Qingliang Chengguan

Chinese illustration of Chengguan

Qingliang Chengguan (Chinese: 澄觀; pinyin: Chéngguān; Korean: Jinggwan; Japanese: Chōgan, 738–839 or 737-838 CE),[1] was an important scholar-monk and patriarch of the Huayan school of Chinese Buddhism also known as Huayan pusa (bodhisattva Avatamsaka) and Qingliang Guoshi (Imperial Preceptor "Clear and Cool", Clear and Cool is a name for Mount Wutai).[2][3]

Chengguan is most widely known for his extensive commentaries and sub-commentaries to the Avataṃsaka Sūtra (Huayan jing), as well as for his translation of a new Gandhavyuha sutra version, together with the Indian monk Prajña.[2][3] Chengguan's commentaries on the Avataṃsaka quickly became one of the authoritative sources for Huayan doctrine.[3] Chengguan lived through the reigns of nine emperors and was an honored teacher to seven emperors starting with Xuanzong (玄宗) until Wenzong (文宗).[3] Chengguan was also the teacher of the influential Huayan patriarch Zongmi.[2][3]

  1. ^ Chengguan 澄觀, Da Fangguang Fo Huayanjing Shu 《大方廣佛華嚴經疏》, Taisho Tripiṭaka 大正新脩大藏經 T35n1735, ed. Dazheng xinxiu dazangjing kanxinghui 大正新修大藏經刊行會 (Tokyo: Dazang chuban zhushi huishe 大藏出版株式會社, 1988).
  2. ^ a b c "Chengguan", in Buswell and Lopez (2013), The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism, pp. 179-178. Princeton University Press.
  3. ^ a b c d e Hamar, I. "Chengguan". in Silk, J.  Brill’s Encyclopedia of Buddhism, Volume II: Lives.

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