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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ZhanranZhanran - Wikipedia

    Zhanran is best known for his scriptural exegesis of such works as Zhiyi's Mohe Zhiguan (The Great Calming and Contemplation), as well as his promotion of the doctrine of universal Buddha-nature. He is the author of The Adamantine Scalpel (金剛錍 Jin'gang Pi) among other works.

  2. Jul 21, 2017 · Zhanran lived during one of the most glorious eras of Chinese culture and literature, when the populous and flourishing Tang capital city, Chang’an (長安), served as a crossroads of cultural exchange across Asia. Zhanran, lay surname Qi (戚), was born in Jinling Jingxi (晉陵荊溪), modern day Jiangsu Yixing (蘇宜興), circa 711.

  3. Zhanran (Jingqi Zhanran and Miaole dashi, 711–782) is the ninth patriarch of the Tiantai school of Chinese Buddhism and the sixth patriarch following Zhiyi (538–597), the de facto architect of the tradition. Author of the first authoritative commentaries on the major works of Zhiyi, Zhanran revitalized and reformed Tiantai during the Tang ...

  4. Jingxi Zhanran. (J. Keikei Tannen; K. Hyŏnggye Tamyŏn 荊溪湛然 (711–782). Chinese monk who is the putative ninth patriarch of the Tiantai zong; also known as Great Master Miaole (Sublime Bliss) and Dharma Master Jizhu (Lord of Exegesis). Zhanran was a native of Jingqi in present-day Jiangsu province.

  5. Zhanran is best known for his scriptural exegesis of such works as Zhiyi's Mohe zhiguan (The Great Calming and Contemplation), as well as his promotion of the Doctrine of universal Buddha-nature. He is the author of The Adamantine Scalpel (金剛錍 Jin'gang Pi) among other works.

  6. Zhanran is known as a “restorer” of Tian-tai Buddhism and was also the teacher of Daosui 道邃 (c. 804) and Xingman 行満 (c. 804), with whom Saichō studied when he traveled to China. While spe-cific points in Zhanran’s exegesis of Zhiyi have drawn both approval and also

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  8. Zhanran, following the example of his great predecessor, Zhiyi, expounds and argues based on the most important texts and tenets of mahāyāna Buddhism, while interpreting, reinterpreting, and often furnishing these with new, ingenious meanings.