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Reincarnating to Finish Copying the Huayan Sutra in Blood: A Late Ming Literati Perspective
Author Eichman, Jennifer=艾靜文
Source 2023華嚴專宗國際學術研討會論文集下冊
Date2023.10
Pages359 - 382
Publisher財團法人臺北市華嚴蓮社
Publisher Url https://www.huayen.org.tw/index.aspx
Location臺北市, 臺灣 [Taipei shih, Taiwan]
Content type會議論文=Proceeding Article
Language英文=English
NoteThe author works at Research Associate, Centre of Buddhist Studies, SOAS, University of London.
KeywordHuayan Sutra; blood-writing; Yongming Yanshou; Shanji; Song Lian; Xie Bi; Qian Qianyi; Li Weizhen; Tao Ru’nai
Abstract This article takes as its subject one very famous intergenerational blood-written copy of the Huayan Sutra and the subsequent veneration of this text among the late Ming literati. This artifact was copied out by the late Yuan dynasty monk Shanji 善繼 (1286-1357) who was thought to be a reincarnation of Yongming Yanshou 永明延壽 (904-975), the purported progenitor of this project. However, the copy was believed to have been completed only after Yongming’s second reincarnation as the great early Ming statesman Song Lian 宋濂 (1310-1381). The karmic connections between these three successive generations elevated the stature of this particular copy, which was revered for its
provenance in a storied traceable ‘Huayan lineage’ comprised of two monks and a famous literatus. Yet despite this acceptance, the historical work of determining who was a reincarnation of whom became a topic of interest in literati prefaces and postfaces, many of which espoused a uniquely Buddhist method of historical proof premised on
assessments of reincarnation, karmic connections, dream encounters, and personal realization. After presenting a detailed analysis of prefaces and postfaces written by Song Lian, the Huizhou scholar Xie Bi 謝陛 (1547-1615), and the famous literatus Qian Qianyi錢謙益 (1582-1664), this article presents a brief history of how this text left Suzhou and was later returned. And finally, I will end with a brief discussion of how this copy is referenced in other late Ming and early Qing sources. The historical reconstruction of the provenance of the Shanji copy evinces a uniquely Buddhist method of historical proof, while the intricacies of this story further shed light on the devotional status of this Buddhist artifact and its reverberations within Buddhist culture during the late Ming toearly Qing.
Table of contentsIntroducing the Interconnections between Yongming, Shanji, and Song 362
Assessing Claims to Reincarnation: Xie Bi and Qian Qianyi’s Differing Historical Views 366
Controversial Moves: How Wang Daokun Acquired the Shanji Copy 373
Later References to the Shanji Copy 377
In Conclusion 380
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 381
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS 381
Hits326
Created date2024.01.16
Modified date2024.01.16



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