icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms

Chapter 5 GREAT QUINQUENNIAL ASSEMBLY OF MONKS. RELICS OF BUDDHA. PRODUCTIONS OF THE COUNTRY.

Word Count: 625    |    Released on: 28/11/2017

requests the presence of the Sramans from all quarters (of his kingdom). They come (as if) in clouds; and when they are all assembled, their place of session is grandly d

nisters present their offerings according to rule and law. (The assembly takes

n riding-horse, saddles, bridles, and waits on him himself,(2) while he makes the noblest and most important minister of the kingdom mount him. Then, taking fine white woollen cloth, all sorts of precious things, and articl

ha, made of stone, and in colour like his alms-bowl. There is also a tooth of Buddha, for which the people have reared a tope, connected with which there are more than a thousand monks and their disciples,(5) all students of the hinayana. To the east of these hills the dress of the common people is of coarse materials, as in our country of Ts'in, but here also(6) there were among th

O

e describes the assembl

ituted by king Asoka f

culcation o

sentence is perplexin

lf, have been

ld of king Asoka's gra

r xxvii. There are sev

fts in the

ention to this as sho

dit of possessing weat

s {.} {.}, not {.} a

ads who looked up to c

prec

id in chapter ii of th

n-s

ruit here was the guav

is preceded by gan {.

Shih-lau, as having be

g-k'een, who is refer

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms
A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms
“Faxian (337 – c. 422) was a Chinese Buddhist monk who travelled by foot from China to India, visiting many sacred Buddhist sites in what are now Xinjiang, Pakistan, India, Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka between 399-412 to acquire Buddhist texts. His journey is described in his important travelogue, A Record of Buddhist Kingdoms, Being an Account by the Chinese Monk Fa-Xian of his Travels in India and Ceylon in Search of the Buddhist Books of Discipline. Antiquated transliterations of his name include Fa-Hien and Fa-hsien. Annnotation- added sticky notes to paragraph for better understanding of historical point of view.”