Tripitaka
The Tripitaka (Sanskrit, lit. three baskets), Tipitaka (Pali), or ?? (Chinese: S?nzàng; Japanese: Sanzo; Khmer: Traip?tâk ត្រៃបិតក; Korean: Samjang ??; Thai: Traipidok ???????; Vietnamese: Tam t?ng) is the formal term for a Buddhist canon of scriptures. Many different versions of the canon exist throughout the Buddhist world, containing an enormous variety of texts. The most widely-known version is the Pali Canon of the Theravada school.
Related Topics:
Sanskrit - Pali - Chinese - Japanese - Khmer - Korean - Thai - Vietnamese - Pali Canon - Theravada
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The Tripitaka writings, which were originally memorized and recited orally by disciples, fall into three general categories and the scrolls (originally written on palm leaves) were therefore kept in three baskets (tri-pitaka).
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The first category, the Vinaya Pitaka, was the code of ethics to be obeyed by the early sangha, monks and nuns. Some rules and practices were regarded by the Buddha as essential and foundational to the pursuit of his philosophical teachings. Others were invented on a day-to-day basis as the Buddha encountered various behavior problems with the monks.
Related Topics:
Vinaya - Code of ethics - Sangha - Monks - Nuns
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The second category, the Sutra Pitaka (literally "basket of threads", Pali: Sutta Pitaka), consists primarily of accounts of the Buddha's life and teachings. The Sutra Pitaka has numerous subdivisions: it contains more than 10,000 sutras.
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The third category is known to the Theravada school as the Abhidhamma Pitaka. It is a collection of texts in which the underlying doctrinal principles presented in the Sutra Pitaka are restated and explained in more a systematic framework. In Mahayana and Vajrayana tripitakas, this pitaka often contains treatises that are referred to as shastras.
Related Topics:
Abhidhamma - Mahayana - Vajrayana - Shastra
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The Chinese form of Tripitaka, "Sanzang", was sometimes used as an honorary title for a Buddhist monk who has mastered all the Tripitaka cannons, most notably in the case of the T'ang Dynasty monk Xuanzang, who was portrayed in the novel Journey to the West as "T'ang Sanzang". Due to the popularity of the novel, the term in "Sanzang" is often erroneously understood as a name of the monk Xuanzang.
Related Topics:
Xuanzang - Journey to the West
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