Difference between revisions of "Saicho"
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+ | [[Image:Dengyo-daishi.jpg|right|thumb|320px|Sculpture of Saichô, in wood. [[Muromachi period]]. Walters Art Museum.]] | ||
* ''Born: [[767]]'' | * ''Born: [[767]]'' | ||
* ''Died: [[822]]'' | * ''Died: [[822]]'' | ||
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A monk who left the urban Buddhism of [[Nara]] to become a recluse on [[Mt. Hiei]], he built a small shrine in [[788]]. He was sent by the [[Emperor Kammu]] with a Japanese embassy to China under [[Fujiwara Kadonomaro]], to study in China in [[804]]. He returned in [[805]] to found the Tendai Lotus sect of Japanese Buddhism. His small monastery, the [[Enryaku-ji]], on Mt. Hiei was enlarged, and grew steadily in power and influence over the centuries, until it was nearly eradicated by [[Oda Nobunaga]] in [[1571]]. | A monk who left the urban Buddhism of [[Nara]] to become a recluse on [[Mt. Hiei]], he built a small shrine in [[788]]. He was sent by the [[Emperor Kammu]] with a Japanese embassy to China under [[Fujiwara Kadonomaro]], to study in China in [[804]]. He returned in [[805]] to found the Tendai Lotus sect of Japanese Buddhism. His small monastery, the [[Enryaku-ji]], on Mt. Hiei was enlarged, and grew steadily in power and influence over the centuries, until it was nearly eradicated by [[Oda Nobunaga]] in [[1571]]. | ||
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+ | ==References== | ||
+ | *Gallery label, "Portrait of Dengyô Daishi," 1974.35, Walters Art Museum. | ||
[[Category:Religious Figures]][[Category:Nara Period]][[Category:Heian Period]] | [[Category:Religious Figures]][[Category:Nara Period]][[Category:Heian Period]] |
Revision as of 02:36, 18 January 2013
Saichô was the founder of the Tendai sect of Buddhism.
A monk who left the urban Buddhism of Nara to become a recluse on Mt. Hiei, he built a small shrine in 788. He was sent by the Emperor Kammu with a Japanese embassy to China under Fujiwara Kadonomaro, to study in China in 804. He returned in 805 to found the Tendai Lotus sect of Japanese Buddhism. His small monastery, the Enryaku-ji, on Mt. Hiei was enlarged, and grew steadily in power and influence over the centuries, until it was nearly eradicated by Oda Nobunaga in 1571.
References
- Gallery label, "Portrait of Dengyô Daishi," 1974.35, Walters Art Museum.