Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
children 19
chiliocosmos 2
chin 1
china 54
chinese 77
ching 7
chino 1
Frequency    [«  »]
55 let
55 monk
55 yet
54 china
54 present
54 sense
53 1
Kaiten Nukariya
Religion of the Samurai

IntraText - Concordances

china

   Part,  Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, Intro (1)| School is found in Nepal, China, Japan, Tibet, etc.~ 2 1, Intro | After its introduction into China in the sixth century, A.D., 3 1, 1 | CHAPTER I HISTORY OF ZEN IN CHINA~ 4 1, 1, 1 | nor can you find it in China and India any more than 5 1, 1 (1) | existence of the Sutra in China. In Japan there exists, 6 1, 1, 1 | a famous Zen history of China, gives two elaborate narratives 7 1, 1, 2 | Introduction of Zen into China by Bodhidharma.~An epoch-making 8 1, 1, 2 | the Buddhist history of China by Bodhidharma's coming 9 1, 1 (1) | Bodhidharma's appearance in China. Compare Chwen Fah Chan 10 1, 1, 3 | at Kwang Cheu in Southern China than he was invited by the 11 1, 1, 4 | Successor the Second Patriarch.~China was not, however, an uncultivated 2~ 12 1, 1 (2) | Zen were not unknown to China before Bodhidharma. Pratyutpanna-buddhasammukhavasthita-samadhi 13 1, 1 (2) | Kumarajiva, who came to China A.D. 384, made a valuable 14 1, 1 (2) | master, who came over to China A.D. 406. His translation 15 1, 1 (2) | sutra for the first time in China in A.D. 413, and it was 16 1, 1 (2) | to no small extent. And China produced, on the one hand, 17 1, 1 (2) | from its very outset in China.~ 18 1, 1, 5 | labour of nine years in China resulted in the initiation 19 1, 1 (1) | prominent Buddhist authors of China and Japan.~ 20 1, 1, 11 | Heu,1 the real ruler of China at that time, was an admirer 21 1, 1, 11 | great development of Zen in China.~ 22 1, 1 (1) | non-Buddhist scholars in China and Japan. Both Hwui Chung ( 23 1, 1, 13 | greatest Zen scholars' of China. To~~~~this age belong almost 24 1, 1, 14 | introduction of Zen into China, therefore it underwent 25 1, 1 (1) | Nagariuna, and Vasubandhu. In China Hwui Yuen (E-on, died in 26 1, 2, 1 | He crossed the sea for China at the age of twenty-eight 27 1, 2 (2) | career. Do-sho went over to China in 653, and met with Hüen 28 1, 2 (2) | however, I Kung went back to China after some years.~Thirdly, 29 1, 2 (2) | Kaku-a in 1171 went over to China, where he studied Zen under 30 1, 2 (3) | named after its founder in China, Chi 1 (538-597), who lived 31 1, 2 (3) | 804 Den-gyo went over to China by the Imperial order, and 32 1, 2 (1) | Mantra-sutras. It was established in China by Vajrabodhi and his disciple 33 1, 2 (1) | as Ko Bo Dai Shi, went to China in 804, and received the 34 1, 2 (2) | faith under Siao Jan in China. Therefore to oppose the 35 1, 2, 2 | and crossed the sea for China, at the age of twenty-four, 36 1, 2 (1) | soon after his return from China, and Ben-do-wa and other 37 1, 2, 8 | happened when he was in China, where the invading army 38 1, 2 (1) | and afterwards went to China, where he was Enlightened 39 1, 2, 12 | came one after another from China, and Zen2 peculiar to them, 40 1, 2 (2) | TRANSMISSION OF ZEN FROM CHINA. TO JAPAN.~ ~ 41 1, 3 (1) | Chi-leu-cia-chin, who came to China in A.D. 147 or A.D. 164, 42 1, 3 (1) | An-shi-kao, who came to China in A.D. 148, translated 43 1, 3 (1) | 25) Matanga, who came to China in A.D. 67, is said by his 44 1, 3 (1) | Vajrabodhi, who came to China in A.D. 719.~ 45 1, 4, 6 | that led some Taoist in China to prefer death to life, 46 1, 5, 12 | by the Sixth Patriarch in China, who called everybody 'a 47 1, 6, 3 | of the Sixth Patriarch in China, to quote an example, one 48 1, 8, 9 | saying: 'I have come over to China in order to worship Mañjuçri,1 49 1, 8, 9 | others. I came home from China with nothing in my hand. 50 1, 8 (2) | Khin San Hwui, who came to China A.D. 241. 51 Appen, Pref | the greatest scholars that China ever produced, was born 52 Appen, Pref | sect, who had come over to China from India about A.D. 520. 53 Appen, 1 (3) | All the ancient sages of China believed in spirits, and 54 Appen, 2, 2 | outsiders (which are confined to China).~"'Existence' means the


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License