Puhua
Автор:
Jesse Russell,Ronald Cohn, 100 стр., издатель:
"Книга по Требованию", ISBN:
978-5-5083-2578-7
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Zhenzhou Puhua (Chinese: traditional: ????, simplified: ??, pinyin: Zhenzhou Puhua; Japanese: romaji: Jinshu Fuke—allegedly ca. 770-840 or 860 (see below)), also known as P'u-k'o or Pu'kua and referred to honorifically as P'u Hua Chan Shih (Japanese: Fuke Zenji or Fuke Zenshi; lit. "Chan Master Puhua" or "Zen Master Fuke", respectively; any alternative romanization included) was a likely mythical Chinese Chan (Japanese: ? Zen) master, monk-priest, wanderer and eccentric, whose existence and many affairs were advanced and likely fabricated by the now defunct Fuke Zen (Japanese: ??? Fuke-shu) or Hotto-ha sect, or sub-sect, of Japanese Rinzai Zen Buddhism in the 17th or 18th century with the publication of the later-disconfirmed document, the Kyotaku Denki (also called the Kyotaku Denki Kokuji Kai), probably first published around 1640. For the komuso (Japanese: ??? komuso; Hiragana: ????; sometimes romanized komusou, komuso or komuso and...
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