Sneha Girap (Editor)

Xuedou Zhijian

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Religion
  
Chan/Zen

Students
  
Tiantong Rujing

Titles
  
Zen master

Successor
  
Tiantong Rujing

Teacher
  
Tiantong Zongjue

Predecessor
  
Tiantong Zongjue

Died
  
1192

School
  
Caodong/Soto

Name
  
Xuedou Zhijian


Xuedou Zhijian

Xuedou Zhijian (Chinese: 雪窦智鑑; Pinyin: Xuědòu Zhìjiàn; Japanese: Setchō Chikan), was a Chinese Zen Buddhist monk during the Song Dynasty. He was born in an ancient town called Chuzhou in what is now Anhui Province. The details of his life have not survived in great detail. In 1154, he is known to have become the abbot of Xizhen Temple near modern Hangzhou. He moved again in 1184 to Mount Xuedou, where he was said to have many students. In the years leading up to his death in 1192, he apparently lived in seclusion in a cottage to the east of his temple.According to the Conglin shengshi (Glorious matters from the monasteries), written in 1199 by Guyue Daorong, Zhijian wrote a popular verse that poked fun at the renowned teacher Hongzhi Zhengjue. The verse is: “Obtaining one Zong, losing one Chong; Joining his palms in front, beating his chest in back.” "Zong" refers to a well-known student of Hongzhi named Sizong, while "Puchong" is a reference to Yetang Puchong, a student who studied under Hongzhi, but later left to study under Caotang Shanqing, a teacher of the rival Rinzai/Linji school.

References

Xuedou Zhijian Wikipedia