Dhyānabhadra

Zhikong Chanxian
Dhyānabhadra
Portrait of Dhyānabhadra at Hoeamsa Temple, South Korea
Title108th Chan Patriarch
Personal
Bornc. 1289 CE
Magadha (modern-day Bihar, India)
Diedc. 1363 CE
ReligionBuddhism
LineageVajrayana

Dhyānabhadra (also known as Sunyadisya, Chi-Gong and Zhikong Chanxian) (1289–1363 C.E.) was an Indian Buddhist monk and translator. He taught first in China but later came to teach in Korea towards the end of the Goryeo dynasty.[1] He was affiliated with esoteric schools of Buddhism.[2]

Sources

Much of what we know about Dhyanabhadra come from a collection of primary sources from both China and Korea. These include:[3]

  • Record of Chan Essentials by the Monk Zhikong (Chanyao lu)
  • Zhikong’s Travel Record (Xinglu)
  • Zhikong’s Text of the Precepts of (Neither Arising Nor) Non-arising (Wushengjie Jing)

Life

Korean sources including the writings of Yi Saek detail that Dhyānabhadra was born as the third son of a minor chief in Magadha in 1289 C.E. At the age of eight, he enrolled at Nalanda monastery where he studied under the guidance of the Mahayana teacher Vinayabhadra who encouraged him to travel abroad including to Sri Lanka.[1] In 1324, he travelled to Tibet and from there he arrived in Korea. During his time there, he founded the Hwaeomsa Temple in 1328 which modelled on Nalanda.[3] A stupa inscription claims that he died in China in 1366 C.E. During his time travelling through China and Korea, it was suggested that he had a role in instigating revolts against the ruling Mongols. 10 years following his death, and after the Mongols had been overthrown from Korea, his disciples erected a stupa on top of his remains. Much of what we know about him comes from the poetic inscription left on his stupa.[4]

He was so revered in Korea that after he died in 1363, King Gongmin of Goryeo had his relics brought back to the country where they were first placed in the royal palace and later placed at the Hoemsa temple.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Buswell, Robert; Lopez, Donald (2014). The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism. Princeton University Press. p. 1056. ISBN 9780691157863.
  2. ^ Orzech, Charles; Sørensen, Henrik; Payne, Richard (2011). Esoteric Buddhism and the Tantras in East Asia. Brill. pp. 609–610. ISBN 9789004184916.
  3. ^ a b Nath Prasad, Birendra (2021). A 'Nālandā Monk' in the Late Thirteenth–Early Fourteenth Century India, Tibet, China and Korea: A Note on the 'Poetic Inscription' on a Korean Stūpa Erected in the Memory of Dhyānabhadra. Routledge. pp. 140–149. ISBN 9781032117225.
  4. ^ Thapa, S (2006). "Transmission of Indian Buddhist Thought in East Asian Historiography: Dhyānabhadra (Chi-Gong) and Buddhism in 14th Century Korea". Sixth World Korean Studies Congress.
  5. ^ Huntley Grayson, James (2002). Korea: A Religious History. Routledge. p. 99. ISBN 9781136869181.
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