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==Important Works== | ==Important Works== | ||
- | <small>Note: This list uses traditional Sino-Japanese characters for book titles | + | <small>Note: This list uses traditional Sino-Japanese characters for book titles; other references may use the post-1946 ''shinjitai'' 新字體 forms.</small> |
* ''Shimbukkyō'' 新佛教 (New Buddhism) (periodical) | * ''Shimbukkyō'' 新佛教 (New Buddhism) (periodical) | ||
* ''Nihon bukkyōshi yō'' 日本佛教史要 (Essential History of Buddhism in Japan). [[1901]] | * ''Nihon bukkyōshi yō'' 日本佛教史要 (Essential History of Buddhism in Japan). [[1901]] | ||
* ''Indo bukkyōshi kō'' 印度佛教史綱 (Outline History of Buddhism in India). 東京: 森江書店, [[1905]] | * ''Indo bukkyōshi kō'' 印度佛教史綱 (Outline History of Buddhism in India). 東京: 森江書店, [[1905]] | ||
+ | ** Published in Chinese as ''Yìndù Fójiào shǐ'' 印度佛教史. Translated by Huìyuán [[慧圓]]. Shànghǎi: Shànghǎi Fóxué shūjú [[上海佛學書局]], [[1935]]? | ||
* ''Shina bukkyōshi kō'' 支那佛教史綱 (Outline History of Buddhism in China). 東京: 森江書店, [[1907]] | * ''Shina bukkyōshi kō'' 支那佛教史綱 (Outline History of Buddhism in China). 東京: 森江書店, [[1907]] | ||
* ''Hasshū kōyō kōwa'' 八宗綱要講話 (Lectures on Essentials of the Eight Schools). 東京: 丙午出版社, [[1916]] | * ''Hasshū kōyō kōwa'' 八宗綱要講話 (Lectures on Essentials of the Eight Schools). 東京: 丙午出版社, [[1916]] |
Sakaino Satoru 境野哲 さかいの・さとる
(1871-1933) |
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Sakaino Satoru 境野哲 さかいの・さとる (1871-1933) was a prolific Japanese scholar and author of Buddhist history whose works were influential in China.
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Sakaino was a priest in the Ōtani sect 大谷派 of the Jōdō Shinshu 真宗 Japanese Buddhist tradition. As a child he read Inoue Enryō 井上圓了 (1858-1919) which sparked an interest in Buddhism, and later in 1894 he was involved with the periodical Bukkyō Shirin 佛教史林 (Histories of Buddhism) published by Murakami Senshō 村上專精 (1851-1929).[1] After studying at Tetsugakukan University 哲学館大學 (present-day Tōyō University 東洋大學) where he majored in Buddhist history, Sakaino lectured at Tetsugakukan and Sōtōshū University 曹洞宗大學 (present-day Komazawa University 駒澤大學).
In 1900 he founded the periodical Shimbukkyō 新佛教 (New Buddhism), which was used as a platform for the Shin Bukkyō dōshikai 新佛教同志會 (New Buddhist Association) of which he was a member. Other members included Watanabe Kaikyoku 渡辺海旭 (1872-1933) who helped publish the Taishō canon 大正新修大藏經, and Takashima Beihō 高嶋米峰 (1875-1949), a scholar of Buddhism.
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Note: This list uses traditional Sino-Japanese characters for book titles; other references may use the post-1946 shinjitai 新字體 forms.