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==Biography== {{More citations needed|section|date=August 2022}} [[File:Faxian zhuan.JPG|thumb|12th-century woodblock print, 1st page of the Travels of Faxian (Record of the Buddhist Countries). The first sentences read: "In [[Chang'an]], Faxian was distressed that the ''Vinaya'' collections were incomplete. Therefore, in the 2nd year of [[Yao Xing|Hongshi]] or the Ji-Hai year (36) of the [[sexagenary cycle]] [the [[Chinese calendar|Chinese year]] covering late 399 and early 400], he agreed with Huijing, Daozheng, Huiying, and Huiwei to go seek out more of the ''Vinaya'' in India."]] [[File:Faxian at Daishō-in Temple.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Faxian at Daishō-in Temple, Miyajima, Japan]] Faxian was born in Shanxi in the 4th-century under the [[Later Zhao|Later Zhao dynasty]] of the [[Sixteen Kingdoms]] period. His birth name was Gong Sehi.{{citation needed|date=May 2024}}{{dubious|1=Sehi isn't pinyin or a set of noises from Middle Chinese; not in any biography; seems to have been made up/garbled by Britannica|date=May 2024}} He later adopted the name Faxian, which literally means "Splendor of Dharma".{{sfnp|''Enc. Brit.''|2019}} Three of his elder brothers died young. His father, fearing that the same fate would befall him, had him ordained as a [[Samanera|novice monk]] at the age of three.{{sfnp|Shi & al.|2022}} In 399 CE, about age 60, Faxian was among the earliest attested pilgrims to India. He set out from [[Chang'an]], the capital of the Buddhist [[Later Qin dynasty]], along with four others to locate sacred Buddhist texts and was later joined by five more pilgrims at [[Zhangye]].{{sfnp|Průšek & al.|1978|p=35}}{{sfnp|Sen|2006}} He visited India in the early fifth century. He is said to have walked all the way from China across the icy desert and rugged mountain passes. He entered India from the northwest and reached [[Pataliputra]]. He took back with him a large number of Sanskrit Buddhist texts and images sacred to Buddhism. Upon his return to China, he is also credited with translating these Sanskrit texts into Chinese.{{sfnp|''Enc. Brit.''|2019}}{{sfnp|Deeg|2019}} Faxian's visit to India occurred during the reign of [[Chandragupta II]]. He entered the Indian subcontinent through the northwest. His memoirs describe his 10 years stay in India. He visited the major sites associated with the Buddha, as well the renowned centres of education and Buddhist monasteries. He visited Kapilvastu ([[Lumbini]]), [[Bodh Gaya]], Benares ([[Varanasi]]), [[Shravasti]], and [[Kushinagar]], all linked to events in Buddha's life. Faxian learned Sanskrit, and collected Indian literature from Pataliputra (Patna), [[Oddiyana]], and [[Taxila]] in [[Gandhara]]. His memoirs mention the Hinayana and emerging Mahayana traditions, as well as the splintering and dissenting Theravada sub-traditions in 5th-century Indian Buddhism. Before he had begun his journey back to China, he had amassed a large number of Sanskrit texts of his times.{{sfnp|''Enc. Brit.''|2019}}{{sfnp|Deeg|2019}} On Faxian's way back to China, after a two-year stay in [[Sri Lanka]], a violent storm drove his ship onto an island, probably [[Java]].<ref>Buswell, Robert E. & Lopez, Donald S. Jr. (2014). ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=DXN2AAAAQBAJ&q=amala&pg=PA275 The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism]'', Princeton: Princeton University Press, p. 297</ref> After five months there, Faxian took another ship for southern China, but again it was [[blown off course]] and he ended up landing at [[Mount Lao]] in what is now [[Shandong]] in northern China, {{convert|30|km}} east of the city of [[Qingdao]]. He spent the rest of his life translating and editing the scriptures he had collected. These were influential to the history of Chinese Buddhism that followed.{{sfnp|''Enc. Brit.''|2019}}{{sfnp|Deeg|2019}} Faxian returned in 412 and settled in what is now [[Nanjing]]. He wrote a book on his travels around the year 414, filled with accounts of early Buddhism and the geography and history of numerous countries along the [[Silk Road]] as they were at the turn of the 5th century CE. He spent the next decade until his death translating the Buddhist [[sutra]]s he had brought with him from [[India]].{{sfnp|Průšek & al.|1978|p=35}} The following is the introduction to [[James Legge]]'s 19th-century translation of Faxian's work. Legge's speculations, such as Faxian visiting India at the age of 25, have been discredited by later scholarship but his introduction provides some useful biographical information about Faxian: [[File:Fa Hsien at the ruins of Asoka's palace.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Faxian at the ruins of Ashoka palace]] [[File:BEAL(1869) FAH-HIAN'S ROUTE THROUGH INDIA AND TARTARY.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Faxian's route through India, from Beal's edition{{sfnp|Beal|1884}}]] {{blockquote|Nothing of great importance is known about Fa-Hien in addition to what may be gathered from his own record of his travels. I have read the accounts of him in the ''[[Memoirs of Eminent Monks]]'', compiled in 519 CE, and a later work, the ''Memoirs of Marvellous Monks'', by the third emperor of the [[Ming dynasty]] (1403–1424 CE), which, however, are nearly all borrowed from the other; and all in them that has an appearance of verisimilitude can be brought within brief compass. His [[Chinese surname|surname]], they tell us, was Kung, and he was a native of Wu-yang in P’ing-Yang, which is still the name of a large department in [[Shanxi|Shan-hsi]]. He had three brothers older than himself, but when they all died before shedding their first teeth, his father devoted him to the service of the Buddhist society and had him entered as a [[śrāmaṇera|Sramanera]], still keeping him at home in the family. The little fellow fell dangerously ill, and the father sent him to the [[vihara|monastery]] where he soon got well and refused to return to his parents. When he was ten years old, his father died, and an uncle, considering the widowed solitariness and helplessness of the mother, urged him to renounce the monastic life and return to her, but the boy replied, "I did not quit the family in compliance with my father’s wishes, but because I wished to be far from the dust and vulgar ways of life. This is why I chose monkhood." The uncle approved of his words and gave over urging him. When his mother also died, it appeared how great had been the affection for her of his fine nature; but after her burial, he returned to the monastery. On one occasion he was cutting rice with a score or two of his fellow-disciples when some hungry thieves came upon them to take away their grain by force. The other Sramaneras all fled, but our young hero stood his ground, and said to the thieves, "If you must have the grain, take what you please. But siries it was your former neglect of charity which brought you to your present state of destitution; and now, again, you wish to rob others. I am afraid that in the coming ages you will have still greater poverty and distress;—I am sorry for you beforehand." With these words he followed his companions into the monastery, while the thieves left the grain and went away, all the monks, of whom there were several hundred, doing homage to his conduct and courage. When he had finished his novitiate and taken on him the obligations of the full Buddhist orders, his earnest courage, clear intelligence, and strict regulation of his demeanor were conspicuous; and soon after, he undertook his journey to India in search of complete copies of the [[Vinaya-pitaka]]. What follows this is merely an account of his travels in India and return to China by sea, condensed from his own narrative, with the addition of some marvelous incidents that happened to him, on his visit to the [[Vulture Peak]] near [[Rajgir|Rajagriha]]. It is said in the end that after his return to China, he went to the capital (evidently [[Nanjing|Nanking]]), and there, along with the Indian Sramana [[Buddhabhadra (translator)|Buddha-bhadra]], executed translations of some of the works which he had obtained in India; and that before he had done all that he wished to do in this way, he removed to [[Jingzhou|King-chow]] (in the present [[Hubei|Hoo-pih]]), and died in the monastery of Sin, at the age of eighty-eight, to the great sorrow of all who knew him. It is added that there is another larger work giving an account of his travels in various countries. Such is all the information given about our author, beyond what he himself has told us. Fa-Hien was his clerical name, and means "Illustrious in the Law," or "Illustrious master of the Law." The Shih which often precedes it is an abbreviation of the name of [[Gautama Buddha|Buddha]] as Sakyamuni, "the [[Shakya|Sakya]], mighty in Love, dwelling in Seclusion and Silence," and may be taken as equivalent to Buddhist. It is sometimes said to have belonged to "the eastern [[Jin dynasty (265–420)|Tsin dynasty]]" (317–419 CE), and sometimes to "the Sung," that is, the [[Liu Song dynasty|Sung dynasty of the House of Liu]] (420–478 CE). If he became a full monk at the age.... of twenty, and went to India when he was twenty-five, his long life may have been divided pretty equally between the two dynasties.{{sfnp|Legge|1886}}}}
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