Haichao yin 海潮音

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Note that a better quality reproduction can be found in the edition published in 2003 by Shànghǎi gǔjì chūbǎnshè 上海古籍出版社. This is especially true for photographs.<ref>The LC call number for this collection is BQ3.H353.</ref>
Note that a better quality reproduction can be found in the edition published in 2003 by Shànghǎi gǔjì chūbǎnshè 上海古籍出版社. This is especially true for photographs.<ref>The LC call number for this collection is BQ3.H353.</ref>
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==Print Run==
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== Print Run ==
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Reprinted in [[MFQ]] 147-204
Reprinted in [[MFQ]] 147-204
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* Publication resumed at Shàndǎo Temple 善導寺 in Táiběi [[台北]] in 1955 if not earlier
* Publication resumed at Shàndǎo Temple 善導寺 in Táiběi [[台北]] in 1955 if not earlier
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==Notes==
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== Gallery ==
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{{Image gallery
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|title=Images from ''Hǎicháoyīn''
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|lines=5
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|width=160
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|height=140
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|Haichaoyin_editors.png|Images of former editors of Haichaoyin|Portraits of editors and publishers of ''Hǎicháoyīn'' 海潮音, from Year 5, Issue 4, 1924.
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}}
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== Notes ==
<references/>
<references/>
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==References==
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== References ==
* [[MFQ]] 205:57-58
* [[MFQ]] 205:57-58
[[Category:Periodical]]
[[Category:Periodical]]

Revision as of 14:18, 24 May 2011

Hǎicháo yīn 海潮音
Sound of the Sea Tide
  • Print run: On the mainland 1920 - April 1949 (352 total issues); it continues publishing to this day in Taiwan

Hǎicháo yīn 海潮音 (Sound of the Sea Tide) was the longest-running Chinese Buddhist periodical, and one of the most influential.

Its precursor was Juéshè cóngshū 覺社叢書 (Awakening Society Collectanea). Founded in 1918, but after its fifth issue in 1919 it was renamed the Hǎicháo yīn. Issues 1-6 under the new title featured on their covers the note "The monthly publication compiled by the Awakening Society" 覺社編叢之月刊, perhaps to emphasize its link with the society and its earlier publication. Later issues also feature similar notes.

It initially had quite a small circulation, perhaps as few as 100 copies per issue, until Shanghai Buddhist Books 上海佛學書局 started publishing it in the early 1930s, after which it gained a much wider distribution.[1]

Note that a better quality reproduction can be found in the edition published in 2003 by Shànghǎi gǔjì chūbǎnshè 上海古籍出版社. This is especially true for photographs.[2]

Contents

Print Run

Reprinted in MFQ 147-204

  • Vol. 3, 1922
  • Vol. 4, 1923
  • Vol. 5, 1924
  • Vol. 6, 1925
  • Vol. 7, 1926
  • Vol. 8, 1927
  • Vol. 9, 1928
  • Vol. 10, 1929
  • Vol. 11, 1930
  • Vol. 12, 1931
  • Vol. 13, 1932
  • Vol. 14, 1933
  • Vol. 15, 1934
  • Vol. 16, 1935
  • Vol. 17, 1936
  • Vol. 18, 1937
  • Vol. 19, 1938
  • Vol. 20, 1939
  • Vol. 21, 1940
  • Vol. 22, 1941
  • Vol. 23, 1942
  • Vol. 24, 1943
  • Vol. 25, 1944
  • Vol. 26, 1945
  • Vol. 27, 1946
  • Vol. 28, 1947
  • Vol. 29, 1948
  • Vol. 30, 1949
    • Issue 4 was the last to be published on the Chinese mainland
  • Publication resumed at Shàndǎo Temple 善導寺 in Táiběi 台北 in 1955 if not earlier

Gallery

Images from Hǎicháoyīn
Images of former editors of Haichaoyin
Portraits of editors and publishers of Hǎicháoyīn 海潮音, from Year 5, Issue 4, 1924. 


Notes

  1. This may be one reason why, for example, in 1930 Earl Cressy's survey reported only one monastic in Hángzhōu 杭州 who read it. See Gregory Adam Scott, "The Dharma Through a Glass Darkly: On the Study of Modern Chinese Buddhism through Protestant Missionary Sources 彷彿對著鏡子觀看的佛法:藉由基督教傳教士的史料研究現代中國佛教," Shengyan yanjiu 聖嚴研究 (Forthcoming: 2011.)
  2. The LC call number for this collection is BQ3.H353.

References

  • MFQ 205:57-58
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