- Lu
Xiujing (Chinese: 陸修靜; pinyin: Lù
Xiūjìng; 406–477),
known by the
courtesy name
Yuande (元德) and the
posthumous name
Jianji (簡寂), was a
Taoist compiler...
- Tang
Xiujing (唐休璟; 627–712),
formal name Tang Xuan (唐璿) but went by the
courtesy name of
Xiujing,
formally Duke
Zhong of Song (宋忠公), was an
official and...
- to
compile and
categorised scriptures and
texts from
across China by Lu
Xiujing and
occurred around 471 and
consisted of
roughly 1,228 scrolls. The Second...
- Ching-yen (c. 3rd century) Bao Gu (c. 4th century) Kou
Qianzhi (365–448) Lu
Xiujing (406–477) Ge
Chaofu (c. 4th or 5th century) Tao
Hongjing (456–536) Sun...
-
which refers to the
image that the
three men, ****yuan, Tao
Yuanming and Lu
Xiujing laugh together when
arriving at Huxi (虎溪,
Tiger Brook) of
Mount Lu. This...
- is a list of the
works contained in the
Lingbao Canon as
listed by Lu
Xiujing in his
catalogue of the
Lingbao School, China, in 437 CE. The
numbers here...
- cosmopolitanism, parochialism, and
social change. d'Angelo, Alessio; Liang,
Xiujing; Montagna, Nicola. London: Routledge. pp. 45–58. ISBN 978-0-415-53670-7...
-
Supreme Clarity tradition. Lu
Xiujing also used this
schema to
arrange the
Taoist scriptures and
Taoist deities. Lu
Xiujing worked to
compile the first...
-
Grove Guo
Xiang Sun
Hanhua Wei
Huacun Ge Hong Bao
Jingyan Kou
Qianzhi Lu
Xiujing Tao
Hongjing Cheng Xuanying Chen Tuan
Zhang Boduan Sun Bu'er Wang Chongyang...
-
Attila the Hun,
ruler of the
Hunnic Empire (approximate date) (d. 453) Lu
Xiujing Shao Di,
emperor of the Liu Song
dynasty (d. 424)
August 23 – Radagaisus...