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Daishi

A Wisdom Archive on Daishi

Daishi

A selection of articles related to Daishi

We recommend this article: Daishi - 1, and also this: Daishi - 2.
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Daishi, Buddhism, Buddhism Dictionary, Buddhism Archives, Buddhism Dictionary - D, Buddhism Glossary - D, Buddhism Terms - D, India, Buddha, Zen Buddhism

ARTICLES RELATED TO Daishi

Daishi: Encyclopedia - Daishi

Daishi (大師) is a Japanese word which means great and/or silent master. It was also used as an honorary title given by the Japanese Imperial Court. The closest English translation for the word in this case would be "great teacher." Two well known recipients are Kūkai (or Kōbō Daishi) and Saichō (or Dengyō Daishi), the founders of the Shingon and Tendai Buddhist sects, respectively. Daishi - Daishi in fiction. The BattleTech universe and its related MechWarrior game series have popularized th ...

Including:

Read more here: » Daishi: Encyclopedia - Daishi

Daishi: Encyclopedia II - Adachi Tokyo - Sights
Adachi Tokyo - Nishiarai Daishi. Nishiarai Daishi, located in Nishiarai, is a temple of the Buzan branch of Shingon Buddhism. Its formal name is Gochisan Henjoin Sojiji (Sojiji Temple). This is one of the Three Great Temples in the Kanto region along with Kawasaki Daishi and Sano Yakuyoke Daishi, and a great number of people annually visit the temple at the beginning of the New Year. Adachi Tokyo - Parks< ...

See also:

Adachi Tokyo, Adachi Tokyo - History, Adachi Tokyo - Famous people, Adachi Tokyo - Sights, Adachi Tokyo - Nishiarai Daishi, Adachi Tokyo - Parks, Adachi Tokyo - Halls and cultural facilities, Adachi Tokyo - Adachi Historical Museum, Adachi Tokyo - Local Food Specialties, Adachi Tokyo - Bunka Fry, Adachi Tokyo - Education, Adachi Tokyo - Transportation, Adachi Tokyo - Rail, Adachi Tokyo - Highway

Read more here: » Adachi Tokyo: Encyclopedia II - Adachi Tokyo - Sights

Daishi: Zen and Buddhism Dictionary on Daishi

Daishi: Name used as a title for a great master. See also Zenji.

 

 (See also: Daishi, Buddhism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Daishi: Encyclopedia - Akasagarbha

Akasagarbha Bodhisattva (Chinese: 虛空藏菩薩) is one of the eight great bodhisattvas. His name can be translated as "boundless space treasury," as his wisdom is boundless as space itself. In Japan he is known as Kokuzo. Kukai (Kobo Daishi), the founder of Shingon Buddhism, is said to have chanted a mantra of Akasagarbha Bodhisattva that enhanced his wisdom and memory. Other related archivesJapan, Shingon Buddhism, bodhisattvas, mantra, memory, wisdom

Read more here: » Akasagarbha: Encyclopedia - Akasagarbha

Daishi: Encyclopedia - Saicho

Saichō (最澄, 767–822) was a Japanese Buddhist monk credited with founding the Tendai school in Japan, based around the Chinese Tiantai tradition he was exposed to during his trip to China beginning in 804. He founded the temple and headquarters of Tendai at Enryakuji on Mt. Hiei near Kyoto. After his death, he was awarded the posthumous title of Dengyō Daishi (伝教大師). See also: Tendai. Other related archives767, 804, 822, Buddhist, Enryakuji, Japanese, Kyoto, Mt. H

Read more here: » Saicho: Encyclopedia - Saicho

Daishi: Encyclopedia - To-ji

Toji (東寺; とうじ) is a Buddhist temple of the Shingon sect in Kyoto, Japan. Its name means East Temple, and it once had a partner, Saiji (West Temple). They stood alongside the Rashomon, the gate to the Heian capital. The famous priest Kobo Daishi (Kukai) founded Toji in 823 A.D. by order of Emperor Saga. The temple's formal name is Kyo-o Gokoku-ji (教王護国寺), indicating that its function was protection of the nation. Its principal image is of Yakushi Nyorai, the healing Buddha. The pagoda of Toji stands 57 ...

Read more here: » To-ji: Encyclopedia - To-ji

Daishi: Encyclopedia - Tendai

Tendai (Japanese: 天台宗, Tendai-shū) is a Japanese school of Buddhism, a descendant of the Chinese Tiantai or Lotus Sutra school. Tendai - History. The Tiantai teaching was first brought to Japan by the Chinese monk Jianshen (鑑眞 Jp: Gishin) in the middle of the 8th century, but it was not widely accepted. In 805, the Japanese monk Saichō (最澄; also called Dengyō Daishi 伝教大師) returned from China with new Tiantai texts and made the temple that he had built on Mt. Hiei (比叡山), ...

Including:

Read more here: » Tendai: Encyclopedia - Tendai

Daishi: Encyclopedia - Yunmen Wenyan

Yúnmén Wényǎn (862 or 864-949 CE), (雲門文偃; Japanese: Ummon Bun'en; he is also variously known in English as "Unmon", "Ummon Daishi", "Ummon Zenji"), was a Chinese Zen Master in Tang-era China. He founded one of the five major schools of Chan (Chinese Zen), the "Yunmen School", after succeeding his master, Xuefeng Yicun (Japanese: Seppo) (822-908), for whom he had served as a head monk. Yunmen as abbot was succeeded by Dongshan Shouchu (Japanese: Tōzan Shusho), who would be succeeded by Suhotsu i ...

Including:

Read more here: » Yunmen Wenyan: Encyclopedia - Yunmen Wenyan

Daishi: Encyclopedia - Kukai

Kūkai (空海) or also known posthumously as Kōbō-Daishi (弘法大師) , 774–835 CE: Japanese monk, scholar, and artist, founder of the Shingon or "True Word" school of Buddhism. Kūkai is famous as a calligrapher (see Shodo), engineer and is said to have invented kana, the syllabary in which, in combination with Chinese characters (Kanji) the Japanese language is written. His religious writing, some 50 works, expound the esoteric Shingon doctrine, of which the major ones have been translated into English by Hakeda (see b ...

Including:

Read more here: » Kukai: Encyclopedia - Kukai

Daishi: Encyclopedia II - Adachi Tokyo - History

Under the Ritsuryo system, the present-day ward was the southern extremity of Adachi District, Musashi Province. In 826, during the Heian period, the Nishiarai Daishi temple was founded. During the Muromachi period and into the Sengoku period, the Chiba clan held control of the region. The Great Senju Bridge was built in 1594. In the Edo Period, parts were under the direct control of the Tokugawa shogunate, and parts were under the administration of Kan'ei-ji, a temple in present-day Ueno, Tokyo. Senju was a post station (one of the four Edo post stations) on the Nikko Kaido. In 1932, Adachi became a ward of Tokyo City. The spe ...

See also:

Adachi Tokyo, Adachi Tokyo - History, Adachi Tokyo - Famous people, Adachi Tokyo - Sights, Adachi Tokyo - Nishiarai Daishi, Adachi Tokyo - Parks, Adachi Tokyo - Halls and cultural facilities, Adachi Tokyo - Adachi Historical Museum, Adachi Tokyo - Local Food Specialties, Adachi Tokyo - Bunka Fry, Adachi Tokyo - Education, Adachi Tokyo - Transportation, Adachi Tokyo - Rail, Adachi Tokyo - Highway

Read more here: » Adachi Tokyo: Encyclopedia II - Adachi Tokyo - History

Daishi: Encyclopedia II - Adachi Tokyo - Local Food Specialties

Adachi Tokyo - Bunka Fry. Bunka fry is a deep-fried dish, which is mainly made of flour and gum syrup.  It is cooked in much the same way as schnitzel.  It is skewered by a chopstick or a stick, and served dripping with sauce.  It tastes like a ham cutlet without ham.  Venders of bunka fry have their secret recipe for the sauce. It was originally cooked without gum syrup.  Mr. Hasegawa then improved it and sold it at a night-stall.  It started to be sold from around 1955, and ...

See also:

Adachi Tokyo, Adachi Tokyo - History, Adachi Tokyo - Famous people, Adachi Tokyo - Sights, Adachi Tokyo - Nishiarai Daishi, Adachi Tokyo - Parks, Adachi Tokyo - Halls and cultural facilities, Adachi Tokyo - Adachi Historical Museum, Adachi Tokyo - Local Food Specialties, Adachi Tokyo - Bunka Fry, Adachi Tokyo - Education, Adachi Tokyo - Transportation, Adachi Tokyo - Rail, Adachi Tokyo - Highway

Read more here: » Adachi Tokyo: Encyclopedia II - Adachi Tokyo - Local Food Specialties

Daishi: Encyclopedia II - Shudo - Origins

Though the term shudo first apears in 1485 it is preceded in the Japanese homosexual tradition by the love relationships between Buddhist bonzes and their acolytes, who were known as chigo. The legendary founder of male love in Japan is Kukai, also known as Kobo Daishi, the founder of the Shingon school of Buddhism, who is said to have brought over from China, together with the teachings of the Buddha, the teachings of male love. Mount Koya, where Kobo Daishi's monastery is still located, was a byword for male love up to ...

See also:

Shudo, Shudo - Origins, Shudo - Cultural aspects

Read more here: » Shudo: Encyclopedia II - Shudo - Origins

Daishi: Encyclopedia II - Tendai - History

The Tiantai teaching was first brought to Japan by the Chinese monk Jianshen (鑑眞 Jp: Gishin) in the middle of the 8th century, but it was not widely accepted. In 805, the Japanese monk Saichō (最澄; also called Dengyō Daishi 伝教大師) returned from China with new Tiantai texts and made the temple that he had built on Mt. Hiei (比叡山), Enryakuji (延暦寺), a center for the study and practi ...

See also:

Tendai, Tendai - History, Tendai - Tendai Doctrine

Read more here: » Tendai: Encyclopedia II - Tendai - History

Daishi: Encyclopedia II - List of Japan-related topics 123-K - D

Da Pump, Dabo, Dabura, Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank, Daichi Akitaro, Daido Moriyama, Daiei, Daiei, Tottori, Daihatsu, Daijiro Kato, Daikon, Daimyo, Daisaku Ikeda, Daisen, Tottori, Daishi, Daisuke Matsuzaka, Daitec, Daito, Daito Bunka University, Daito Ryu, Daito, Shimane, Daito, Shizuoka, Daiwa, Hiroshima, Daiwa, Shimane, Dan Hibiki, Dance Dance Revolution, Dango, Darius Gaiden, Darkstalkers, Daruma doll, Dahrumasan ga Koronda, Darunia, Dashi, Data East, Date, Hokkaido, Date Masamune, Dating sim, Datsun 1500, 1600, 2000 Roadster, Datsun 240Z, Dat ...

See also:

List of Japan-related topics 123-K, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - 123, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - A, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - B, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - C, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - D, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - E, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - F, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - G, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - H, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - I, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - J, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - K

Read more here: » List of Japan-related topics 123-K: Encyclopedia II - List of Japan-related topics 123-K - D

Daishi: Encyclopedia II - Heian period - Developments in Buddhism

Buddhism began to spread throughout Japan during the Heian period, primarily through two major esoteric sects, Tendai (Heavenly Terrace) and Shingon (True Word). Tendai originated in China and is based on the Lotus Sutra, one of the most important sutras of Mahayana Buddhism. Shingon is an indigenous sect with close affiliations to original Indian, Tibetan, and Chinese Buddhist thought founded by Kukai (also called Kobo Daishi). Kukai greatly impressed the emperors who succeeded Emperor Kammu (782-806), and also generations of Japanese, not ...

See also:

Heian period, Heian period - History, Heian period - Developments in Buddhism, Heian period - Heian period literature, Heian period - Heian period economics, Heian period - The Fujiwara Regency, Heian period - The Rise of the military class

Read more here: » Heian period: Encyclopedia II - Heian period - Developments in Buddhism

Daishi: Encyclopedia II - Japanese architecture - Heian

In reaction to the growing wealth and power of organized Buddhism in Nara, the priest Kukai (best known by his posthumous title Kobo Daishi, 774-835) journeyed to China to study Shingon, a form of Vajrayana Buddhism, which he introduced into Japan in 806. At the core of Shingon worship are the various mandalas, diagrams of the spiritual universe which influenced temple design. Japanese Buddhist architecture also a ...

See also:

Japanese architecture, Japanese architecture - Asuka and Nara architecture, Japanese architecture - Heian, Japanese architecture - Kamakura period, Japanese architecture - Tea houses, Japanese architecture - Azuchi-Momoyama period / Sengoku period, Japanese architecture - Edo period, Japanese architecture - Meiji period, Japanese architecture - Modern architecture, Japanese architecture - Contemporary Japanese architects

Read more here: » Japanese architecture: Encyclopedia II - Japanese architecture - Heian

Daishi: Encyclopedia II - Morioka Iwate - Temples and Shrines

Hoonji is a temple which was built at Sannohe by the 13th lord of the Nambu Clan, Moriyuki, in 1394, and brought to Morioka by the 27th lord, Toshinao. It was considered the head temple among the 280 operated by the Nambu Clan. its notable feature is the Rakando (Statues Hall), built in 1735 and rebuilt in 1858. It's central statue Rushana-butsu is reported to be made by Kodo-daishi. Within the Rakando 500 Rakans ('holy people who deserve other's offerings') which were made in Kyoto and later brought to Morioka rest on a series of 5 rows of shelves that stretch around the room. ...

See also:

Morioka Iwate, Morioka Iwate - History, Morioka Iwate - Geography, Morioka Iwate - Transportation, Morioka Iwate - Food, Morioka Iwate - Temples and Shrines, Morioka Iwate - Twinnings, Morioka Iwate - Notable persons, Morioka Iwate - Authors, Morioka Iwate - Politicians, Morioka Iwate - Athletes

Read more here: » Morioka Iwate: Encyclopedia II - Morioka Iwate - Temples and Shrines

Daishi: Encyclopedia II - List of Japan-related topics 123-K - A

A City With No People, A Personal Matter, A.I. Love You, Aba, Okayama, Abashiri, Hokkaido, Abashiri subprefecture, ABCL/1, ABCL/R, ABCL/R2, Abe clan of Mikawa, Abe Hiroshi, Abe Iso, Abe Kobo, Abe Masakatsu, Abe no Hirafu, Abe no Seimei, Abe Nobuyuki, Abe Yutaka, Abe River, Abe Shintaro, Abenobashi Magical Shopping District, Abh, Abiko, Chiba, Abolition of the han system, Abu District, Yamaguchi, Abu, Yamaguchi, Abukuma River, Abura kiri Acala, ActRaiser, Acura, AD Police, Adachi clan, Adachi Kagemori, Adachi Morinaga, Adachi, Tokyo, A ...

See also:

List of Japan-related topics 123-K, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - 123, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - A, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - B, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - C, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - D, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - E, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - F, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - G, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - H, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - I, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - J, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - K

Read more here: » List of Japan-related topics 123-K: Encyclopedia II - List of Japan-related topics 123-K - A

Daishi: Encyclopedia II - List of Japan-related topics 123-K - J

J. League, J-Air, J-Pop, Jaleco, JALways, Jam Films, Janken Japan, Japan Air System, Japan Airlines, Japan Airlines Flight 123, Japan Asia Airways, Japan Australia Migratory Bird Agreement, Japan general election, Japan general election, 2000, Japan general election, 2003, Japan Lutheran Church, Japan Mennonite Brethren Conference, Japan Meteorological Agency, Japan Post and Postal Services Agency, Japan Prize, Japan Railway, Japan Self-Defense Forces, Japan Series, Japan standard ...

See also:

List of Japan-related topics 123-K, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - 123, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - A, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - B, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - C, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - D, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - E, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - F, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - G, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - H, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - I, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - J, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - K

Read more here: » List of Japan-related topics 123-K: Encyclopedia II - List of Japan-related topics 123-K - J

Daishi: Encyclopedia II - List of Japan-related topics 123-K - H

H-2A rocket, H2, Habikino, Habu, Hachikai, Aichi, Hachiman, Hachinohe, Aomori, Hachinohe Station, Hachioji, Tokyo, Hadaka Apron, Hadano, Kanagawa, Haebaru, Okinawa, Haga, Hyogo, Hagakure, Hagi, Yamaguchi, Hagiwara Sakutaro, Haguri District, Aichi, Haguro, Haibane Renmei, Haibara District, Shizuoka, Haibara, Nara, Haibara, Shizuoka, Haiku, Hajime Sorayama, Hakata, Hakata Minami Line, Hakata Station, Hakata-men, Hakata, Ehime, Haki, Fukuoka, Hakko Ryu, Hakodate Airport, Hakodate, Hokkaido, Hakone, Hakone-Tozan Line, Haku, Hakui, Hakusan, Mie, ...

See also:

List of Japan-related topics 123-K, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - 123, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - A, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - B, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - C, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - D, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - E, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - F, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - G, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - H, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - I, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - J, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - K

Read more here: » List of Japan-related topics 123-K: Encyclopedia II - List of Japan-related topics 123-K - H

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