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Daoxuan (Chinese: 道宣; pinyin:
Dàoxuān; Wade–Giles: Tao-hsüan; 596–667) was an
eminent Tang
dynasty Chinese Buddhist monk. He is
perhaps best
known as...
- gāosēng zhuàn),
Daoxuan (道宣)
possibly drew on Tanlin's
preface as a
basic source, but made
several significant additions: Firstly,
Daoxuan adds more detail...
- Wu
Daozi (c. 685 – c. 758 CE or c. 689 – c. 759 CE), also
known as
Daoxuan and Wu Tao Tzu, was a
Chinese painter of the Tang dynasty. The
British art...
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According to the
Dharmaguptaka Vinaya commentary (四分律刪繁補闕行事鈔, T. 1804) by
Daoxuan, newly-ordained
monks should leave one, three, or five
small knots of hair...
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especially when
secular powers were
hostile towards Buddhism. For example,
Daoxuan's (c. 667) Xu
Gaoseng Zhuan (Chinese: 續高僧傳; lit. 'Continued Biographies...
- Kumārajīva
Sengzhao Jizang Dharmakṣema
Paramartha Xuanzang Kuiji Woncheuk Daoxuan ****yuan
Tanluan Daochuo Shandao Zhiyi Zhanran Fazang Chengguan Śubhakarasiṃha...
- Kumārajīva
Sengzhao Jizang Dharmakṣema
Paramartha Xuanzang Kuiji Woncheuk Daoxuan ****yuan
Tanluan Daochuo Shandao Zhiyi Zhanran Fazang Chengguan Śubhakarasiṃha...
- the hall, or out of the
temple compound altogether. In the
early Tang,
Daoxuan wrote a
Standard Design for
Buddhist Temple Construction in
which the main...
- Kumārajīva
Sengzhao Jizang Dharmakṣema
Paramartha Xuanzang Kuiji Woncheuk Daoxuan ****yuan
Tanluan Daochuo Shandao Zhiyi Zhanran Fazang Chengguan Śubhakarasiṃha...
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Luoyang (AD 547), and Li Xian, in the Ming
Yitongzhi (1461),
concur with
Daoxuan's location and attribution. The
Jiaqing Chongxiu Yitongzhi (1843) specifies...