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- | [[File:Liza_Roos.jpg| | + | {{Bio_infobox |
+ | |name-date=Liza Roos (1864-1941) | ||
+ | |names=* Alternate names: Mrs. Silas Hardoon | ||
+ | |* Surname 性: Luó 羅 | ||
+ | |* Dharma name 法名: Jiālíng 迦陵 | ||
+ | |* Style name 號: Tàilóng jūshì 太隆居士 | ||
+ | |image=[[File:Liza_Roos.jpg|center|Liza Roos]] | ||
+ | |birth=March 28, [[1864]] (2/21 Tóngzhì 同治 ) in Shànghǎi [[上海]] | ||
+ | |death=October 3, [[1941]] (Mínguó 民國 30) | ||
+ | |associates=Notable Associates: | ||
+ | * Chísōng [[持松]] | ||
+ | * Yuèxiá [[月霞]] | ||
+ | * Zōngyǎng [[宗仰]] | ||
+ | |editor-name=Erik Hammerstrom | ||
+ | }} | ||
- | + | '''Luó Jiālíng 羅迦陵, a.k.a. Liza Roos (1864-1941)''' was the wife of prominent Shànghǎi businessman Silas Hardoon. She donated a great deal of money to Buddhist activities, and she was a supporter of the monk Zōngyǎng [[宗仰]]. | |
- | + | ==Biography== | |
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According to her own biography, Liza was the daughter of a Chinese mother and a French sailor who returned to France soon after her birth. Her mother died when she was young, and she may have been a prostitute to French sailors. She did learn French and English. | According to her own biography, Liza was the daughter of a Chinese mother and a French sailor who returned to France soon after her birth. Her mother died when she was young, and she may have been a prostitute to French sailors. She did learn French and English. | ||
- | On September 24, [[1886]] she married Silas Aaron Hardoon in a Jewish ceremony. Hardoon was a Jew born in Baghdad who had been educated in India. The Hardoons were very successful beginning in the 1890s in the International Settlement. | + | On September 24, [[1886]] she married Silas Aaron Hardoon in a Jewish ceremony. Hardoon was a Jew born in Baghdad who had been educated in India. The Hardoons were very successful beginning in the [[1890s]] in the International Settlement. In her life, she generously supported Buddhist activities. At Hardoon Gardens 哈同花園 (also called Àilì Gardens 愛儷園, 愛儷花園), she established the Kalaviṇka Hermitage [[頻伽精舍]] in [[1904]], where the monk Zōngyǎng [[宗仰]] lived for several years. The Gardens also served as the site for the Huáyán University [[華嚴大學]] founded by Yuèxiá [[月霞]] in [[1912]]. |
- | + | In [[1908]], with Zōngyǎng's assistance in organizing it, Mrs. Hardoon paid for the publication of the ''Kalaviṇka Hermitage Canon'' [[頻伽精舍校刊大藏經]] in 8,146 volumes. | |
- | + | During the Second-Sino Japanese War, she helped finance the publication of works by Chísōng [[持松]]. | |
- | + | Her Buddhist name, Jiālíng 迦陵, is short for Kalaviṇka 迦陵頻伽, a bird from Buddhist myth that lives in the Himālayas. | |
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- | - | + | ==References== |
- | + | * {{ZFJS}} Pp. 2.736-738. | |
* {{BRC}} 16, 298-299, 319. | * {{BRC}} 16, 298-299, 319. | ||
* [http://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E7%BD%97%E8%BF%A6%E9%99%B5 维基百科-罗迦陵] | * [http://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E7%BD%97%E8%BF%A6%E9%99%B5 维基百科-罗迦陵] | ||
[[Category:Biography]] | [[Category:Biography]] |
Liza Roos (1864-1941)
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Notable Associates: |
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Luó Jiālíng 羅迦陵, a.k.a. Liza Roos (1864-1941) was the wife of prominent Shànghǎi businessman Silas Hardoon. She donated a great deal of money to Buddhist activities, and she was a supporter of the monk Zōngyǎng 宗仰.
According to her own biography, Liza was the daughter of a Chinese mother and a French sailor who returned to France soon after her birth. Her mother died when she was young, and she may have been a prostitute to French sailors. She did learn French and English.
On September 24, 1886 she married Silas Aaron Hardoon in a Jewish ceremony. Hardoon was a Jew born in Baghdad who had been educated in India. The Hardoons were very successful beginning in the 1890s in the International Settlement. In her life, she generously supported Buddhist activities. At Hardoon Gardens 哈同花園 (also called Àilì Gardens 愛儷園, 愛儷花園), she established the Kalaviṇka Hermitage 頻伽精舍 in 1904, where the monk Zōngyǎng 宗仰 lived for several years. The Gardens also served as the site for the Huáyán University 華嚴大學 founded by Yuèxiá 月霞 in 1912.
In 1908, with Zōngyǎng's assistance in organizing it, Mrs. Hardoon paid for the publication of the Kalaviṇka Hermitage Canon 頻伽精舍校刊大藏經 in 8,146 volumes.
During the Second-Sino Japanese War, she helped finance the publication of works by Chísōng 持松.
Her Buddhist name, Jiālíng 迦陵, is short for Kalaviṇka 迦陵頻伽, a bird from Buddhist myth that lives in the Himālayas.