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Yishan Yining

一山一宁 (A Mountain Rather), calligraphy by Yishan Yining, 1315

Yishan Yining (一山一寧, in Japanese: Issan Ichinei) (1247 – 28 November 1317) was a Chinese Buddhist monk who traveled to Japan. Before monkhood his family name was Hu. He was born in 1247 in Linhai, Taizhou, Zhejiang, China. He was a monk of the Linji school during the Yuan Dynasty of China, and subsequently a Rinzai Zen master who rose to prominence in Kamakura Japan. He was one of the chief disseminators of Zen Buddhism among the new militarized nobility of Japan, a calligrapher and a writer. Mastering a variety of literary genres and being a prolific teacher, he is mostly remembered as the pioneer of Japanese Gozan Bungaku literature,[1] that recreated in Japan the literary forms of Song dynasty.

  1. ^ Louis-Frédéric, Käthe Roth. Japan encyclopedia. Harvard University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-674-01753-6, ISBN 978-0-674-01753-5 Стр. 402

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Yishan Yining German Yishan Yining French 一山一寧 Japanese Yishan Yining Polish Ишань Инин Russian Nhất Sơn Nhất Ninh VI 一宁 Chinese

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