Misplaced Pages

Huahujing

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Some of this article's listed sources may not be reliable. Please help improve this article by looking for better, more reliable sources. Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed. (August 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Huahujing
Traditional Chinese化胡經
Simplified Chinese化胡经
Literal meaningClassic on converting the barbarians
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHuàhújīng
Wade–GilesHua Hu Ching
IPA
Middle Chinese
Middle Chinesehˠua ɦuo keŋ
Part of a series on
Taoism
Tao
Concepts
Practices
Texts
Theology
People




Schools

Sacred places
Institutions and organizations

The Huahujing (also romanized as Hua Hu Ching) is a Taoist work, traditionally attributed to Laozi. No extant versions exist today apart from quotations in a partial manuscript discovered in the Mogao Caves, Dunhuang, in China.

Origins

The work is honorifically known as the Taishang lingbao Laozi huahu miaojing (太上靈寶老子化胡妙經, "The Supreme Numinous Treasure's Sublime Classic on Laozi's Conversion of the Barbarians").

Traditionally, it is said that Laozi wrote it with the intention of converting Buddhists to Taoism, when they began to cross over from India. The Taoists are sometimes claimed to have developed the Huahujing to support one of their favourite arguments against the Buddhists: that after leaving China to the West, Laozi had travelled as far as India, where he had converted—or even become—the Buddha and thus Buddhism had been created as a somewhat distorted offshoot of Taoism.

Some scholars believe it is a forgery because there are no historical references to it until the early 4th century CE. It has been suggested that the Taoist Wang Fu [zh] (王浮) may have originally compiled the Huahujing circa 300 CE.

Destruction of copies

In 705, the Emperor Zhongzong of Tang prohibited distribution of the text.

Emperors of China occasionally organized debates between Buddhists and Taoists, and granted political favor to the winners. An emperor ordered all copies to be destroyed in the 13th century after Taoists lost a debate with Buddhists.

Dunhuang manuscript

Parts of chapters 1, 2, 8 and 10 have been discovered among the Dunhuang manuscripts, recovered from the Mogao Caves near Dunhuang and preserved in the Taisho Tripitaka, manuscript 2139.

Estimated dates for the manuscript range from around the late 4th or early 5th century to the 6th century CE Northern Celestial Masters.

Its contents have no direct relation to later oral texts produced in English.

References

Notes

  1. Homes Welch (1957:152)
  2. ^ Louis Komjathy (2004:48)
  3. Weinstein (1987:47–48)
  4. Liu Yu (1977)

Bibliography

Taoism
Philosophy
Metaphysics
Ethics
  • De (integrity)
  • Wu wei (nonaction)
  • Ziran (spontenaity)
    • Pu (plainness)
  • Zhenren
  • Five Precepts
  • Ten Precepts
  • Taoism
    Practice
    Texts
    Deities
    People
    Schools
    Sacred places
    Categories:
    Huahujing Add topic