bibliography 1133
——. 2006. “Knowing vs. Owning a Secret: Secrecy in Medieval Japan, as Seen Through
the Sokui kanjō Enthronement Unction.” In The Culture of Secrecy in Japanese Reli-
gion. Ed. Bernhard Scheid and Mark Teeuwen, 172–203. London: Routledge.
Teeuwen, Mark, and Fabio Rambelli, eds. 2003. Buddhas and Kami in Japan: Honji
Suijaku as a Combinatory Paradigm. London: Routledge, Curzon.
Teeuwen, Mark, and Hendrik van der Veere, trans. 1988. “Nakatomi no harae kunge.”
In Nakatomi no harae kunge: Purification and Enlightenment in Late-Heian Japan.
Ed. Mark Teeuwen and Hendrik van der Veere. München: Iudicium Verlag.
Teiser, Stephen F. 1986. “Ghosts and Ancestors in Medieval Chinese Religion: The
Yu-lan-p’en Festival as Mortuary Ritual.” History of Religions 26: 47–67.
——. 1988a. “ ‘Having Once Died and Returned to Life’: Representations of Hell in
Medieval China.” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 48: 433–64.
——. 1988b. The Ghost Festival in Medieval China. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
Press.
——. 1992. “Hymns for the Dead in the Age of the Manuscripts.” The Gest Library
Journal 5: 26–56.
——. 1994. The Scripture of the Ten Kings and the Making of Purgatory in Medieval
Chinese Buddhism. Studies in East Asian Buddhism 9. Honolulu: Kuroda Institute
and University of Hawai‘i Press.
——. 1996. The Ghost Festival in Medieval China. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
Press. Rev. ed.
——. 2006. Reinventing the Wheel: Paintings of Rebirth in Medieval Buddhist Temples.
Seattle: University of Washington Press.
Tendai shūten hensanjo , ed. 1987. Zoku tendaishū zensho
, 10 vols. Tokyo: Shunjūsha.
——. 1993. Zoku tendai zenshō , 15 vols. Tokyo: Shunjūsha.
Tendaishuu Eizan Gakuin, ed. 1925–1926. Dengyō Daishi Zenshū ,
5 vols. Hieizan: Tosho Kankōsho.
ten Grotenhuis, Elizabeth. 1999. Japanese Mandalas: Representations of Sacred Geog-
raphy. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press.
——. 2004. “Bodily Gift and Spiritual Pledge: Human Hair in Japanese Buddhist
Embroideries.” Orientations 35: 31–35.
Thomas, F. W. 1908–1926. “Abhiṣeka.” In Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics. Ed.
James Hastings, 1: 21–24. New York: C. Scribner’s Sons.
Tian Yiheng. 1985, 1992. Liuqing rizha (Daily Notes for Preserving
History). Shanghai: Shanghai guji chubanshe.
Todaro, Dale A. 1986. “A Study of the Earliest Garbha Vidhi of the Shingon Sect.”
Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 9: 109–146.
Toganoo Shōun. 1933. Himitsu Bukkyōshi (History of Esoteric
Buddhism). Kōyasan: Kōyasan Daigaku Shuppanbu; Kyoto: Hatsubaijo nagai shup-
pan insatsu kabushiki-gaisha. (Repr. Tokyo: Ryūbunkan, 1981.)
——. 1940. Himitsu jisō no kenkyū. Koyasan: Koyasan daigaku shup-
panbu.
——. 1957. Himitsu Bukkyō shi. Kōyasan: Kōyasan daigakunai Toganoo
Zenshū Kankōkai.
——. 1958. Mandara no kenkyū. Toganoo zenshū 4. Kyoto:
Mikkyō bunka kenkyūjo. (Orig. pub. 1927.)
——. N.d. (ca. 1980). “Shingon: The Japanese Tantric Tradition.” Trans. Leo Pruden.
Original title: “Himitsu Jisō no Kenkyū,” 1935. Unpublished manuscript.
——. 1982a. Himitsu jisō no kenkyū. Toganoo Shōun zenshū
. Vol. 2. Kyoto: sōhatsubaimoto Rinsen Shoten. (Orig. pub.: Kōyasan:
Kōyasan Daigaku Shuppanbu, 1935.)
——. 1982b. Mandara no Kenkyū. Toganoo zenshū
4. Kōyasan: Kōyasan Daigaku Mikkyō Bunka Kenkyūjo. (Orig. pub.: Kōyasan:
Kōyasan daigaku mikkyō bunka kenkyūjo, 1927.)