2009
DOI: 10.1163/156852708x374437
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Vows for the Masses: Eison and the Popular Expansion of Precept-Conferral Ceremonies in Premodern Japan

Abstract: Over the course of his roughly fifty-year ministry, the Japanese vinaya (ritsu) revivalist priest Eison (also read “Eizon,” 1201–1290) is said to have bestowed the bodhisattva precepts upon some 97,710 people. Many of these conferrals were given en masse, with tens or hundreds (and, according to some records, even thousands) taking precepts (jukai; Chns. shoujie) from Eison together, in single ceremonies. This study places Eison's use of precept-conferral ceremonies in the broader historical context of East As… Show more

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