- in 349 — four
princes were
enthroned and
murdered in that year
alone —
Fotudeng's disciples fanned out
across the
north from
Shandong to
Sichuan and gravitated...
- (Taishō Tripiṭaka 602). At a
later date, Buddhacinga, more
commonly known as
Fotudeng (佛圖澄) (231–349 CE), came from
Central Asia to
China in 310 and propagated...
- Faya's life are unknown, but he was a
student of the
Indian monk
Fotudeng or Zhu
Fotudeng 竺佛圖澄 (c. 231–349), and a
contemporary of the
translators Dao'an...
- text
includes the
biographies of An Shi Gao, Kumārajīva, Faxian, Dao An,
Fotudeng, and others. **** Jiao used a wide
range of
other biographies, some of which...
- The
source for this
phrase was the
Kuchean Buddhist monk and
missionary Fotudeng. It was
recorded in the Book of Jin as 秀支替戾岡,僕穀劬禿當 and said to have a connection...
- and mother. He
ultimately relented when his
spiritual advisor, the monk
Fotudeng,
pointed out that
allowing her to
become a nun
would bring glory and salvation...
- rise of
Buddhism in 4th-century China, as he
allowed the
Kuchan monk,
Fotudeng to
wield considerable influence in his court. Shi Le was born in 274—but...
- Kumārajīva (c. 401), a
Kuchean monk and one of the most
important translators Fotudeng (4th century), a
Central Asian monk who
became a
counselor to the Chinese...
-
Linzhang and
became a
disciple of the
famous Kuchean monk and
missionary Fotudeng (232–348). One of his
disciples was the monk ****yuan,
whose teachings inspired...
-
containing dhāraṇīs, the
Modengqie jing (T.D. no. 1300).
Others such as
Fotudeng (d. 348)
served Chinese emperors with
mantras and rituals. The use of mandalas...