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CHANGES IN SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY KOREAN BUDDHISM AND THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE BUDDHIST TRADITION IN THE LATE CHOSON DYNASTYopen access

Authors
Yong-t'ae, Kim
Issue Date
15-Dec-2013
Publisher
ACADEMIA KOREANA KEIMYUNG UNIV
Keywords
Choson Buddhism; monastic army; monastic corvee labor; dharma lineage; monastic education
Citation
ACTA KOREANA, v.16, no.2, pp 537 - 563
Pages
27
Indexed
AHCI
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
ACTA KOREANA
Volume
16
Number
2
Start Page
537
End Page
563
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/24877
DOI
10.18399/acta.2013.16.2.009
ISSN
1520-7412
2733-5348
Abstract
Korean Buddhism during the Choson period (1392-1910) has been characterized as a religion whose institutional integrity and philosophical vigor severely declined due to the state policy of oppression. Since such a negative description was promulgated by Japanese scholars during the colonial period, it has been adhered to even by post-colonial era Korean scholars. This article is an attempt to redress such a stereotypical understanding of Korean Buddhism, especially that of the late Choson period, and to bring to light its real nature from a historical perspective. As for the factors that contributed to the enhancement of Choson Buddhism's status, we may adduce some changes in the institutional and social settings. During the years 1550 to 1566, the traditional system of the Son and Kyo schools was restored and government regulations for clerical ordination and the state examination for monks were also reinstated. During the Imjin War, the monastic armies' military achievements led to the enhancement of their social status. Thereafter, the government publicly utilized their corvee labor, and the Buddhist institution came to receive state support. In the early seventeenth century, along with the rearrangement of religious institutions, various lineages and branches were established and an economic foundation for managing their monasteries was secured. The Buddhist circle in this period proclaimed their self-identity by determining the dharma lineages and established systems for monastic education and practice through combining the practice of meditation and doctrinal studies, in which kanhwa Son took precedence.
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