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Difference between revisions of "Samghadeva"

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'''[[Samghadeva]]'''
 
'''[[Samghadeva]]'''
([[僧伽提婆]]] (n.d.) (Skt; Jpn Sogyadaiba)
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([[僧伽提婆]]) (n.d.) (Skt; Jpn Sogyadaiba)
  
 
     A [[monk]] of [[Kashmir]] and a translator of [[Buddhist scriptures]] into {{Wiki|Chinese}}. [[Samghadeva]] went to [[Ch'ang-an]] in [[China]] between the years 365 and 384, and translated [[Buddhist scriptures]] there. From [[Ch'ang-an]] he moved to Lo-yang and then went to Mount Lu at the invitation of Hui-yüan who had [[heard]] of his reputation. Samghadeva's translations include the [[Medium-Length Agama Sutra]], the {{Wiki|Increasing}} by One [[Agama Sutra]], The Eight-part Treatise, and The [[Heart]] of the [[Abhidharma]].
 
     A [[monk]] of [[Kashmir]] and a translator of [[Buddhist scriptures]] into {{Wiki|Chinese}}. [[Samghadeva]] went to [[Ch'ang-an]] in [[China]] between the years 365 and 384, and translated [[Buddhist scriptures]] there. From [[Ch'ang-an]] he moved to Lo-yang and then went to Mount Lu at the invitation of Hui-yüan who had [[heard]] of his reputation. Samghadeva's translations include the [[Medium-Length Agama Sutra]], the {{Wiki|Increasing}} by One [[Agama Sutra]], The Eight-part Treatise, and The [[Heart]] of the [[Abhidharma]].

Latest revision as of 02:41, 5 April 2016

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Samghadeva
(僧伽提婆) (n.d.) (Skt; Jpn Sogyadaiba)

    A monk of Kashmir and a translator of Buddhist scriptures into Chinese. Samghadeva went to Ch'ang-an in China between the years 365 and 384, and translated Buddhist scriptures there. From Ch'ang-an he moved to Lo-yang and then went to Mount Lu at the invitation of Hui-yüan who had heard of his reputation. Samghadeva's translations include the Medium-Length Agama Sutra, the Increasing by One Agama Sutra, The Eight-part Treatise, and The Heart of the Abhidharma.

Source

www.sgilibrary.org