Cultural Horizons of India
author: Musashi Tachikawa
edition: 1990, International Academy of Indian Culture and Aditya Prakashan
pages: 2743
Topic: History
Buddhism as the creative vision of Korea
This chapter describes Buddhism as the creative vision of Korea located on page 229 of volume Volume 2 in the book Cultural Horizons of India compiled by Musashi Tachikawa. This book comprises 50 years of research material of Lokesh Chandra and represents a thorough study of the ancient culture of India, dealing with Tantra, Buddhism, Art, Archaeology, Language and Literature in 7 volumes.
Volume 2 comprises the studies of Prof. Lokesh Chandra on the iconography, syllabary, tantras, cultural heritage in general, defence, Canon and mandalas of Japan, Korea and China.
This book covers the research articles and general surveys of Professor Lokesh Chandra. For example, this chapter describes Buddhism as the creative vision of Korea. Everything together represents a huge collection of writings related to languages such as Sanskrit, Iranian, Sino-Japanese, Tibetan, Thai, Greek, Latin, Celtic, and Slavic..
This page contains an online preview of the full text and summarizes technical terms, as well as information if you want to buy this book.
Full contents not available online!
To read the full text of Cultural Horizons of India, you can buy Musashi Tachikawa’s book from Exotic India
You can look up the meaning of the phrase “Buddhism as the creative vision of Korea” according to 26 books dealing with History. The following list shows a short preview of potential definitions.
The Great Buddhist Emperors of Asia [by Shibani Dutta]
After returning to Korea, he propagated Buddhism for Huchen and Tien Tai traditions. He wrote many articles and papers on Buddhism in Korean language. Later on, Ven. Puchao worked for the spread of Zen Buddhism (Dhyan-meditation) in Korea. It was a school of Mahayana Buddhism that originated in China during the Tang dynasty. Zen Buddhism was strongly influenced by Taoism and developed as a distinct school of Chinese Buddhism. From China, Zen Buddhism spread to Korea....
Read full contents: Chapter 5 - Korean Emperor Wang Kiyen (918 A.C.–949 A.C.)
Triveni Journal
All this seems to be a far-off vision, but it is a vision worth pursuing. So, while the present re-organisation is effected on the basis of the Fazl Ali Commission s recommendations, as modified by the decisions of the Government of India, provision may be made in the Draft Bill for a re-grouping of States with the consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned....
Read full contents: ‘The Triple Stream’
Vietnamese Buddhist Art [by Nguyen Ngoc Vinh]
From the Ashoka s missionaries, Indian traders in the first millennium had spread Indian scripts languages, literatures and faiths, especially Buddhism in South East Asian. The Buddhist art of South East Asian illustrate artistic contacts between India and greater India and help to show that Indian creative genius under colonial condition. Indeed, the arts of South East Asian recover for us one of the lost pages in history of Buddhist art....
Read full contents: Conclusion
Total 26 books found: See all results here.
Summary:
You can return to the book Index to buy or shop for other books, or you can read the available online pages below:
[Cultural Horizons of India: index]
[About the Author (Lokesh Chandra)]
[Volume 1 (summary)]
[Volume 1 (preface)]
[Volume 2 (summary)]
[Volume 3 (summary)]
[Volume 4 (summary)]
[Volume 5 (summary)]
[Volume 6 (summary)]
[Volume 7 (summary)]