Kakuban

E389566

Kakuban was a prominent 12th-century Japanese Buddhist monk and reformer who played a key role in the development of Shingon Buddhism, particularly through his doctrinal writings and liturgical innovations.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Kakuban canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (44)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Buddhist scholar
Buddhist writer
Japanese Buddhist monk
Shingon Buddhist monk
religious reformer
alternateName Gyōki
surface form: Kōgyō Daishi
birthYear 1095
centuryActive 12th century
countryOfCitizenship Japan
culturalContext Heian-period Japanese Buddhism
deathYear 1143
doctrine emphasis on ritual and liturgical correctness
reinterpretation of Shingon mandala practice
synthesis of nenbutsu and esoteric practice
era late Heian period
fieldOfWork Buddhist doctrine
Buddhist ritual
Esoteric Buddhist practice
honorificTitle Daishi
influenced Negoro-ji tradition
later Shingon lineages
influencedBy Kūkai
Shingon scholastic tradition
knownFor development of Shingon ritual
doctrinal writings
liturgical innovations
promotion of nenbutsu within esoteric Buddhism
reforms within Shingon Buddhism
language Classical Chinese (kanbun)
Classical Japanese
legacy contributed to diversification of Shingon schools
venerated posthumously as Kōgyō Daishi
movement Shingon Buddhism
surface form: Shingon reform movement
nativeName 覚鑁
occupation abbot
placeOfActivity Mount Kōya
Negoro NERFINISHED
positionHeld leader within Shingon establishment on Mount Kōya
religion Buddhism
religiousSchool Mikkyō
surface form: Mikkyō (Esoteric Buddhism)

Shingon Buddhism
tradition Japanese Esoteric Buddhism
wrote doctrinal treatises on Shingon Buddhism
liturgical texts for Shingon rituals

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.