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Difference between revisions of "Twenty-eight Indian patriarchs"

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[[File:4b50c343a z.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:4b50c343a z.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
<poem>
 
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'''twenty-eight [[Indian]] [[patriarchs]]'''
 
'''twenty-eight [[Indian]] [[patriarchs]]'''
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[天竺二十八祖・西天二十八祖・二十八祖] (Jpn Tenjiku-nijuhasso, Saiten-nijuhasso, or nijuhasso )
 
[天竺二十八祖・西天二十八祖・二十八祖] (Jpn Tenjiku-nijuhasso, Saiten-nijuhasso, or nijuhasso )
  
     Also, twenty-eight [[patriarchs]]. In the [[doctrine]] of the [[Zen]] (Chin [[Ch'an]]) school in [[China]] and [[Japan]], the [[patriarchs]] of the [[Zen]] [[teaching]] in [[India]] who inherited and [[successively]] transmitted [[Shakyamuni]] [[Buddha's]] [[enlightenment]], down through [[Bodhidharma]], the founder of the {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Zen school]]. [[Zen]] [[traditionally]] holds that the content of that [[transmission]] is a [[teaching]] that [[Shakyamuni Buddha]] communicated from "[[mind]] to [[mind]]" to [[Mahakashyapa]] and did not expound orally.  
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     Also, twenty-eight [[patriarchs]]. In the [[doctrine]] of the [[Zen]] ([[Chin]] [[Ch'an]]) school in [[China]] and [[Japan]], the [[patriarchs]] of the [[Zen]] [[teaching]] in [[India]] who inherited and [[successively]] transmitted [[Shakyamuni]] [[Buddha's]] [[enlightenment]], down through [[Bodhidharma]], the founder of the {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Zen school]]. [[Zen]] [[traditionally]] holds that the content of that [[transmission]] is a [[teaching]] that [[Shakyamuni Buddha]] communicated from "[[mind]] to [[mind]]" to [[Mahakashyapa]] and did not expound orally.  
  
 
The twenty-eight are  
 
The twenty-eight are  
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   (9) [[Buddhamitra]],  
 
   (9) [[Buddhamitra]],  
 
   (10) [[Parshva]],  
 
   (10) [[Parshva]],  
   (11) Punyayashas,  
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   (11) [[Punyayashas]],  
 
   (12) [[Ashvaghosha]],  
 
   (12) [[Ashvaghosha]],  
 
   (13) [[Kapimala]],  
 
   (13) [[Kapimala]],  
 
   (14) [[Nagarjuna]],  
 
   (14) [[Nagarjuna]],  
 
   (15) [[Aryadeva]],  
 
   (15) [[Aryadeva]],  
   (16) [[Rahulabhadra]] (also Rahulataor Rahulata),  
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   (16) [[Rahulabhadra]] (also Rahulataor [[Rahulata]]),  
 
   (17) [[Samghanandi]],  
 
   (17) [[Samghanandi]],  
 
   (18) [[Samghayashas]],  
 
   (18) [[Samghayashas]],  

Latest revision as of 13:31, 26 December 2023

4b50c343a z.jpg









twenty-eight Indian patriarchs


[天竺二十八祖・西天二十八祖・二十八祖] (Jpn Tenjiku-nijuhasso, Saiten-nijuhasso, or nijuhasso )



    Also, twenty-eight patriarchs. In the doctrine of the Zen (Chin Ch'an) school in China and Japan, the patriarchs of the Zen teaching in India who inherited and successively transmitted Shakyamuni Buddha's enlightenment, down through Bodhidharma, the founder of the Chinese Zen school. Zen traditionally holds that the content of that transmission is a teaching that Shakyamuni Buddha communicated from "mind to mind" to Mahakashyapa and did not expound orally.

The twenty-eight are

   (1)Mahakashyapa,
   (2) Ananda,
   (3) Shanavasa,
   (4) Upagupta,
   (5) Dhritaka,
   (6) Mikkaka,
   (7) Vasumitra,
   (8) Buddhananda,
   (9) Buddhamitra,
   (10) Parshva,
   (11) Punyayashas,
   (12) Ashvaghosha,
   (13) Kapimala,
   (14) Nagarjuna,
   (15) Aryadeva,
   (16) Rahulabhadra (also Rahulataor Rahulata),
   (17) Samghanandi,
   (18) Samghayashas,
   (19) Kumarata,
   (20) Jayata,
   (21) Vasubandhu,
   (22) Manorhita,
   (23) Haklenayashas,
   (24) Aryasimha,
   (25) Vasiasita,
   (26) Punyamitra,
   (27) Punyatara, and
   (28) [[Bodhidharma]].

See also; Zen school.

Source

www.sgilibrary.org