Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Ōtani Kōzui, jap. 大谷光瑞, (* 27. Dezember 1876 in Kyōto; † 5. Oktober 1948 in Beppu, Präfektur Ōita) war der 22. Oberste ( 門主, Monshu) des buddhistischen Tempels Nishi Hongan-ji der Jōdo-Shinshū (der Wahren Schule des Reinen Landes) im japanischen Kyōto. Nach 1868 wurde er in den nach westlichem Modell gebildeten ...

  2. Count Ōtani Kōzui (大谷 光瑞, 27 December 1876 – 5 October 1948) was a Japanese Buddhist leader and explorer who was the 22nd Abbot of Nishi Hongan-ji and the head of the Honganji-ha sect of Buddhism.

  3. Description. Practitioner of religion. Born in Kyoto. He entered the Buddhist priesthood at the age of 10, and is known as Takamaro, his childhood name, Kyonyo, his Buddhist name, and finally, Kozui, his posthumous name.

  4. 1. Juni 2022 · Count Ōtani Kōzui (1876–1948) was a student in London in 1901 when archaeologist Aurel Stein (1862–1943) electrified the scholarly world with news of his discoveries of Buddhist cities buried beneath the sands of the Taklamakan desert along the Silk Road trade routes in Chinese Turkestan.

  5. Ōtani Kōzui, jap. 大谷光瑞, (* 27. Dezember 1876 i n Kyōto; † 5. Oktober 1948 i n Beppu, Präfektur Ōita) w ar der 22. Oberste (門主, Monshu) d es buddhistischen Tempels Nishi Hongan-ji d er Jōdo-Shinshū (der Wahren Schule d es Reinen Landes) i m japanischen Kyōto. Nach 1868 w urde er i n den n ach westlichem Modell gebildeten ...

  6. 23. Juli 2022 · The mastermind behind these Japanese enterprises was Ōtani Kōzui, the 22nd lord-abbot of the Western Honganji temple in Kyoto and the patriarch of the Honpa Honganji denomination of the Jōdo Shinshū sect, which was and remains the largest Buddhist community in Japan.

  7. Ōtani Kōzui (1876–1948), a prominent figure of 20th century Japanese history, was the 22nd patriarch of the Honpa Honganji denomination of the Buddhist Jōdo Shinshū sect (True Pure Land or Shin Buddhism) and the chief-abbot of its head-temple, Western [Nishi] Honganji, Kyoto.