Ōbaku (school of Buddhism)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series on
Buddhism


History

Dharmic religions
Timeline of Buddhism
Buddhist councils

Foundations

Four Noble Truths
Noble Eightfold Path
The Five Precepts
Nirvāṇa · Three Jewels

Key Concepts

Three marks of existence
Skandha · Cosmology · Dharma
Saṃsāra · Rebirth · Shunyata
Pratitya-samutpada · Karma

Major Figures

Gautama Buddha
Disciples · Later Buddhists

Practices and Attainment

Buddhahood · Bodhisattva
Four Stages of Enlightenment
Paramis · Meditation · Laity

Regions

Southeast Asia · East Asia
India · Sri Lanka · Tibet
Western Countries

Schools

Theravāda · Mahāyāna
Vajrayāna · Early schools

Texts

Pali Canon · Mahayana Sutras
Tibetan Canon

Comparative Studies
Culture · List of Topics
Portal: Buddhism

Image:Dharma_wheel_1.png

This box: view  talk  edit

Ōbaku (Japanese. Chinese 黃檗; pinyin huang bo) is a Japanese Zen Buddhist school. It was founded in 1654 when the Chinese monk Yinyuan Longqi and his disciple Muyan, followers of the Linji tradition, went to Japan. The head temple Mampukuji was founded at Uji in 1661. In 1664 Muyan replaced Yinyuan Longqi as chief priest there. In 1671 he established a second temple, Zuishōji at Shirokane, Edo. Chinese monks remained master of the temple for the first thirteen generations, until the Japanese monk Ryūtō became the fourteenth.

Ōbaku monks were famed for their skill at calligraphy, and three of them, Ingen Ryuki, Mokuan Shoto and Sokuhi Nyoitsu were known as the "Three Brushes of Ōbaku" or Obaku no Sanpitsu.

[edit] Famous Ōbaku monks

[edit] See also