This book, a reconstruction of daily life and ways of thought in China
during the ninth century, is based on an extensive travel diary of that
time. The diarist Ennin was a Japanese Buddhist monk who went to China
in AD 838 in search of new Buddhist texts and further enlightenment in
his faith. While journeying through North China, and living in
Ch'ang-an, he recorded in detail what he saw and experienced.
Edwin O. Reischauer presents-often in Ennin's own words-a series of
vignettes of various aspects of life in the Far East in medieval times:
embassies and the conduct of international relations, the hazards of sea
travel, Ennin's entanglements with the Chinese bureaucracy, life in the
cities and the countryside, travel and economic conditions, commerce as
carried on by
Korean merchants, secular and religious festivals, Buddhism and its
cults, rituals, and monastery life. The reader accompanies Ennin on a
pilgrimage to the holy Mt. Wu-t'ai, and lives through China's greatest
religious persecution, which Ennin personally experienced from beginning
to end, before he returned to Japan in 847.
The perfect companion for the reader of Ennin's Diary, Ennin's
Travels serves as perhaps the most accurate and detailed account of the
extraordinary civilization that flourished in China more than a thousand
years ago. Unavailable for years, it is Angelico's pleasure to bring
this important work, with a new foreword by Valerie Hansen, to the
modern reader.