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  1. A Secure Home. for your Digital Assets. connect with experiences and apps on Tezos. By Accessing, Continuing to Use & Browse this Website including its Services provided therein (“Kukai Wallet”), you agree that you have read and reviewed our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KūkaiKūkai - Wikipedia

    e. Kūkai (空海; 27 July 774 – 22 April 835 [1]), born Saeki no Mao (佐伯 眞魚), [2] posthumously called Kōbō Daishi (弘法大師, "The Grand Master who Propagated the Dharma "), was a Japanese Buddhist monk, calligrapher, and poet who founded the esoteric Shingon school of Buddhism. He travelled to China, where he studied ...

  3. Apesar de Kukai ter almejado permanecer vinte anos estudando na China, em poucos meses ele receberia a iniciação final e se tornaria um mestre da linhagem esotérica. Em outras palavras, ele teria dominado os complexos rituais envolvendo combinações de mudra , mantra , e visualizações associadas com cada uma das deidades nas ...

  4. 12 de nov. de 2023 · Kukai, também conhecido como Kobo Daishi, foi um importante filósofo e monge budista japonês do século IX. Ele é considerado uma das figuras mais influentes na história do budismo japonês e é amplamente reverenciado como um santo e mestre espiritual.

    • Early Life
    • Shingon Buddhism
    • Miracles
    • Kukai The Scholar

    Kukai was born in 774 CE to a family by the name of Saeki in Sanuki Province, Shikoku which had been exiled from the capital Heiankyo (Kyoto). He adopted the name Kukai, meaning 'air-sea' when he joined, still a youth, a Buddhist monastery. When just seven years old, he was said to have climbed a mountain and, at the summit, declared, "If I am dest...

    Kukai's studies of Chinese classics at the capital allowed him to visit China as part of a diplomatic embassy between 804 and 806 CE. He studied there under the master Hui-kuo, abbot of the Ching Lung (Green Dragon) Temple, was chosen as the master's successor and was suitably initiated. Thus he became an advocate of esoteric Buddhism or mikkyo,whi...

    Kukai also established a route of pilgrimage - the longest and most famous in Japan - which is a 1,600 km (1,000 miles) circuit which stops at 88 temples. Besides these more practical achievements, Kukai was credited with many miracles. Known as a great sculptor - there are still several trees in Japan said to have been sculpted by him into figures...

    Kukai was, above all, a scholar and he compiled detailed histories of religious thought in both China and India. He wrote the semi-autobiographical Sango shiiki('Indications of the Goals of the Three Teachings') in 797 CE. Kukai was also a poet of some repute, and he wrote a guide on the rules of Chinese poetry. He was a fine calligrapher, too, and...

    • Mark Cartwright
  5. 3 de out. de 2006 · First published Tue Oct 3, 2006; substantive revision Wed Aug 17, 2022. Kūkai (774–835CE) is one of the intellectual giants of Japan, who ought not to be ignored in any account of the history of Japanese thought. Among the traditional Buddhist thinkers of Japan, and perhaps even of the whole of East Asia, he is one of the most ...

  6. 23 de jul. de 2024 · Kūkai was one of the best-known and most-beloved Buddhist saints in Japan, founder of the Shingon (“True Word”) school of Buddhism that emphasizes spells, magic formulas, ceremonials, and masses for the dead. He contributed greatly to the development of Japanese art and literature and pioneered in.

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