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Amoghavajra (Sanskrit: अमोघवज्र
Amoghavajra; Chinese: 不空; pinyin: Bùkōng; ****anese: ****ū; Korean: 불공; Vietnamese: Bất Không, 705–774) was a
prolific translator...
-
versions of the dhāraṇī
proper by or
attributed to Vajrabodhi's
disciple Amoghavajra: (1) The Thousand-Handed Thousand-E****
Bodhisattva Avalokitasvara's Great-Comp****ionate...
- the
Chinese people. The
Tantric masters Śubhakarasiṃha,
Vajrabodhi and
Amoghavajra,
established the
Esoteric Buddhist Zhenyan (Chinese: 真言, "true word"...
-
centuries after the
appearance of the
original version, by the monk
Amoghavajra (Bukong 不空), one of the most
important figures in the
Chinese Esoteric...
-
Indian vajrācāryas (esoteric masters) like Śubhakarasiṃha,
Vajrabodhi and
Amoghavajra.
These esoteric teachings would later flourish in ****an
under the au****es...
-
disciples of
Amoghavajra did
ceremonies for the
state and emperor. Tang
dynasty Emperor Suzong was
crowned as
cakravartin by
Amoghavajra after victory...
- pinyin: rénhuáng) - of
those who were near death. A tale
found in
Amoghavajra's translation of the
Humane King Sūtra
relates how a
heterodox (i.e. non-Buddhist)...
- fact that six of the
Sanskrit texts translated by the
esoteric master Amoghavajra into
Chinese are
devoted entirely to him. Indeed, Acala's rise to a more...
- (present-day Xi'an).
Accompanying him was his soon-to-be-famous disciple,
Amoghavajra. Like Subhakarasimha, who
preceded him by four years,
Vajrabodhi spent...
- was his successor,
Amoghavajra, who saw the firm
establishment of
Esoteric Buddhism as a
school of
thought in China.
Amoghavajra was the son of a South...