist concepts of heaven or hell as well as deities and divine figures. Herman Herzog Levy Gallery, Main
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The religious varieties of ethnic presence: a comparison between a Taiwanese immigrant Buddhist temple and an evangelical Christian church.
Magazine article from: Sociology of Religion; 6/22/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...millennium, Sunday, January 2, 2000. To inaugurate the beginning of the twenty-first century, Dharma Light Temple, (1) a Chinese Buddhist temple, hosted a World Peace Day, inviting groups from different religious faiths in the community to share in a ceremony...
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The Heart of the Prajna Paramita Sutra.(The Heart of the Prajna Paramita Sutra: Verses Without a Stand and Prose Commentary)(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Newspaper article from: Wisconsin Bookwatch; 7/1/2005; 185 words
; ...more than two thousand years. The Venerable Hsuan Hua (1918-1995) was one of the foremost Tripitaka and Chan Masters of Chinese Buddhist in the U.S. and in The Heart Of The Prajna Paramita Sutra: Verses Without A Stand And Prose Commentary offers western readers...
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Kumarajiva
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Kumarajiva Kumarajiva (344-409) was an Indian Buddhist monk and one of the world's greatest...previously rendered into Chinese only in crude or even incoherent versions. Kumarajiva was born in the central Asiatic city of Kucha, son of an Indian Brahmin...
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ü
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...omnipotent. These essays, and his correspondence with Kumarajiva, begun in 405 or 406, are Hui-y ü an's lengthiest...not completely understood the Madhyamika philosophy that Kumarajiva expounded and that he was still, in part at leas
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Madhyamika
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...was transmitted to Tibet. Madhyamika was also transmitted to China as the San-lun, or Three Treatises, school, introduced by Kumarajiva . Bibliography: See T. R. V. Murti, The Central Philosophy of Buddhism (2d ed. 1960, repr. 1970); D. T. Suzuki, Outlines of...
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Tao-an
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...him the most important figure in early Chinese Buddhism, before he was overshadowed by his disciple Hui-Y ü an and by Kumarajiva, who was brought to China through Tao-an's influence. Taoan died in Ch'ang-an. Further Reading The once voluminous writings...
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