m (moved 張化聲 to Zhang Huasheng 張化聲: To accord with new protocol) |
|||
(4 intermediate revisions not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
- | + | {{Bio_infobox | |
+ | |name-date=Zhāng Huàshēng 張化聲 (b.1880) | ||
+ | |names= | ||
+ | |image= | ||
+ | |birth=[[1880]] (Guāgxù 光緒 6) in Shānkǒuwān 山口彎 in Húnán [[湖南]] | ||
+ | |death=19?? | ||
+ | |associates=Notable Associates: | ||
+ | * Dàxǐng [[大醒]] | ||
+ | * Fǎfǎng [[法舫]] | ||
+ | * Shǐ Yìrú [[史一如]] | ||
+ | * Tàixū [[太虛]] | ||
+ | * Táng Dàyuán [[唐大圓]] | ||
+ | |editor-name=Erik Hammerstrom | ||
+ | }} | ||
- | + | '''Zhāng Huàshēng 張化聲 (b.1880)''' was a lay teacher at the Wǔchāng Buddhist Seminary [[武昌佛學院]] and a colleague of Tàixū [[太虛]]. | |
- | + | ==Biography== | |
- | + | ||
- | ''' | + | As a young man, Zhāng was very interested in ''qìgōng'' 氣功 and Daoist bodily practices. He received a classical education and in the closing years of the Qing Dynasty he studied in Japan. He began studying Buddhism at the start of the Republic, obtaining several hundred volumes of Buddhist texts from the Chángshā Scriptural Press [[長沙刻經處]]. He was an early contributor (both financially and in terms of articles) to the ''Hǎicháo yīn'' [[海潮音]], along with Shǐ Yìrú [[史一如]] and Táng Dàyuán [[唐大圓]]. |
- | + | Zhāng was one of the first teachers at the Wǔchāng Buddhist Seminary, where he taught Madhyamaka thought. After the school was occupied by the army during the Northern Expedition in [[1926]], Zhāng focused on editing and writing for the ''Hǎicháo yīn''. In the mid 1920s he published a collection of his writings, ''Huàshēng jí'' 化聲集, which had prefaces by Tàixū, Táng Dàyuán, and Dàxǐng [[大醒]]. His activities after this period are unknown. | |
- | + | ==References== | |
- | + | * {{ZFJS}} Pp. 2.687-689. | |
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | * {{ZFJS}} Pp. 2.687- | + | |
* {{XFRC}} Pp. 1.966a. | * {{XFRC}} Pp. 1.966a. | ||
[[Category:Biography]] | [[Category:Biography]] |
Zhāng Huàshēng 張化聲 (b.1880)
|
Notable Associates: |
|
Zhāng Huàshēng 張化聲 (b.1880) was a lay teacher at the Wǔchāng Buddhist Seminary 武昌佛學院 and a colleague of Tàixū 太虛.
As a young man, Zhāng was very interested in qìgōng 氣功 and Daoist bodily practices. He received a classical education and in the closing years of the Qing Dynasty he studied in Japan. He began studying Buddhism at the start of the Republic, obtaining several hundred volumes of Buddhist texts from the Chángshā Scriptural Press 長沙刻經處. He was an early contributor (both financially and in terms of articles) to the Hǎicháo yīn 海潮音, along with Shǐ Yìrú 史一如 and Táng Dàyuán 唐大圓.
Zhāng was one of the first teachers at the Wǔchāng Buddhist Seminary, where he taught Madhyamaka thought. After the school was occupied by the army during the Northern Expedition in 1926, Zhāng focused on editing and writing for the Hǎicháo yīn. In the mid 1920s he published a collection of his writings, Huàshēng jí 化聲集, which had prefaces by Tàixū, Táng Dàyuán, and Dàxǐng 大醒. His activities after this period are unknown.