. "Shid\u014D Sh\u014Dy\u016B"@en . . . . . . . "Kangan Giin (\u5BD2\u5DCC\u7FA9\u5C39, 1217\u20131300) was a disciple of D\u014Dgen and the founder of the Higo school of S\u014Dt\u014D Zen Buddhism. It has been claimed that his father was Emperor Go-Toba or Emperor Juntoku. He did much evangelization work in Ky\u016Bsh\u016B, where he founded Daiji-ji (\u5927\u6148\u5BFA) in Kumamoto. Before practicing with D\u014Dgen, Giin started his Buddhist path as a Tendai monk. He later abandoned that school and became a member of Daruma School under Kakuzen Ekan. Along with his fellow students Tetts\u016B Gikai and Gien, Giin became a student of D\u014Dgen when Giin's teacher Ekan himself became a student of D\u014Dgen. D\u014Dgen died without giving dharma transmission to Giin, but he received it later from D\u014Dgen's primary disciple, Koun Ej\u014D. Giin traveled to China after D\u014Dgen's death in order to present D\u014Dgen's recorded sayings, the Eihei K\u014Droku, to Chinese monks in the Caodong lineage of Tiantong Rujing, D\u014Dgen's teacher. Giin asked Wuwai Yiyuan, a primary student of Rujing, to write a foreword for the collection as well as to edit it. The text became the Eihei D\u014Dgen Zenji Goroku, an edited selection from Eihei K\u014Droku. After returning from China, Giin practiced at a temple called Sh\u014Dfuku-ji in Kyushu connected to My\u014Dan Eisai. Shortly thereafter, records tell us that Giin formed a relationship with a powerful samurai named Kawajiri Yasuaki who in 1269 sponsored the construction of Giin's first temple, Nyorai-ji. In 1282 Yasuaki paid for the construction of a second temple, Daiji-ji, with which Giin is now usually associated with."@en . . . . "Kakuzen Ekan"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Kangan Giin"@en . . . "Zen Master"@en . . . "Kangan Giin (\u5BD2\u5DCC\u7FA9\u5C39, 1217\u20131300) est un disciple de D\u014Dgen et le fondateur de l'\u00E9cole Higo du Bouddhisme Zen S\u014Dt\u014D. Il a \u00E9t\u00E9 pr\u00E9tendu que son p\u00E8re \u00E9tait l'empereur Go-Toba ou l'empereur Juntoku. Il est tr\u00E8s actif dans l'activit\u00E9 missionnaire au Ky\u016Bsh\u016B o\u00F9 il fonde le Daiji-ji (\u5927\u6148\u5BFA) \u00E0 Kumamoto."@fr . . . . "Tetsuzan"@en . . . . . . . . . "21419374"^^ . "Kangan Giin (\u5BD2\u5DCC\u7FA9\u5C39, 1217\u20131300) was a disciple of D\u014Dgen and the founder of the Higo school of S\u014Dt\u014D Zen Buddhism. It has been claimed that his father was Emperor Go-Toba or Emperor Juntoku. He did much evangelization work in Ky\u016Bsh\u016B, where he founded Daiji-ji (\u5927\u6148\u5BFA) in Kumamoto. Before practicing with D\u014Dgen, Giin started his Buddhist path as a Tendai monk. He later abandoned that school and became a member of Daruma School under Kakuzen Ekan. Along with his fellow students Tetts\u016B Gikai and Gien, Giin became a student of D\u014Dgen when Giin's teacher Ekan himself became a student of D\u014Dgen. D\u014Dgen died without giving dharma transmission to Giin, but he received it later from D\u014Dgen's primary disciple, Koun Ej\u014D."@en . "Kangan Giin"@fr . . . . . . . "1300"^^ . . "1217"^^ . . "Kangan Giin"@en . . . "Kangan Giin (ur. 1217, zm. 1300; jap. \u5BD2\u5DCC\u7FA9\u5C39) \u2013 japo\u0144ski mistrz zen szko\u0142y s\u014Dt\u014D, ucze\u0144 D\u014Dgena."@pl . "Shid\u014D Sh\u014Dy\u016B"@en . . . . . "\u5BD2\u5DCC\u7FA9\u5C39\uFF08\u304B\u3093\u304C\u3093 \u304E\u3044\u3093\u3001\u5EFA\u4FDD5\u5E74\uFF081217\u5E74\uFF09 - \u6B63\u5B892\u5E748\u670821\u65E5\uFF081300\u5E7410\u67084\u65E5\uFF09\uFF09\u306F\u3001\u938C\u5009\u6642\u4EE3\u4E2D\u671F\u306E\u66F9\u6D1E\u5B97\u306E\u7985\u50E7\u3002\uFF08\u6CD5\u7687\u6D3E\uFF09\u306E\u6D3E\u7956\u3002\u7236\u306F\u5F8C\u9CE5\u7FBD\u5929\u7687\uFF08\u300E\u300F\uFF09\u3068\u3082\u9806\u5FB3\u5929\u7687\uFF08\u300E\u672C\u671D\u9AD8\u50E7\u4F1D\u300F\uFF09\u3068\u3082\u8A00\u308F\u308C\u3001\u6CD5\u7687\u9577\u8001\u3068\u547C\u3070\u308C\u305F\u3002"@ja . . "2960"^^ . "Kangan Giin"@pl . . . . . . . . . . . "Kangan Giin"@en . . "Kangan Giin (\u5BD2\u5DCC\u7FA9\u5C39, 1217\u20131300) est un disciple de D\u014Dgen et le fondateur de l'\u00E9cole Higo du Bouddhisme Zen S\u014Dt\u014D. Il a \u00E9t\u00E9 pr\u00E9tendu que son p\u00E8re \u00E9tait l'empereur Go-Toba ou l'empereur Juntoku. Il est tr\u00E8s actif dans l'activit\u00E9 missionnaire au Ky\u016Bsh\u016B o\u00F9 il fonde le Daiji-ji (\u5927\u6148\u5BFA) \u00E0 Kumamoto."@fr . . . . . . . . "Kangan Giin (ur. 1217, zm. 1300; jap. \u5BD2\u5DCC\u7FA9\u5C39) \u2013 japo\u0144ski mistrz zen szko\u0142y s\u014Dt\u014D, ucze\u0144 D\u014Dgena."@pl . "\u5BD2\u5DCC\u7FA9\u5C39"@ja . . . . . . "Gukoku"@en . . . "1078511761"^^ . . "\u5BD2\u5DCC\u7FA9\u5C39\uFF08\u304B\u3093\u304C\u3093 \u304E\u3044\u3093\u3001\u5EFA\u4FDD5\u5E74\uFF081217\u5E74\uFF09 - \u6B63\u5B892\u5E748\u670821\u65E5\uFF081300\u5E7410\u67084\u65E5\uFF09\uFF09\u306F\u3001\u938C\u5009\u6642\u4EE3\u4E2D\u671F\u306E\u66F9\u6D1E\u5B97\u306E\u7985\u50E7\u3002\uFF08\u6CD5\u7687\u6D3E\uFF09\u306E\u6D3E\u7956\u3002\u7236\u306F\u5F8C\u9CE5\u7FBD\u5929\u7687\uFF08\u300E\u300F\uFF09\u3068\u3082\u9806\u5FB3\u5929\u7687\uFF08\u300E\u672C\u671D\u9AD8\u50E7\u4F1D\u300F\uFF09\u3068\u3082\u8A00\u308F\u308C\u3001\u6CD5\u7687\u9577\u8001\u3068\u547C\u3070\u308C\u305F\u3002"@ja . . . . . "Ninn\u014D"@en .