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Heine, Steven Professor of Religion and History, Director of Asian Studies, Florida International University
Print publication date: 2006 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: May 2006
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-530570-8







doi:10.1093/0195305701.003.0001

Steven Heine
Abstract: DU+014Dgen was the second in a succession of Japanese monks who went to China in pursuit of true Buddhism, then returned to Japan to establish Zen temples. This chapter details the route travelled by DU+014Dgen and MyU+014Dzen to the Ch’an temples, which was patterned after the journeys of Eisai and continued on through the Five Mountains temples in China. DU+014Dgen spent two years seeking an authentic master, almost giving up his quest in despair. He finally settled at Mt. T’ien-t’ung around the time of MyU+014Dzen’s death. During the same year, he began training under the tutelage of Ju-ching, who would become the master that DU+014Dgen was seeking.

Keywords: Ch’an Masters, Eisai, Five Mountains, Ju-ching, Mt. T’ien-t’ung, MyU+014Dzen,

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Part I Historical and Methodological Issues
Part II Theory of Periodization