Itsunen Shoyu
|
Missing image Dharma_wheel_1.png Dharma wheel Buddhism |
Culture |
History |
List of topics |
People |
By region and country |
Schools and sects |
Temples |
Terms and concepts |
Texts |
Timeline |
Itsunen Shoyu (Japanese.) (Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China, 1601 - Nagasaki, Japan, 1668) is famous as a Buddhist monk and painter who helped to establish Chan (Zen) in Japan.
In 1642 he travelled to Nagasaki as a trader in Chinese medicine, and in 1644 entered Kofuku-ji, becoming its 3rd abbot in 1645. In 1654 after multiple requests he succeeded in persuading Yinyuan Longqi (Ingen Ryuki), the 33rd abbot of Wanfu Temple (Mount Huangbo, Fujian) to emigrate to Japan, where he founded Ōbaku, the third and final major Japanese Zen sect.
Itsunen was a talented late Ming style painter of Buddhist figural subjects, and is known to have copied works by Chen Xian brought to Japan by Yinyuan Longqi.
See: Japanese Buddhism, Zen.