Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Genshin> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 96 of
96
with 100 triples per page.
- Genshin abstract "Genshin (源信; 942 – July 6, 1017), also known as Eshin Sozu, was the most influential of a number of Tendai scholars active during the tenth and eleventh centuries in Japan. He was not a wandering evangelist as Kūya was, but was an elite cleric who espoused a doctrine of devotion to Amida Buddha which taught that because Japan was thought to have entered mappō, the "degenerate age" of the "latter law," the only hope for salvation lay in the reliance on the power of Amitabha. Other doctrines, he claimed, could not aid an individual because they depended on "self-power" (jiriki), which cannot prevail during the chaos of the degenerate age, when the power of another (tariki) is necessary. In his approach to rebirth in the Pure Land, Genshin emphasized visual meditation practices, where later Pure Land sects favored verbal recitations such as the nembutsu. Genshin's doctrine is documented in his magnum opus, the Ōjōyōshū (往生要集, "Essentials of Birth in the Pure Land"), which in later copies of the text came complete with graphic depictions of the joy of the blessed and the suffering of those doomed to chaos.Genshin's influence in contemporary Japanese culture today is primarily due to his treatise, Ōjōyōshū, particularly the graphic descriptions of the Buddhist hell realms (地獄 jigoku), which inspired a genre of horror and morality stories. The 1960 Japanese film Jigoku was influenced by Genshin's Ōjōyōshū among other works. In Jodo Shinshu Buddhism, he is considered the Sixth Patriarch.Genshin is credited as the founder of the Enshin school of Tendai Buddhism, and for espousing the "original enlightenment" teaching, or hongaku (本覚), where one is originally enlightened, but unaware of it. In all, Genshin left more than 30 works which continue to influence Pure Land thought today.The image of Amida Nyorai in the main building of Yasaka-ji Temple in Shikoku is said to have been made by Genshin in the Nara Period.".
- Genshin birthDate "0942".
- Genshin birthYear "0942".
- Genshin deathDate "1017-07-06".
- Genshin deathYear "1017".
- Genshin thumbnail Genshin-gazo.jpg?width=300.
- Genshin wikiPageExternalLink ojoyoshu.html.
- Genshin wikiPageExternalLink kashiba-p-e.html.
- Genshin wikiPageID "1889221".
- Genshin wikiPageLength "3224".
- Genshin wikiPageOutDegree "30".
- Genshin wikiPageRevisionID "663382372".
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Amida_Buddha.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Amitābha.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Blessing.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Category:1017_deaths.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Category:942_births.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Category:Buddhism_in_Japan.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japanese_Buddhist_monks.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Chaos_(cosmogony).
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Doctrine.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Happiness.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Hell.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Hongaku.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Japan.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Jigoku_(film).
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Jiriki.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Jodo_Shinshu.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Jodo_Shinshu_Patriarchs.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Jōdo_Shinshū.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Kūya.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Mappō.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Masterpiece.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Nara_Period.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Nara_period.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Nembutsu.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Nianfo.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Pure_Land.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Pure_land.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Salvation.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Tariki.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Tendai.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Three_Ages_of_Buddhism.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink Ōjōyōshū.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLink File:Genshin-gazo.jpg.
- Genshin wikiPageWikiLinkText "Genshin".
- Genshin dateOfBirth "942".
- Genshin dateOfDeath "1017-07-06".
- Genshin en "Shōjūraigōji Temple".
- Genshin hasPhotoCollection Genshin.
- Genshin lang "ja".
- Genshin langTitle "聖衆来迎寺".
- Genshin name "Genshin".
- Genshin shortDescription "Japanese Buddhist monk".
- Genshin verticalAlign "sup".
- Genshin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Genshin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Buddhism-bio-stub.
- Genshin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Japan-bio-stub.
- Genshin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Link-interwiki.
- Genshin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nihongo.
- Genshin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Persondata.
- Genshin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Genshin description "Japanese Buddhist monk".
- Genshin description "Japanese Buddhist monk".
- Genshin subject Category:1017_deaths.
- Genshin subject Category:942_births.
- Genshin subject Category:Buddhism_in_Japan.
- Genshin subject Category:Japanese_Buddhist_monks.
- Genshin type Agent.
- Genshin type Article.
- Genshin type Person.
- Genshin type Article.
- Genshin type Person.
- Genshin type Agent.
- Genshin type NaturalPerson.
- Genshin type Thing.
- Genshin type Q215627.
- Genshin type Q5.
- Genshin type Person.
- Genshin comment "Genshin (源信; 942 – July 6, 1017), also known as Eshin Sozu, was the most influential of a number of Tendai scholars active during the tenth and eleventh centuries in Japan. He was not a wandering evangelist as Kūya was, but was an elite cleric who espoused a doctrine of devotion to Amida Buddha which taught that because Japan was thought to have entered mappō, the "degenerate age" of the "latter law," the only hope for salvation lay in the reliance on the power of Amitabha.".
- Genshin label "Genshin".
- Genshin sameAs Genshin.
- Genshin sameAs Gensin.
- Genshin sameAs 源信_(僧侶).
- Genshin sameAs m.063z_k.
- Genshin sameAs Genshin.
- Genshin sameAs Гэнсин.
- Genshin sameAs Genshin.
- Genshin sameAs Ґенсін.
- Genshin sameAs Q1009263.
- Genshin sameAs Q1009263.
- Genshin sameAs 源信_(僧人).
- Genshin wasDerivedFrom Genshin?oldid=663382372.
- Genshin depiction Genshin-gazo.jpg.
- Genshin isPrimaryTopicOf Genshin.
- Genshin name "Genshin".