-
Scriptures (traditional Chinese: 大藏經;
simplified Chinese: 大藏经; pinyin:
Dàzàngjīng; ****anese: 大蔵経; rōmaji: Daizōkyō; Korean: 대장경; romaja: Daejanggyeong;...
- The Taishō Tripiṭaka (Chinese: 大正新脩大藏經; pinyin: Dàzhèng Xīnxīu
Dàzàngjīng; ****anese: Taishō Shinshū Daizōkyō; lit. "Taishō
Revised Tripiṭaka") is a definitive...
-
canon is
Great Storage of
Scriptures (traditional Chinese: 大藏經; pinyin:
Dàzàngjīng). The Pāli
Canon maintained by the Theravāda
tradition in
Southeast Asia...
- Tripiṭaka Koreana's
texts were even used in the
Chinese edition of
Zhonghua dazangjing which was
based on the Jin
edition which in turn was a
sister edition...
- Zhōnghuá
dàzángjīng (大 日本 續 藏經),
volume 7, text no. 2 Taishō Shinshū Daizōkyō (大 正 新 修 大 大 藏經),
volume 8, text no. 222 Zhōnghuá
dàzángjīng (大 日本 續 藏經)...
- of Mahāyāna Buddhism,
which draws on the
Chinese Buddhist Canon (大藏經,
Dàzàngjīng, "Great
Storage of Scriptures") as well as
numerous Chinese traditions...
-
Koshiki texts in ****an. They are a
significant part of the
historic Chinese dazangjing (scriptures of the
great repository) and the
Korean daejanggyeong – the...
-
there are
various editions of the
Chinese Buddhist canon (大藏經; pinyin:
Dàzàngjīng), one of the most
widespread modern editions is the ****anese
Taisho Tripitaka...
- Specifically, in 1440, the
Buddhist collection Chinese Buddhist Canon (大藏經;
Dàzàngjīng; 'Great
Storage of Scriptures')
consisting of 6361
volumes in 636 books...
- Tripiṭaka"
first came into use in the Sui
dynasty (581-618), also
known as the
Dàzàngjīng 大藏經,
referring to all the
classic scriptures or the
entire Buddhist canon...