Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1349949> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 53 of
53
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1349949 description "Buddhist patriarch".
- Q1349949 description "Buddhist patriarch".
- Q1349949 subject Q16816869.
- Q1349949 subject Q6641349.
- Q1349949 subject Q6653202.
- Q1349949 abstract "Fazang (Chinese: 法藏; pinyin: Fǎzàng; Wade–Giles: Fa-tsang) (643–712) was the third of the five patriarchs of the Huayan school. He was an important and influential philosopher, so much so that it has been claimed that he "was in fact the real creator of what is now known as Hua-yen." Fazang's ancestors came from Sogdia, a major center for trade along the Silk Road (modern Uzbekistan and Tajikistan), but he was born in the Tang capital of Chang'an (now Xi'an), where his family had become culturally Chinese.In his youth, Fazang assisted Xuanzang in translating Buddhist works from Sanskrit into Chinese, but later became a disciple of Zhiyan, the second patriarch of the Huayan school. Another disciple of Zhiyan during the same period was the Korean Buddhist Uisang, who went on to found Hwaeom, the Korean branch of Huayan. Fazang and Uisang became good friends, and after Uisang returned to Korea, Fazang wrote him a letter expressing his admiration and affection. One of the major intellectual influences on Fazang was the Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana, particularly its doctrine of the tathagatagarbha "womb of the Buddha", and his commentary on it "has been accepted as the final authority for a correct understanding of the text." In interpreting The Awakening of Faith in Mahayana, Fazang frequently quotes with approval the interpretation of the Korean Buddhist Wonhyo. Many scholars have also observed the influence of Taoism on Chinese Buddhism in general and Fazang's thought in particular. Finally, some claim that Fazang drew inspiration from the Yijing.Fazang is said to have authored over a hundred volumes of essays and commentaries, but two of his works in particular are among the most celebrated Huayan texts: "On the Golden Lion" and "The Rafter Dialogue." The former essay is based on a lecture on Buddhism that Fazang gave to Empress Wu Zetian. The Empress was having trouble understanding the subtle views of Huayan, so Fazang drew an analogy, comparing the relationship between the shape of a lion statue and the gold of which it is composed to the relationship between the conditioned things that exist and the underlying reality of which all are a part. "On the Golden Lion" may be found in the Taishō Tripiṭaka, where it is text 1881, and is accompanied by the Song dynasty commentary of Cheng Qian. In The Rafter Dialogue, Fazang defends the doctrine of the interdependent existence of all entities, using the relationship between a rafter and the other parts of a building as an analogy. The Rafter Dialogue is a portion of a longer, systematic treatise, Paragraphs on the Doctrine of Difference and Identity of the One Vehicle of Huayan (Chinese: 華嚴一乘教分齊章), which may be found in the Taishō Tripiṭaka, where it is text 1866.".
- Q1349949 birthDate "0643".
- Q1349949 birthYear "0643".
- Q1349949 deathDate "0712".
- Q1349949 deathYear "0712".
- Q1349949 wikiPageExternalLink ming.htm.
- Q1349949 wikiPageExternalLink 302908496?pq-origsite=summon&accountid=14824.
- Q1349949 wikiPageExternalLink 288243074?accountid=14824.
- Q1349949 wikiPageExternalLink fazang.
- Q1349949 wikiPageExternalLink 2850.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q1076715.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q11059.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q1198075.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q16816869.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q181937.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q2621384.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q265.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q36288.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q42063.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q421715.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q483049.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q485114.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q486244.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q5826.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q6501000.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q6641349.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q6653202.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q837315.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q847618.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q863.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q9598.
- Q1349949 wikiPageWikiLink Q9738.
- Q1349949 dateOfBirth "643".
- Q1349949 dateOfDeath "712".
- Q1349949 name "Fazang".
- Q1349949 shortDescription "Buddhist patriarch".
- Q1349949 type Person.
- Q1349949 type Agent.
- Q1349949 type Person.
- Q1349949 type Agent.
- Q1349949 type NaturalPerson.
- Q1349949 type Thing.
- Q1349949 type Q215627.
- Q1349949 type Q5.
- Q1349949 type Person.
- Q1349949 comment "Fazang (Chinese: 法藏; pinyin: Fǎzàng; Wade–Giles: Fa-tsang) (643–712) was the third of the five patriarchs of the Huayan school.".
- Q1349949 label "Fazang".
- Q1349949 name "Fazang".