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  1. Reaching India. From Kapisi, the journey continued to Adinapur and Laghman. Now, in the year 630, Hsuan-tsang considered himself to have reached India. (Nowadays, this area is a part of eastern Afghanistan, near the border to Pakistan.) Hsuan-tsang (sometimes transcribed Xuan Tsang or Xuanzang) was a Chinese Buddhist monk who in 627 AD traveled ...

  2. ja.wikipedia.org › wiki › 玄奘玄奘 - Wikipedia

    玄奘三蔵. 玄奘 (げんじょう、 602年 - 664年 3月7日 )は、 唐代 の 中国 の 訳経僧 。. 玄奘は 戒名 であり、俗名は 陳褘( ちんい ) 。. 諡 は 大遍覚 [1] で、尊称は 法師 、 三蔵 など。. 玄奘三蔵 と呼ばれ、 鳩摩羅什 と共に二大訳聖、あるいは 真諦 と 不空 ...

  3. Annotation. This Schematic Map shows the entire "Journey to the West" as made by the Chinese Monk Xuanzang (Hsüan-tsang) on the Silk Road between China and India in the years 629 AD to 645 AD. The Path of the Journey to led from the Chinese Capital in Shaanxi Province of China acros the Yellow River to the westernmost pass of the Great Wall of ...

  4. Jan 1, 2017 · Xuanzang was born in Henan in 600 A.D. ( [ 2 ], p. 1), whose surname was Chen and personal name Wei. It is said that he entered a monastery at 13 years of age and was extremely intelligent beyond his age. In 620 A.D. he was fully ordained in Chengdu. Under the guidance of his masters, Xuanzang distinguished himself first in the Vinaya canon ...

  5. Xuanzang, the Tang Monk (Chinese: 玄奘; pinyin: Xuánzàng) is a central character of the classic Chinese novel ‘Journey to the West’. The Chinese novel was published in the time of the Ming Dynasty in the 16th century. Wu Cheng'en (circa 1500–1582) is considered to be the author of the novel. Xuanzang.

  6. Feb 12, 2007 · Xuanzang was a Chinese monk-scholar who travelled from China to India in the 7th century to study at the Nālandā Monastery, collect manuscripts of the true teachings of Buddha, and visit the sacred places associated with Buddha. Xuanzang left a detailed account of the 17 years of his journey on the Silk Route and in India, which became the ...

  7. Xuanzang, world-famous for his sixteen-year pilgrimage to India and career as a translator of Buddhist scriptures, is one of the most illustrious figures in the history of scholastic Chinese Buddhism. Born of a family possessing erudition for generations in Yanshi prefecture of Henan province, Xuanzang, whose lay name was Chenhui, was the youngest of four

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