enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Early Buddhist texts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_Buddhist_texts

    Early Buddhist texts ... the mention of Buddha Gotama and all five past Buddhas of the EBTs, ... 1994). According to 84000.co, ...

  3. Mahāvastu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahāvastu

    The Mahāvastu is considered a primary source for the notion of a transcendent (lokottara) Buddha, common to all Mahāsāṃghika schools. According to the Mahāvastu, over the course of many lives, the once-human-born Buddha developed supramundane abilities including: a painless birth conceived without intercourse; no need for sleep, food, medicine or bathing although engaging in such "in ...

  4. Ashokavadana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashokavadana

    The text begins with the stories about the Buddhist monk Upagupta, who eventually becomes Ashoka's spiritual teacher. It describes one of Upagupta's past lives, his present early life as the son of a perfume merchant in Mathura. It then describes his youth, including his encounters with a courtesan named Vasavadatta.

  5. Dharani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dharani

    The Buddhist dharani invocations are the earliest mass printed texts that have survived. The earliest extant example of printing on paper is a fragment of a dhāraṇī miniature scroll in Sanskrit unearthed in a tomb in Xi'an, called the Great spell of unsullied pure light (Wugou jingguang da tuoluoni jing 無垢淨光大陀羅尼經).

  6. Buddhist canons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhist_canons

    The Nepalese Buddhist textual tradition is a unique collection of Buddhist texts preserved primarily in Nepal, particularly within the Newar Buddhist community of the Kathmandu Valley. [55] It is distinct for its emphasis on preserving the Sanskrit originals of many Mahayana and Vajrayana scriptures, which have otherwise been lost in India and ...

  7. Sanskrit Buddhist literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanskrit_Buddhist_literature

    The earliest Buddhist texts were orally composed and transmitted in Middle Indo-Aryan dialects called Prakrits. [8] [9] [10] Various parallel passages in the Buddhist Vinayas state that when asked to put the sutras into chandasas the Buddha refused and instead said the teachings could be transmitted in sakāya niruttiyā (Skt. svakā niruktiḥ).

  8. Samadhiraja Sutra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samadhiraja_Sutra

    Candraprabha (Gakkō Bosatsu, Moonlight Bodhisattva) sculpture, Tōdai-ji, Nara.Candraprabha is the Buddha's main interlocutor in the Candrapradīpa.. The Samādhirāja Sūtra (King of Samādhis Sūtra) or Candrapradīpa Sūtra (Moonlamp Sūtra) is a Buddhist Mahayana sutra.

  9. Lalitavistara Sūtra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lalitavistara_Sūtra

    The Lalitavistara Sūtra is a Sanskrit Mahayana Buddhist sutra that tells the story of Gautama Buddha from the time of his descent from Tushita until his first sermon in the Deer Park at Sarnath near Varanasi.