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・ Jin Qian Cao
・ Jin Qiang
・ Jin Qiaoqiao
・ Jin Qicong
・ Jin Records
・ Jin Renqing
・ Jin River
・ Jin River (Bei River)
・ Jin River (Fujian)
・ Jin River (Ningxiang County)
・ Jin River (Sichuan)
・ Jin Sato
・ Jin Se-yeon
・ Jin Sha
・ Jin Sheng Long
Jin Shengtan
・ Jin Shijia
・ Jin Shin Do
・ Jin Shirosaki
・ Jin Shuren
・ Jin Soon-jin
・ Jin State
・ Jin Sun-kuk
・ Jin Sun-yu
・ Jin Suo Chi tea
・ Jin Tae-hyun
・ Jin Taiyan
・ Jin Taraqayah
・ Jin Tianhe
・ Jin Tielin


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Jin Shengtan : ウィキペディア英語版
Jin Shengtan
Jin Shengtan () (1610?-7 August 1661), former name Jin Renrui (金人瑞), also known as Jin Kui (金喟), was a Chinese editor, writer and critic, who has been called the champion of Vernacular Chinese literature.
==Biography==

The year of Jin's birth is unclear, with some sources reporting 1610 and others 1608.〔For examples of this discrepancy, see:

〕 The former estimate is based on the fact that Jin's son was 10 years old in East Asian age reckoning in 1641, and is generally accepted by scholars. He was born Jin Renrui in the town of Suzhou, a place celebrated for its culture and elegance. Jin's family was of the scholar-gentry class, but was constantly plagued by sickness and death, which led in turn to little wealth. Jin's father was apparently a scholar. Jin began schooling relatively late, attending a village school at the age of nine. He displayed great intellectual curiosity, and had somewhat unusual ideas. However, he was a conscientious student. Early in life, he took the style name "Shengtan", a phrase from the ''Analects'' meaning "the sage () sighed". He passed only the lowest of the imperial examinations, and never held public office.
In his writings, Jin showed a great interest in the ideas of Chan Buddhism. He claimed that this interest began early, when he first read the ''Lotus Sutra'' at the age of 11. This inclination toward Buddhist ideas became even more pronounced after the fall of the Ming Dynasty in 1644. In that year and the one that followed, Jin became conspicuously more depressed and withdrawn, as well as more receptive to Buddhism. The 20th century scholar Zhang Guoguang attributed this change to the fall of the short-lived Li Zicheng regime. Throughout his life, Jin's interest in Buddhism affected his views, and he considered himself a mere agent of the forces of eternity.
Jin is sometimes said to have been known by the name Zhang Cai (張采), but this appears to be a mistake due to confusion with a contemporary, Zhang Pu.〔Hummel (1943) p. 164〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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