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Kegon

 

Buddhist philosophy introduced into Japan from China in the 8th century. The name Kegon (meaning "flower ornament") is a translation of the Sanskrit avatamsaka, after the school's chief text, the Avatamsaka-sutra, which deals with the buddha Vairocana. The school was founded in China as Huayan in the late 6th century and reached Japan c. 740. Kegon taught that all living things are interdependent and that the universe is self-creating, with Vairocana at its centre. Though the Kegon school is no longer an active faith teaching a separate doctrine, it continues to administer the famous Todai Temple monastery at Nara.

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or Kegon-shū

As one of the ‘Six Schools of Nara Buddhism’, Kegon is one of the oldest schools of Buddhism in Japan. The name represents the Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese words Hua-yen, and this school saw itself as the inheritor of the Chinese Hua-yen tradition and its transmitter to future generations of Japanese Buddhists. The Hua-yen teachings were first transmitted to Japan by the Korean monk Shinjō (d. 742), and gained currency in the Japanese court because of the lectures given by his disciple Ryōben (or Rōben, 689-773). Based on the Indian Mahāyāna scripture, the Avataṃsaka Sūtra, this school taught that the Buddha Mahāvairocana (see Vairocana) was himself the centre and ground of the universe, and all phenomena emanated from his own being. The imperial court appreciated the imagery of a central power to which all subsidiary things owed their being, because the emperor saw in this an image that could be used to inculcate an analogous political culture in which the emperor would occupy the place of the Buddha, while all subsidiary political units in the nation would trace the source of their authority back to him. Consequently, the emperor Shōmu Tennō granted the school a headquarters temple called the Tōdaiji in the capital of Nara, in which he installed a monumental statue of Mahāvairocana, completed in 749. Shōmu himself took on the name Roshana, a partial transliteration of the Buddha's name. The Kegon school, never more than a small group of scholar-monks devoted to the study of this very abstruse scripture, found itself in danger of being absorbed into the politically powerful Tendai school during the Heian period (794-1185). Even though it resisted complete assimilation, it never thrived as an independent institution or congregation, but as an area of concentration and study into which those with motivation and aptitude could enter as need and inclination dictated. As in China, Kegon philosophy was regarded by all as the highest and most profound statement of the way in which the enlightened mind sees the world. See also Hua-yen.

Wikipedia: Kegon
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For the Japanese waterfall in Nikkō National Park in the Tochigi Prefecture, see Kegon Falls.
Daibutsuden at Tōdai-ji, Nara


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Kegon (華厳) ([kegõɴ], or in some dialects, [keŋõɴ]) is the name of the Japanese transmission of the Huayan school of Chinese Buddhism. This transmission occurred through the Korean Hwaeom tradition.

Huayan studies were founded in Japan when, in 736, the scholar-priest Rōben (良辯 or 良弁; originally a monk of the Hossō tradition) invited Shinshō (審祥, also in Japanese Shinjō, Chinese Shen-hsiang, Korean Simsang) to give lectures on the Avatamsaka Sutra at Kinshōsen-ji (金鐘山寺, also 金鐘寺 Konshu-ji or Kinshō-ji), the origin of later Tōdai-ji. When the construction of Tōdai-ji was completed, Rōben entered that temple to formally initiate Kegon as a field of study in Japanese Buddhism, and Kegon-shū would become known as one of the "Nanto Rikushū" (南都六宗, lit. The Six Buddhist Sects of Nanto (Nara). Rōben's disciple Jitchu continued administration of Todaiji temple and expanded its prestige through the introduction of imported rituals. Kegon thought was later be popularized in Japan by Myōe (明惠), who combined its doctrines with those of Vajrayana and Gyōnen (凝然), and is most responsible for the establishment of the Tōdai-ji lineage of Kegon.

Over time, Kegon incorporated esoteric ritual from Shingon Buddhism, with which it shared a cordial relationship, and continues to this day with limited temples overseas.

See also

External links

  • Tōdai-ji (Japanese)[1]
  • The Japanese Buddhist Schools and Teaching[2]



 
 
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Myōe Kōben
Chuzenji (lake, Japan)
Six Schools of Nara Buddhism

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Buddhism Dictionary. A Dictionary of Buddhism. Copyright © 2003, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Kegon" Read more