Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Antai-jiAntai-ji - Wikipedia

    Kyoto. Antai-ji was founded in 1921 by Oka Sotan as a monastery for scholars to study the Shōbōgenzō. It was located in the Gentaku area of northern Kyoto and many leading scholars studied there. Vacated during World War II, Kōdō Sawaki became its fifth abbot in 1949 and made it a place for Zazen.

  2. Antai-ji (安泰寺?) est un temple bouddhiste de l'école Zen Sōtō . Il se trouve à Shin'onsen ( préfecture d'Hyōgo ), au Japon. Il occupe 50 hectares dans les montagnes, près du parc national de San'inkaigan. Inaccessible en hiver, il accueille les visiteurs pendant les mois d'été. Fondation à Kyoto.

    • Muhô Nölke
    • Temple Sōtō
    • 1923
    • Oka Sotan
  3. Antai-ji (安泰寺, Antai-ji?) is a Buddhist temple that belongs to the Sōtō school of Zen Buddhism. It is located in the town of Shin'onsen, Mikata District, in northern Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan, where it sits on about 50 hectares of land in the mountains, close to a national park on the Sea of Japan.

  4. Kosho Uchiyama (内山 興正, Uchiyama Kōshō, 1912 – March 13, 1998) was a Sōtō priest, origami master, and abbot of Antai-ji near Kyoto, Japan. Uchiyama was author of more than twenty books on Zen Buddhism and origami, of which Opening the Hand of Thought: Foundations of Zen Buddhist Practice is best known.

  5. de.wikipedia.org › wiki › Antai-jiAntai-ji – Wikipedia

    Antai-ji. Der Antaiji ( jap. 安泰寺) ist ein zen -buddhistischer Tempel in Japan . Er liegt nordwestlich von Kyōto und nördlich von Kōbe in der Präfektur Hyōgo im Bereich der Gemeinde Shin’onsen auf einem schwer zugänglichen Hochplateau, umgeben von dichten Kiefernwäldern. In den Wintermonaten ist Antaiji aufgrund starken ...

  6. In 1949, he took responsibility for Antai-ji, a zen temple in northern Kyoto. Because of his regular travels throughout Japan to teach zen, and against tradition his not becoming a conventional abbot of a home temple, he came to be known as "Homeless Kodo" [3] ("homeless" in the Japanese referring more to his lack of a temple than a ...

  7. Antaijis History. Antaiji belongs to the Sōtō Zen school. It was founded in 1921 by Oka Sotan as monastery for scholars to study the Shobogenzo. At that time it was located in northern Kyoto, and many leading scholars studied there. During the second worldwar though, Antaiji was vacated until in 1949 Sawaki Kōdō and Uchiyama Kōshō ...