Welch Project

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**Mount Pǔtuó [[普陀山]]
**Mount Pǔtuó [[普陀山]]
*page 54.
*page 54.
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**The Awakening Society ([[Jué shè 覺社]]) (Welch calls this "the Bodhi Society")
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**The Awakening Society (Jué shè [[覺社]]; Welch calls this "the Bodhi Society")
**Wáng Yītíng [[王一亭]]
**Wáng Yītíng [[王一亭]]
**Zhāng Tàiyán [[章太炎]] (Chang Ping-ling)
**Zhāng Tàiyán [[章太炎]] (Chang Ping-ling)

Revision as of 22:07, 20 June 2010

The Welch Project is currently a companion page to Holmes Welch's The Buddhist Revival in China. Below is a list of the chapter and section headings of that work. One of the first steps of this project is to list the articles in the DMCB that cover the material discussed on the pages listed.

It is our goal that this project will eventually expand upon Welch's work in order to further our understanding of Chinese Buddhism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, as well as to honor the tremendous work Welch did in broadening that understanding himself.

THE BUDDHIST REVIVAL IN CHINA

Contents

Chapter 1. The Beginning's of the Revival

Yang Wen-hui

Modern Education for Monks

  • pages 10-11.
  • pages 12-13.
    • Jìchán 寄禪 ("Eight Fingers")
    • Universal Saṇgha Study Hall (Pǔtōng sēng xuétáng 普通僧學堂); Welch refers to this as the "Seng-li P'u-t'ung Chng-hsüeh"
    • Jiāngsū Saṇgha Normal Study Hall (Jiāngsū sēng shīfàn xuétáng 江蘇僧師範學堂]])
    • Dìxián 諦閑
    • Yuèxiá 月霞
    • Yuányīng 圓瑛
    • Tàixū 太虛
    • Zhìguāng 治光

Revolutionary Monks

Chapter 2. The Struggle For National Leadership

  • page 26.
  • page 27.
    • Karl Ludvig Reichelt (Ài Xiāngdé 艾香德

The Invasion of Chin Shan

Danao Jinshan 大鬧金山

Rival Buddhist Associations

The Chinese Buddhist Association (Shanghai, 1929)

Chinese Buddhist Association 中國佛教會

Chapter 3. T'ai-hsü

Tàixū 太虛

World Organizations

  • page 55.
  • page 56.
  • page. 62
    • "Library of the World Buddhist Institute" at the World Buddhist Studies Center (Shìjiè Fóxué yuàn 世界佛學苑)
  • page 63.

Domestic Organizations

T'ai-hsü and Science

T'ai-hsü's Methods

Chapter 4. The Lay Buddhist Movement

Types of Lay Societies

The Right Faith Society

The Growing Role of the Laity

Chapter 5. Building and Publishing

Restoration

New Monasteries

Publishing

Chapter 6. Buddhist Education

Traditional Education

Seminaries: Kuan-tsung

T'ai-hsü's Seminaries

The T'ien-ning Seminary

The Level of Education

The Metaphysical Institute

Chapter 7. Social Action by the Sangha

The Lung-ch'üan Orphanage

Other Welfare Activities

The Sangha's Approach to Social Welfare

Chapter 8. Sangha and State

Republican Laws and Their Enforcement

The Law Versus the Enemies of Buddhism

Friends in High Places

Monks in Politics

Chapter 9. Foreign Contacts

Contacts with Japan

Contacts with Tibet

Contacts with Theravada Buddhists

Contacts with Christians

Christian Converts to Buddhism

Contacts with Chinese Overseas

Chapter 10. Sects and Dissention

The Esoteric School

The Antisectarian Trend

Regional Loyalties

Divisive Issues

Chapter 11. Christian Stereotypes and Buddhist Realities

Buddhist Realities

The Growth in Understanding

Distorting Factors

Regional Differences

Chapter 12. The Meaning of the Revival

Was it a Revival?

Postscript

Appendices:

1. Buddhist Periodicals

2. Buddhist Seminaries

3. Monastic Population Figures

4. Regional Decay

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