Timeline
of Chinese Buddhism
|
Year
|
Major Events in
Chinese Buddhism
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1st century CE
|
• Historical record has it that two Buddhist monks, Kasyapa and
Dharmaraksha, from India
in 68 AD, arrived at the court of Emperor Ming (58-75) of the Han Dynasty (25-220 AD). They
enjoyed imperial favour and stayed on to translate various Buddhist Texts,
one of which, The 'Sutra of Forty-two Sections' continues to be
popular even today.
|
2nd century CE
|
• First translations of Indian Buddhist texts into Chinese by An
Shih-Kao in 148.
• A Mahayana monk, Lokaksema translates Small Perfections of Wisdom Sutra
and A Land of Bliss Sutra (168).
• First Buddhist monastery constructed.
• This early work of translating texts continues into 3rd century.
• Dhamaraksa (born 230) translates a large number of sutras, including the
Lotus Sutra and Large Perfection of Wisdom Sutra, and founded monasteries,
ordained Sangha, and expounded the Dharma
|
4th century CE
|
• Fo-T'u-Teng
founds Buddhist order of nuns (317).
• Translation of Buddhist
texts into Chinese by Kumarajiva (344-413) and
Hui-yüan (344-416).
|
5th century CE
|
•
Chinese pilgrim scholar Fa-hsien visits India
(399-414).
• Amitabha (Amida) the Pure Land School (Ching t'u) emerges in China (402).
• First Patriarch of Pure
Land was T'an-Luan
(476-542)
• Persecution of Buddhism under Emperor Wu or Shih-tusu (424-451).
• Restoration under the new Emperor, Wen-ch'eng-ti (454).
• T'ien Tai school founded by Hui-Wen (470-?) in South
China.
|
6th century CE
|
• Bodhidharma, first Patriarch of
the Ch'an School arrives in China
from India
in 520 (variant 526).
• The T'ang dynasty (618-907) was the
Golden Age of Chinese Buddhism.
• The T'ien-tai School was established by Chih-i (538-597) • Hua-yen School
establish by Fa-shun (557-640) • Dhyana
School (Ch'an; Jap.Zen)
Schools of Chinese Buddhism.
|
7th
century CE
|
•
The Southern School
of Ch'an or new Ch'an
begins in earnest with Hui-neng (638-713) the Sixth
Patriarch.
•
The Persecution in 845, during the reign of Emperor Wu-tsung (841-7) an order
came to the effect that all Buddhist establishments should be destroyed,
initiating a decline in Chinese Buddhism.
•
The invention of block printing by Chinese Buddhists. The oldest extant book
printed is the Tun-hung book of 868 it contained excerpts from the Diamond
Sutra .
|
10th century CE
|
• In 972, the first emperor of the Sung Dynasty ordered the
complete printing of the Chinese Tripitaka. This was achieved in 983, known
as the Shu-pen (Szechuan edition). •
Two classic collections appeared, the 'Blue Cliff Record', (Pi-yen-lu;
Jap. Hekiganroku) compiled by Hsueh Tou Ch'ung Hsien (980-1152) and the 'Gateless
Gate' (Wu-men-kuan; Jap. Mumonkan) compiled by Wu-men Hui kai
(1184-1260).
|
12th to 15th century CE
|
• China during
the Yuan Dynasty was under Mongolian
rule and the influences of Tibetan Lamaism. It was during the Mogol Dynasty
that the Buddhist-Taoist controversy was brought before Mangu Khan in 1255.
The acrimonious debate, which had started over a 1000 years before was
finally concluded in the Buddhist's favour by an edict of Kublai Khan in
1281.
•
Movement toward unity among the schools developed under the Ming Dynasty (1368-1643)
• Master Chu-hung, (born 1535) united in his person the two leading trends in
Ming Buddhism: harmonization of the different schools (specifically Cha'n and
Pureland) and the inauguration of a lay Buddhist movement.
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The Modern Era
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•
The revolution of 1911 that toppled the Manchu Dynasty and established
the Republic of China brought problems for the Buddhist Sangha. To combat
these trends arose a remarkable monk, T'ai-hsu (1898-1947) who was able to
rally his fellow religionists and to initiate a program of reform. On the
national scale he organised a Chinese Buddhist Society in 1929.
• A
revival of the Idealistic School was initiated by the publication in 1901of
the Ch'eng-wei-shih-lun (Notes on the Completion of the Idealistic
Doctrine) of K'uei-chi, long lost in China
but brought back from Japan.
The leader of this revival was the layman Ou-yang Chien, and the Institute of Inner
Learning, which he organised in Naking (Nanjing) in 1922.
• Hsu Yun, Ch'an Master
(1840-1959) 'Universally regarded as the most outstanding Buddhist of the
Chinese Sangha in the modern era' (Richard Hunn). Dharma successor of all
five Ch'an schools; main reformer in Chinese Buddhism revival (1900-50).
•
Wong Mou-Lam translated the The Platform Sutra into English and
founded the journal Chinese Buddhism (1930).
•
(1898-1978) Upasaka Lu K'uan Yu (Charles Luk) Translator and Writer on Ch'an.
Born in Canton.
Lived in exile in Hong Kong.
•
The official formation of the Chinese Buddhist Association by the government
of the People's Republic of China
on May 30th, 1953.
•
The Cultural Revolution (1965-75) Buddhist temples and monasteries were
sacked and the already weakened Sangha was further depleted. The excesses of
this time have since been regretted, however, and a more liberal policy
introduced.
•
Ven. Cheng Yen founds Tzu Chi Compassion Relief Association (1966) and Tzu
Chi Compassion Foundation (1980).
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Source: www.buddhanet.net