Doctrine beyond Borders: The Sinographic Cosmopolis and Religious Classics in Vietnam from the Tenth to the Fourteenth Centuries

This article studies the transmission of the Three Teachings 三教 (Buddhism, Confucianism, and Taoism) from China to Vietnam in the tenth to fourteenth centuries. Using the primary sources written in Sinitic, I argue that Vietnam in the pre-national period was a type of multireligious political commun...

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Published inSungkyun journal of East Asian studies Vol. 23; no. 1; pp. 1 - 26
Main Author Trần, Trọng Dương
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Duke University Press 01.05.2023
동아시아학술원
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Summary:This article studies the transmission of the Three Teachings 三教 (Buddhism, Confucianism, and Taoism) from China to Vietnam in the tenth to fourteenth centuries. Using the primary sources written in Sinitic, I argue that Vietnam in the pre-national period was a type of multireligious political community, in which sinographs, Literary Sinitic, and the classics of the Three Teachings created a threefold structure in the political culture of Vietnam. Visits to the Chinese imperial court by delegations from the Great Việt were conceived as pilgrimages to the center of civilization and the origin of different schools of thought. The canonical texts brought back to the country were considered to be an endorsement of Vietnam as a Domain of Manifest Civility (文獻之邦), a symbol of recognized political power, and a tool to expand education and spread ruling power.
Bibliography:https://read.dukeupress.edu/sungkyun-journal-of-east-asian-studies/article/23/1/1/355109/Doctrine-beyond-Borders-The-Sinographic-Cosmopolis
ISSN:1598-2661
2586-0380
DOI:10.1215/15982661-10336272