Śrīmitra: Difference between revisions
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|MainNameChi=帛尸梨密多羅 | |MainNameChi=帛尸梨密多羅 | ||
|MainNamePin=Boshilimiduoluo | |MainNamePin=Boshilimiduoluo | ||
|bio=Scholar from Kucha Po-Śrīmitra went to China during the period 307-312. The political troubles there compelled him to move to South China where he translated three Buddhist texts. | |||
Śrīmitra—literally meaning ‘lucky friend’ was a Śramaṇa of western origin [Kucha] who was the heir apparent of a king of that country. He, however, gave up his kingdom to his younger brother and became a Śramaṇa. He came to China in the Yun-Kia period A.D. 307–12, under the western Tsin dynasty and translated 3 works at Kin-khan (Nanking) under the reign of Yuen-ti, A.D. 317–322 and died at the age of eighty in the Hhien-Khan period, A.D. 335–342. The works are ''Mahāhhishekarāddhidhāraṇi-sūtra'', ''Mahāmayūri-Vidyārāgnī'' and in two Fascimulae (Nanjio: ''Catalogue'', ii, 36, pp. 397–98). (Puri, ''Buddhism in Central Asia'', 115n91) | |||
|PersonType=Translators | |PersonType=Translators | ||
|YearDeath=ca. 343 | |YearDeath=ca. 343 |
Revision as of 17:15, 1 September 2021
PersonType | Category:Translators |
---|---|
MainNamePhon | Śrīmitra |
MainNameChi | 帛尸梨密多羅 |
MainNamePin | Boshilimiduoluo |
SortName | Śrīmitra |
bio | Scholar from Kucha Po-Śrīmitra went to China during the period 307-312. The political troubles there compelled him to move to South China where he translated three Buddhist texts.
Śrīmitra—literally meaning ‘lucky friend’ was a Śramaṇa of western origin [Kucha] who was the heir apparent of a king of that country. He, however, gave up his kingdom to his younger brother and became a Śramaṇa. He came to China in the Yun-Kia period A.D. 307–12, under the western Tsin dynasty and translated 3 works at Kin-khan (Nanking) under the reign of Yuen-ti, A.D. 317–322 and died at the age of eighty in the Hhien-Khan period, A.D. 335–342. The works are Mahāhhishekarāddhidhāraṇi-sūtra, Mahāmayūri-Vidyārāgnī and in two Fascimulae (Nanjio: Catalogue, ii, 36, pp. 397–98). (Puri, Buddhism in Central Asia, 115n91) |
YearDeath | ca. 343 |
IsInGyatsa | No |
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