Nichiren

Nichiren
Nichiren (日蓮)

A statue of Nichiren outside Honnoji in the Teramachi District of Kyoto.
School Mahayana, Nichiren
Personal
Born February 16, 1222
Died October 13, 1282 (age 60)
Senior posting
Title Founder of Nichiren Buddhism

Nichiren (Japanese: 日蓮) (February 16, 1222 – October 13, 1282) was a Buddhist monk who lived during the Kamakura period (1185–1333) in Japan. Nichiren taught devotion to the Lotus Sutra, entitled Myōhō-Renge-Kyō in Japanese, as the exclusive means to attain enlightenment and the chanting of Nam-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō as the essential practice of the teaching. Nichiren Buddhism includes various schools with diverging interpretations of Nichiren's teachings. While virtually all Nichiren Buddhist schools regard his as a reincarnation of the Lotus Sutra's Bodhisattva Superior Practices, Jogyo Bosatsu (上行菩薩), some prominent schools of Nichiren Buddhism's Nikkō lineages also regard him as the actual Buddha of this age, or the Buddha of the Latter day of the Law.[1]


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