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rdfs:comment | - Hyecho (704-787 CE), Sanskrit: Prajñāvikram; Hui Chao in Chinese Pinyin, was a Korean Buddhist monk from Silla, one the three Korean kingdoms of the period. "You complain of the long way home to the west, and I sigh at the endless road to the east." Hyecho Hyecho studied esoteric Buddhism in Tang Dynasty China, initially under Subhakarsinha and then under the famous Indina monk Vajrabodhi who praised Hyecho as "one of six living persons who were well-trained in the five sections of the Buddhist canon."
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abstract | - Hyecho (704-787 CE), Sanskrit: Prajñāvikram; Hui Chao in Chinese Pinyin, was a Korean Buddhist monk from Silla, one the three Korean kingdoms of the period. "You complain of the long way home to the west, and I sigh at the endless road to the east." Hyecho Hyecho studied esoteric Buddhism in Tang Dynasty China, initially under Subhakarsinha and then under the famous Indina monk Vajrabodhi who praised Hyecho as "one of six living persons who were well-trained in the five sections of the Buddhist canon." On the advice of his Indian teachers in China, he set out for India in 723 CE to acquaint himself with the language and culture of the land of the Buddha.
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