- Asaṅga (Sanskrit: असंग, Tibetan: ཐོགས་མེད།, Wylie:
thogs med,
traditional Chinese: 無著; ; pinyin: Wúzhuó; Romaji: Mujaku) (fl. 4th
century C.E.) was one...
- (Four
Heavenly Kings), and a pair of
Indian rakan (Sanskrit: arhats)
named Muchaku and Seshin. Only the
Miroku Butsu and
rakan still stand today.
After the...
- (Guardian Deity) at the
Central Gate of Hōryū-ji
Taishakuten Śakra, 839, Tō-ji
Muchaku by Unkei, 1212, Kō****u-ji,
National Treasure Tsuba sword ****ing with a...
-
Muchaku by Unkei, Kō****u-ji, 1212,
National Treasure...
-
polychromed wood
sculptures (1208, Kō****u-ji, Nara) of two
Indian sages,
Muchaku and Seshin, the
legendary founders of the Hossō sect, are
among the most...
-
Muchaku by Unkei, Kō****u-ji, 1212,
National Treasure...
- Roshi), a
Shingon priest who
studied the
koans with
another Shingon priest,
Muchaku Kaiko Roshi (1871-1928);
Kaiko in turn
studied koans with
Kazan Genku (1837-1917)...
-
artists sculpt Twelve Heavenly Generals in Kō****u-ji 1208:
Unkei sculpts Muchaku in Kō****u-ji 1205:
Nicholas of
Verdun –
French goldsmith and enamellist...
- in Chongqing.
Photographs taken during Kinki Treasure Survey Statue of
Muchaku at Kō****u-ji, 1888/1889. Kuse
Kannon at Hōryū-ji, 1888/1889.
Miroku Bosatsu...
- (30.4 in) (Ryūtōki) Nara Nara Ko****ujiKō****u-ji, Nara, Nara
Muchaku (木造無著菩薩立像, mokuzō
muchaku bosatsu ryūzō) and
Seshin (木造世親菩薩立像, mokuzō
seshin bosatsu...