61:
95:
114:
86:
Watt, Paul B. (March 8, 1999). "Chapter 7: Eison and the
Shingon Vinaya Sect". In Tanabe, George (ed.).
72:
than traditional
Shingon Buddhism while still adhering to tantric practices. Its home temple is
91:
30:
38:
34:
50:
108:
73:
54:
60:
42:
69:
59:
46:
68:
Shingon Risshū is marked by a greater emphasis on the
22:
8:
53:, and carried further by Eison's disciple
29:is a comparatively small medieval sect of
64:Saidai-ji, Shingon-Risshu head temple
7:
14:
90:. Princeton University Press.
88:Religions of Japan in Practice
49:(叡尊 1201-1290), a disciple of
27:, "The Shingon-Vinaya school")
1:
131:
23:
65:
63:
41:. Its founder was a
66:
37:as an offshoot of
33:that arose in the
57:(忍性 1217-1303).
31:Buddhism in Japan
122:
115:Shingon Buddhism
101:
39:Shingon Buddhism
28:
26:
25:
130:
129:
125:
124:
123:
121:
120:
119:
105:
104:
98:
85:
82:
35:Kamakura period
20:
12:
11:
5:
128:
126:
118:
117:
107:
106:
103:
102:
96:
81:
78:
18:Shingon-risshū
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
127:
116:
113:
112:
110:
99:
97:0-691-05789-3
93:
89:
84:
83:
79:
77:
75:
71:
62:
58:
56:
52:
48:
44:
40:
36:
32:
19:
87:
67:
17:
15:
80:References
74:Saidai-ji
109:Category
94:
70:vinaya
55:Ninshō
45:named
51:Jōkei
47:Eison
92:ISBN
43:monk
24:真言律宗
16:The
111::
76:.
100:.
21:(
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.