Hisao Inagaki

From Tsadra Commons
Revision as of 16:43, 19 December 2024 by AlexC (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Inagaki, H.

Inagaki Hisao.png
PersonType Category:Authors of English Works
Category:Professors
FirstName / namefirst Hisao
LastName / namelast Inagaki
MainNamePhon Hisao Inagaki
SortName Inagaki, Hisao
bio Hisao Inagaki (1929–2021) was born in 1929 in Kobe. He was Professor Emeritus of the Ryukoku University in Kyoto (Japan). He received his PhD from the University of London and taught Buddhism at the university. He returned to Japan to become a professor at the Ryukoku University.

In addition he served as a visiting professor at the University of California (Berkeley), the University of Hawaii at Manoa, and the University of Leiden in the Netherlands. Aside from teaching, Inagaki also held offices for the International Association of Shin Buddhist Studies and has written numerous books.

He was the recipient of the 43rd Bukkyo Dendo Distinguished Service Award. The honour is presented to personalities who have made important contributions to the promotion of Buddhism. (Source Accessed Dec 19, 2024)

YearBirth 1929
YearDeath 2021
BornIn Kobe, Japan
Other wikis

If the page does not yet exist on the remote wiki, you can paste the tag {{PersonCall}} inside the destination page. But please first make sure you are on the right page. Some wikis have the person page on Person/<COMMONS PERSON PAGENAME>, in which case the page <COMMONS PERSON PAGENAME> needs to be redirected. Ask if you need clarification.

Full Name

Zuio Hisao Inagaki

Affiliation

Professor Emeritus, Ryukoku University
Ph.D. University of London, 1968

Other Information

Zuio Hisao Inagaki Website: http://www12.canvas.ne.jp/horai/
Bio: Professor Emeritus, Ryukoku University. Born in Kobe, Nov. 1929; graduated from Kobe City University of Foreign Languages (B.A.), Ryukoku University (M.A.), and School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London (Ph.D., 1968). Lecturer in Buddhism at School of Oriental and African Studies, 1969-1981; professor at Ryukoku University, 1982-1998. Appointed to Numata professorship at the University of California, Berkeley (1985), the University of Hawaii at Manoa (1989), and Leiden University, The Netherlands (1992). President of the International Association of Shin Buddhist Studies since 1993. Honoary President of the same since 2005. Representative of the Jodo Mandala Study Group since 1993. Editor of The Pure Land since 1979. Representative of the Honganji Shin Buddhism Translation Committee and Portuguese Translation Committee.


Major publications:
Order his books online
A Tri-lingual Glossary of the Sukhavativyuha Sutras (1984),
A Dictionary of Japanese Buddhist Terms (1984,85, 88, 2003),
Anantamukhanirhara-dharani Sutra and Jnanagarbha's Commentary (1987),
A Glossary of Zen Terms (1991 & 95),
The Three Pure Land Sutras: a study and translation (1994, 95, 2000),
The Three Pure Land Sutras (BDK English Tripitaka 12-II,III,IV, 1995, 2003).
The Amida Sutra Mandala: an iconography with the text of the Amida Sutra (1995),
T'an-luan's Commentary on Vasubandhu's Discourse on the Pure Land: a study and translation (1998),
Nagarjuna's Discourse on the Ten Stages: translation and study of the verses and the chapter on the Easy Practice (1998),
and Home-page "Jodo Mandala" (1998).
Amida Dharani Sutra and Jnanagarbha's Commentary: An annotated translation from Tibetan of the Anantamukha-nirhara-dharani Sutra and Tika (1999).
Liturgy for Birth (in the Amida Net, 2000), Kyogyoshinsho (BDK English Tripitaka, 2004). Shan-tao's Kannenbomon (2005).
Translations of other Buddhist texts:
Pratyutpanna-samadhi Sutra, Shan-tao's Pan-chou tsan, Kukai's Sokushin-jobutsugi, Kakuban's Amida-hishaku, etc.
(Source)


 Template:DRL Authors of Japanese Works