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  1. Ta T'ang Hsi-yü Chi. The Records of the Western Regions, also known by its Chinese name as the Datang Xiyuji or Da Tang Xiyu Ji and by various other translations and transcriptions, is a narrative of the Buddhist monk Xuanzang 's nineteen-year journey from Tang China through the Western Regions to medieval India and back during the mid-7th ...

  2. Apr 7, 2017 · The Xuanzang Memorial at Nalanda, built in 2007, is a structure that could provide a possible answer. The memorial is devoted to Xuanzang (c. 602–64), a Chinese monk who served the Chinese emperor and traveled to India to learn more about Buddhism, bringing back (and translating) the Heart Sutra , among other scriptures.

  3. Overview. “I will make you my new disciple. Yes, I will raise you to be a splendid pupil of the Buddha!”. With fisticuff skills completely unfitting of the Caster class’s image, Sanzang has an equally unique image as a servant. Lacking the companionship of her more famous heroic pal Sun Wukong, she compensates by journeying forth with a ...

  4. May 27, 2022 · Xuanzang (602–664) is famous for his legendary life, his important translation works, and also his Discourse on the Realisation of Consciousness-Only (Vijñapti-mātratā-siddhi, 成唯識論). This text, which is considered as a synthesis of Yogācāra thought, has been diversely interpreted by modern scholars and is still discussed, in particular about the status of external things. Nevertheless, this issue seems to be of little interest for Yogācāra thinkers compared to other topics ...

  5. An Indian woman with a China craze retraces the footsteps of a Chinese monk with an Indian obsessionIn the seventh century AD, the Chinese monk Xuanzang (earlier spelt as Hiuen Tsang or Hsuan Tsang) set off on an epic journey to India to study Buddhist philosophy from the Indian masters.

    • Mishi Saran
  6. Hsüan-tsang's Translations and Works. Dan Lusthaus. The following annotated bibliography is an abridged extract from an appendix to my book, Buddhist Phenomenology (London: Curzon Press, 2000). Cf. that work for fuller notations on many of these works, including a comprehensive listing of available Western language translations and studies of ...

  7. Oct 19, 2021 · The life and legacy of Xuanzang: a Buddhist seeker, philosopher, and intrepid traveler who became the world's most famous pilgrim.In the fall of 629, Xuanzang (600–662), a twenty-nine-year-old Buddhist monk, left the capital of China to begin an epic pilgrimage across the country, through the deserts of Central Asia, and into India.

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