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Difference between revisions of "Wa-kuan-ssu"

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<poem>
Wa-kuan-ssu
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[[Wa-kuan-ssu]]
 
[[瓦官寺]] (PY [[Waguansi]]; Jpn [[Gakan-ji]])
 
[[瓦官寺]] (PY [[Waguansi]]; Jpn [[Gakan-ji]])
  
     A [[temple]] built in 364 by Hui-li in Chien-k'ang, [[China]]. Many {{Wiki|eminent}} {{Wiki|priests}} delivered lectures on [[Buddhist]] [[doctrines]] and [[scriptures]] there, among them, [[T'ient'ai]]. After practicing for seven years under [[Nan-yüeh]] on [[Mount Ta-su]], [[T'ient'ai]] (also known as [[Chih-i]]) lived in this [[temple]] for eight years until he moved to Mount [[T'ient'ai]] in 575. While at Wa-kuan-ssu [[temple]], he lectured on The [[Treatise on the Great Perfection of Wisdom]] and the [[Lotus Sutra]], and also wrote The [[Teaching]] of the Practice of [[Meditation]], which reflects his later [[ideas]] in their early stages of development.
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     A [[temple]] built in 364 by [[Hui-li]] in Chien-k'ang, [[China]]. Many {{Wiki|eminent}} {{Wiki|priests}} delivered lectures on [[Buddhist]] [[doctrines]] and [[scriptures]] there, among them, [[T'ient'ai]]. After practicing for seven years under [[Nan-yüeh]] on [[Mount Ta-su]], [[T'ient'ai]] (also known as [[Chih-i]]) lived in this [[temple]] for eight years until he moved to [[Mount T'ient'ai]] in 575. While at [[Wa-kuan-ssu]] [[temple]], he lectured on The [[Treatise on the Great Perfection of Wisdom]] and the [[Lotus Sutra]], and also wrote The [[Teaching]] of the Practice of [[Meditation]], which reflects his later [[ideas]] in their early stages of development.
 
</poem>
 
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{{R}}
 
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Latest revision as of 09:10, 19 September 2013

Kyoto-japan.jpg

Wa-kuan-ssu
瓦官寺 (PY Waguansi; Jpn Gakan-ji)

    A temple built in 364 by Hui-li in Chien-k'ang, China. Many eminent priests delivered lectures on Buddhist doctrines and scriptures there, among them, T'ient'ai. After practicing for seven years under Nan-yüeh on Mount Ta-su, T'ient'ai (also known as Chih-i) lived in this temple for eight years until he moved to Mount T'ient'ai in 575. While at Wa-kuan-ssu temple, he lectured on The Treatise on the Great Perfection of Wisdom and the Lotus Sutra, and also wrote The Teaching of the Practice of Meditation, which reflects his later ideas in their early stages of development.

Source

www.sgilibrary.org