Difference between revisions of "Chinese Āgamas"

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The Chinese Āgamas are translations representing a class Indian scriptures drawn from several different mainstream Buddhist sects including the [[Sarvâstivāda]] and [[Dharmaguptaka]]. These mainstream Buddhist traditions referred to their sūtra collections as [[Āgama|Āgamas]], which were analogous to the [[Nikāya|Nikāyas]] of the present-day [[Theravāda]] tradition. The majority of these translations are collected in the first two volumes of the [[''Taishō shinshū daizōkyō'']] (T 1-151).
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The Chinese Āgamas are translations representing a class Indian scriptures drawn from several different mainstream Buddhist sects including the [[Sarvâstivāda]] and [[Dharmaguptaka]]. These [[mainstream Indian Buddhism|mainstream Buddhist traditions]] referred to their sūtra collections as [[Āgama|Āgamas]], which were analogous to the [[Nikāya|Nikāyas]] of the present-day [[Theravāda]] tradition. The majority of these translations are collected in the first two volumes of the ''[[Taishō shinshū daizōkyō]]'' (T 1-151).
  
 
== The Four Āgamas ==
 
== The Four Āgamas ==

Revision as of 22:46, 23 August 2020

The Chinese Āgamas are translations representing a class Indian scriptures drawn from several different mainstream Buddhist sects including the Sarvâstivāda and Dharmaguptaka. These mainstream Buddhist traditions referred to their sūtra collections as Āgamas, which were analogous to the Nikāyas of the present-day Theravāda tradition. The majority of these translations are collected in the first two volumes of the Taishō shinshū daizōkyō (T 1-151).

The Four Āgamas

Four complete Āgama sūtra collections were translated to classical Chinese during the 4-5th centuries CE, and numerous independent translations were completed by various translators between the 1st and 10th centuries CE.

The four complete collections include: