Coming Down the Mountain: Gods and Buddhas at Hie Shrine
by Bernard Faure, Stanford University
Conference paper presented at Buddhism In (and Out of) Place Conference held 17-18 October 2004
More Papers
- The Formation of Medieval Japanese Towns and the Rise of Kamakura New Buddhism
- "Indianism" and the Construction of Pan-Asian Buddhism in Pre-War Japan
- A New Paradigm for Understanding Japanese Buddhism
- Coming Down the Mountain: Gods and Buddhas at Hie Shrine
- Dividing Bones for the Common Dead: The Role of Buddhism in the Formation of Japan's Civil Society
- How Important was Buddhism in Early Southeast Asia?
- Is There Still Buddhism Outside Japan?: "Three Countries" in the Thought of Eisai and Nichiren
- Japanese Buddhism in the Formation of Tokugawa Authority
- Japanese Tendai Interpretations of the Environment
- Literary and Social Differences Between the Arhat and the Bodhisattva
- On the Allure of Green: Landscape in Buddhist Practice from Dunhuang to Kyoto
- Problems in the Reestablishment of Orders of Nuns in Theravada Buddhism
- Relics of Misunderstanding? Chinese Sheli and Indic Sarira in the Mahaparinirvana-sutra and Elsewhere
- The Cosmology of Buddhas and Kami in medieval Japan: A reconsideration of kami-Buddhist amalgamation paradigm
- The Roof Tiles of Fujiwarakyo Yakushiji
- What Manner of Monk is This: The Buddhist Bhiksu's Obligation to Support his Parents in Early and Medieval India
Home | Activities | Study Buddhism at UCLA | Resources | Publications | Support | People | About Us
Center for Buddhist Studies • 11385 Bunche Hall • Box 951487 • Los Angeles, CA 90095-1487
Tel: (310) 825-2089 • Fax: (310) 206-3555 • Email: buddhist@international.ucla.edu
© 2013. The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
