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'''Batuo''' (''Fo Tuo'', {{zh-cp |c=跋陀 |p='''Bátuó'''}}, from Sanskrit ''Buddhabhadra''), an ] ] master, was the founder and the first patriarch of the ]. <ref> The founder of Shaolinsi</ref> '''Batuo''' (''Fo Tuo'', {{zh-cp |c=跋陀 |p='''Bátuó'''}}, from Sanskrit ''Buddhabhadra''), an ] ] master, was the founder and the first patriarch <ref> Chan Insights and Oversights: an epistemological critique of the Chan tradition by Bernard Faure </ref> of the ]. <ref> The founder of Shaolinsi</ref>


According to the ''Deng Feng County Recording'' (''Deng Feng Xian Zhi''), Bátuó came to China in 464 CE to preach ]. According to the ''Deng Feng County Recording'' (''Deng Feng Xian Zhi''), Bátuó came to China in 464 CE to preach ].

Revision as of 18:16, 20 November 2006

There were two Indian Buddhist masters named Buddhabhadra in China during the 5th century CE. This article is about the Shaolin Abbot.
Main gate of the Shaolin temple in Henan

Batuo (Fo Tuo, Chinese: 跋陀; pinyin: Bátuó, from Sanskrit Buddhabhadra), an Indian dhyana master, was the founder and the first patriarch of the Shaolin Monastery.

According to the Deng Feng County Recording (Deng Feng Xian Zhi), Bátuó came to China in 464 CE to preach Nikaya (小乘) Buddhism. Thirty-one years later, in 495, the Shaolin Monastery was built by the order of Emperor Xiaowen of Northern Wei for Batuo's preaching. The temple originally consisted of a round dome used as a shrine and a platform where Indian and Chinese monks translated Indian Buddhist scriptures into native Chinese languages.

Batuo was the teacher of early Shaolin monks, including Sengchou and Huiguang. Monastery records state Sengchou and Huiguang were two of Shaolin's first monks, both experts in martial arts. The Taishō Tripiṭaka documents Sengchou's skill with the tin staff.

Notes

  1. Chan Insights and Oversights: an epistemological critique of the Chan tradition by Bernard Faure
  2. The Founder Of Shaolinsi The founder of Shaolinsi
  3. Kungfu History at EasternMartialArts.com
  4. Legacy of Shaolin Fighting Monks by Salvatore Canzonieri
  5. Broughton, Jeffrey L. (1999). The Bodhidharma Anthology: The Earliest Records of Zen. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 109. ISBN 0-520-21972-4.
  6. Canzonieri, Salvatore (1998). "History of Chinese Martial Arts: Jin Dynasty to the Period of Disunity". Han Wei Wushu. 3 (9). {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)

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