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  1.  5
    The Application of Traditional Rules of Purity (Qinggui) in Contemporary Taiwanese Monasteries.Tzu-Lung Chiu - 2020 - Buddhist Studies Review 36 (2):249-277.
    Vinaya rules embody the ideal of how Buddhists should regulate their daily lives, and monastics are required to observe them, despite the fact that they were compiled nearly 2,500 years ago in India: a context dramatically different not only from Chinese Buddhism's present monastic conditions, but from its historical conditions. Against this backdrop, rules of purity were gradually formulated by Chinese masters in medieval times to supplement and adapt vinaya rules to China's cultural ethos and to specific local Chinese contexts. (...)
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  2.  11
    The Gurudharmas in Taiwanese Buddhist Nunneries.Ann Heirman & Tzu-Lung Chiu - 2013 - Buddhist Studies Review 29 (2):273-300.
    According to tradition, Mah?praj?pat?, the Buddha’s aunt and stepmother, when allowed to join the Buddhist monastic community, accepted eight ‘fundamental rules’ that made the nuns’ order dependent upon the monks’ order. This story has given rise to much debate, in the past as well as in the present. This article first shows how the eight rules became an integrated part of the vinaya, and more particularly of the Dharmaguptakavinaya, that forms the basis of monastic ordinations in East Asia. Against the (...)
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    The Gurudharmas in Buddhist Nunneries of Mainland China.Tzu-Lung Chiu & Ann Heirman - 2015 - Buddhist Studies Review 31 (2):241-272.
    According to tradition, when the Buddha’s aunt and stepmother Mah?praj?pat? was allowed to join the Buddhist monastic community, she accepted eight ‘fundamental rules’ that made the nuns’ order dependent upon the monks’ order. This story has given rise to much debate, in the past as well as in the present, and this is no less the case in Mainland China, where nunneries have started to re-emerge in recent decades. This article first presents new insight into Mainland Chinese monastic practitioners’ common (...)
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