Foxue yuan 佛學院

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Buddhist Seminaries: Fóxué yuàn 佛學院

Welch claims that this term was invented (or at least pioneered) by Tàixū 太虛 in reference to the Wuchang Buddhist Seminary 武昌佛學院 in 1922. He states, "Many of the innovations he (Tàixū) made there proved popular, and by 1945 almost all seminaries in China had become 'institutes for Buddhist studies' in name, if not in substance. To varying degrees they adopted what Tàixū had adopted from lay schools and abroad."[1]

Welch lists 72 such seminaries in operation between 1912 and 1950, for which he includes the dates during which they were active. He also includes the average number of monks (or nuns) enrolled.[2]

Welch estimates, very tentatively, that somewhere on the order of 7,500 Buddhist seminarians graduated in China between 1912 and 1950. Although this estimation is based on incomplete data, it demonstrates that thousands of monks and nuns received their education at Buddhist Seminaries.



(Incomplete) List of Buddhist Seminaries associated with Tàixū

  • 武昌佛學院 1922- intermittent, ended in 1934, briefly moved to Shanghai in 1937 (70)[3]



Other Important Seminaries



Notes:

  1. Welch, 107
  2. Welch, 285-287
  3. The numbers in parentheses are Welch's very rough estimate of typical enrollment

References:

Pittman, Don A. Toward a Modern Chinese Buddhism: Taixu’s Reforms. (Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press, 2001), 99.

Shì Dōngchū 釋東初. Zhōngguó fójiào jìndàii shǐ 中國佛教近代史 (A History of Early Contemporary Chinese Buddhism), in Dōngchū lǎorén quánjí 東初老人全集 (Complete Collection of Old Man Dongchu), vols. 1-2. (Taibei: Dongchu, 1974), 2:896.

Welch, Holmes. The Buddhist Revival in China. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1968.

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