Korean Buddhism is somewhat concerned with theological doctrines, as are many schools of Mahayana Buddhism.
There are several forms of Buddhism practiced in South Korea, but the most common is the Chogye, the Korean Rinzai Zen school of Mahayana Buddhism. There is little truly distinct about Korean Buddhism.
There is one element, however. In Mahayana Buddhism, there is the view that the Buddha left a successor, Mahakashyapa, as the second Buddhist patriarch. Zen Buddhism believes that the founder of Ch'an/Zen, Bodhidharma, was the tenth Buddhist patriarch. Most of Zen Buddhism believes that there were only 28 Buddhist patriarchs. The 28th gave his transmission to many successors, thus ending the lineage of Buddhist patriarchs.
But there are two schools of Korean Rinzai Zen, Chogye and one other, which both believe that the head of their sect is the current patriarch of all Buddhism. Thus these two schools of Korean Rinzai Zen are sometimes referred to as "Patriarchal Zen".
Korean Buddhism is more concerned with theological doctrines
It has more ancestral worship mixed in.
The Chinese adopted it and created other forms of it such as Zen and Pure Land Buddhism
Some Buddhism statues arrived by way of Korean peninsula, but as for Buddhism, Japan and China had direct contact with each other, and there was no need for Korea in this regard.
There are few elements about Zen Buddhism that are truly unique. Mostly the difference between Zen Buddhism and other forms of Buddhism is just a matter of emphasis. In Rinzai Buddhism, there are unsolvable questions called koans. These are unique, not found in any other denomination.
Chai-Shin Yu has written: 'Korea and Christianity (Studies in Korean Religions and Culture, 8)' 'Early Korean art and culture' -- subject(s): Korean Mural painting and decoration, Civilization, Tombs 'Early Buddhism and Christianity' -- subject(s): Buddhism, Christianity, Christianity and other religions, Church history, History, Relations
Meat that is cooked on a Korean grill is no different from other grills, except that it might cook the meat in a different style than the other grills.
In general, most forms of Buddhism are different from other religions because they focus on how we as individuals can free ourselves from suffering here and now, in this life, and provide actual skills to do this -- they empower the individual to do this without relying on the assumption that there are forces beyond those we can see that can intercede for us.
Japanese and Korean share some grammatical similarities, and some words. Other than this, they are quite different.
they have swerls
no. taoism and Buddhism come to mind. most have a god or gods but some have prophets or other forms of prophecy.
The orthodox view is that Theravada Buddhism is the oldest form. However there is serious evidence to suggest other older forms which once existed have how died out. Recent manuscripts finds and by comparing old Chinese copies of the older Indian texts, we can safely assume there were other forms of Buddhism which have died out. If one does serious study you see that even the date of Buddha's life time is disputed. But we know definetly within 100-200 years the approximate time he lived. It was approximetly 300 years BC, but dont take that literally as different Buddhist countries have different dates. Dont shoot me I am just the messanger and an ex Buddhist monk on top.
It mixes with Japanese Buddhism, or Zen Buddhism. there are other types of buddhism, but not that are practiced in Japan.
There is no god in Buddhism & Buddhist leaders vary depending upon the different schools of Buddhism. Often people believe that H.H. the 13th Dali Lama as the leader of Buddhism, but that is only due to the fact that he is seen more often than other Buddhist leaders.