Maming Sheng

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Literal meaning"Master Horse-neigh"
Hanyu PinyinMǎmíng shēng
Maming Sheng
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese馬鳴生
Simplified Chinese马鸣生
Literal meaning"Master Horse-neigh"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinMǎmíng shēng
Wade–GilesMa-ming sheng
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingMaa5ming4sang1
Middle Chinese
Middle ChineseMæXmjæng sræng
Old Chinese
Baxter–Sagart (2014)Mˁraʔm.reŋ sreŋ
Korean name
Hangul마명생
Hanja馬鳴生
Transcriptions
McCune–ReischauerMamyŏng saeng
Japanese name
Kanji馬鳴生
Hiraganaめみょうせい
Transcriptions
Revised HepburnMemyō sei

Maming Sheng (Chinese: 馬鳴生 "Master Horse-neigh", fl. c. 100 CE) was a legendary Han dynasty Daoist alchemist and xian ("transcendent; immortal"). He was a disciple of the transcendent and fangshi ("master of methods") Anqi Sheng, who transmitted a secret waidan external alchemical scripture to him. Maming refined this elixir of immortality, but rather than take a full dose and immediately ascend to heaven, he only took half and lived for over 500 years as a secret dìxiān (地仙; "earthbound transcendent"). Master Horse-neigh was a key figure in the Daoist Taiqing (太清; "Grand Purity") alchemical tradition. Furthermore, in Chinese Buddhism, Maming (馬鳴; "Horse-neigh") translates the name of the 2nd-century CE Indian Buddhist monk and polymath Aśvaghoṣa (from Sanskrit áśva अश्व, "horse" and ghoṣa घोष, "cry; sound"), so-called because when teaching the Dharma his words were intelligible even to animals.

The Chinese appellation Maming Sheng ("Master Horse-neigh") combines the courtesy title shēng (; "master; sir") with mǎmíng (馬鳴; 'horse cry/sound'; "neigh; whinny; nicker; whicker"). Some later texts write Maming Sheng as 馬明生; "Master Horse-bright" with the variant Chinese character míng (; "bright; clear") instead of míng (; "cry; sound"). Since Ma () is a common Chinese surname, a few scholars[1] parse the name 馬鳴生 as "Ma Mingsheng" instead of "Maming Sheng"). The following Shenxian zhuan hagiography of Maming Sheng says his surname was He () and original name was Junxian (君賢).

Hagiographies

Ashvaghosha

References

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