(Difference between revisions)
Revision as of 05:28, 15 April 2010
Nánjīng 南京
Other names include: Jīnlíng 金陵; Jiāngníng 江寧; Tiānjīng 天京
|
|
Nearby Locations:
- Mǎānshān 馬鞍山
- Zhènjiāng 鎮江
- Yángzhōu 揚州
- Shànghǎi 上海
|
Jiāngnán 江南 Region
|
Article editor: Gregory Adam Scott
|
Geography Portal
|
Nánjīng 南京
Nánjīng was the capital of the Tàipíng state in the mid-nineteenth century, as well as the capital of the Nationalist government from 1928-1937.
Important Buddhist Sites
- The Jinling Scriptural Press 金陵刻經處 was established by Yáng Wénhuì 楊文會 in 1866
- The Jetavana Hermitage 祇洹精舍 was located on the grounds of the press from 1908 to 1910
- The Chinese Inner Studies College 支那內學院 was established by Ōuyáng Jìan 歐陽漸 and Lǚ Chéng 呂澂 in 1922
- The college published the periodical Inner Studies 內學 here
- The Buddhist Normal School for Monastics 佛教師範僧學校 was founded here in 1910
- Línggǔ Temple 靈谷寺 was founded in the 6th century on Zǐjīn Mountain 紫金山
- Qīxiá Temple 栖霞寺 was founded in the 5th century and is situated 22 km. northeast of the city
- Pílú (Vairocana) Temple 毘盧寺 was founded in the late 19th century with the support of Zēng Guóquán 曾國荃, by expanding a small hermitage that had been on the site since the Jiāqìng 嘉慶 era (1796-1820)
- The Jiāngsū Saṇgha Normal Study Hall 江蘇僧師範學堂 was located here between 1909 and 1911
Other Notes
- Karl Ludvig Reichelt 艾香德 ran a Christian mission to Buddhists here in the 1920s
- Yuèxiá 月霞 was tonsured here in 1876
- Zōngyǎng 宗仰 died at Qīxiá Temple 栖霞寺 in 1921
- Tāng Yòngtóng 湯用彤 taught here in the 1920s
Resources