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+ | |title='''Nányíng Fójiào 南瀛佛教'''<br>''South Seas Buddhism'' | ||
+ | |other-names= Published under several names: | ||
+ | * South Seas Buddhist Association News 南瀛佛教會會報 [[1923]] - January [[1930]] | ||
+ | * South Seas Buddhism 南瀛佛教 January [[1930]] - January [[1941]] | ||
+ | * Taiwanese Buddhism 台灣佛教 February [[1941]] - December [[1941]] | ||
+ | |image= | ||
+ | |print-run=Total for all three titles: July [[1923]] – December [[1941]] | ||
+ | |other-info= | ||
+ | |location=Táiwān [[台灣]] | ||
+ | |person=Lín Xǔzài 林許在 | ||
+ | |organization=South Seas Buddhist Association [[南瀛佛教會]] | ||
+ | |editor-name= | ||
+ | }} | ||
- | + | '''Nányíng Fójiào 南瀛佛教''' (''South Seas Buddhism'') was a Buddhist periodical published in Taiwan, known by three different names. | |
- | + | Roughly 33 pages per issue at some points, over 60 pages at others. Run by Taiwanese. Started in Chinese. Articles on scripture, faith, practice, poetry. It became bilingual Chinese-Japanese in July, [[1936]]. By [[1937]], it had become heavily pro-Emperor and the Chinese content was almost completely removed, with only a few poems being published in Chinese. | |
- | + | A digital archive of ''Nányíng Fójiào'' containing 195 issues is available as part of the Archive of Taiwanese Buddhism [http://ccbs.ntu.edu.tw/taiwan/ny.html]. | |
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- | + | * [[MFQ]] has over 200 issues; looks fairly complete | |
- | + | * [[MFQB]] has 22 issues from [[1940]] and [[1941]] | |
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+ | ==Notes== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
- | + | ==References== | |
- | + | * [[MFQ]] 205:49-50 | |
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- | [[MFQ]] 205 | + | |
[[Category:Periodical]] | [[Category:Periodical]] |
Nányíng Fójiào 南瀛佛教
South Seas Buddhism |
Published under several names: |
Nányíng Fójiào 南瀛佛教 (South Seas Buddhism) was a Buddhist periodical published in Taiwan, known by three different names.
Roughly 33 pages per issue at some points, over 60 pages at others. Run by Taiwanese. Started in Chinese. Articles on scripture, faith, practice, poetry. It became bilingual Chinese-Japanese in July, 1936. By 1937, it had become heavily pro-Emperor and the Chinese content was almost completely removed, with only a few poems being published in Chinese. A digital archive of Nányíng Fójiào containing 195 issues is available as part of the Archive of Taiwanese Buddhism [1].