Fangsheng pond
A pond, also known by [|myriad other names], is a type of pond at Chinese or Japanese Buddhist temples. It is usually located in front of the shanmen or the Hall of Four Heavenly Kings. Copying Buddhist use, similar ponds sometimes appear in Taoist and Shinto temples as well. Within Buddhist temples, the pond is used for ritual 'freeing' of fish, birds, and other animalsusually purchased from fishermen or at local marketsin order to accrue merit owing to Chinese Buddhism's focus on compassion towards all living beings.
Names
The Chinese name, pronounced in Mandarin, literally refers to a pond or pool of water used for the release, liberation, or freeing of a life or some living thing. The concept has been translated and glossed in a wide variety of ways: life release pond, releasing-life pond, life releasing pond, pond for releasing life, pond for releasing living creatures, pond for releasing living beings, liberation pond, pond for the liberation of animals, pool of liberating life, ponds for setting lives free, fish-freeing pond, etc.In Japanese contexts, such ponds are known as or ponds from the Japanese pronunciation of the same characters as the Chinese name.
History
The practice of releasing captured animals for merit began to develop within Chinese Buddhism from the late 3rd century.ponds were first mentioned in later editions of the early 5th-century Treatise on the Great Wisdom. It relates that Buddhists of Shandong were robbed and fled to Jiankang in Jiande 6. Losing their oars and shipwrecked in a storm, they were supposedly miraculously saved by a giant tortoise. As one monk praised Amitābha, the tortoise reminded them of their own previous care of him at the pond at Haiqu. When the Xuan Emperor of the Northern Zhou Dynasty heard the story from the monks a few years later, he established the Temple of Repaying Kindness in commemoration. The Yunlu Manchao of the Song scholar Zhao Yanwei quotes an otherwise lost passage in the Zhuanji of the Tang scholar Liu Su stating that the Wu Emperor of Liang had earlier ordered the construction of such "ponds of longevity", a claim supported by known accounts of the emperor's promotion of Buddhism and protection of animals to such an extreme that he became known as the "Bodhisattva Emperor". It is extremely likely that a pond was established under the Sui Dynasty by Zhiyi, founder of the Tiantai school, as numerous sources including one from his immediate disciple Guanding claim he not only established one after the model of local Zhejiang fishermen but even lectured to the liberated fish on the Diamond and Golden Light Sutras.
ponds are attested at Buddhist temples with historical certainty from the early Tang Dynasty. In 759, Emperor Suzong of the Tang ordered all Buddhist temples to set up ponds. According to the Duobaomingjing, 81 Buddhist temples set up ponds in accordance with the emperor's order.
was particularly popular under the Song. The Tiantai monk Ciyun Zunshi petitioned Song emperors to make West and South Lake into ponds and composed a ritual for the release of living things into a pond comprising an initial narrative, a blessing of the pond's water, a petition, declaration of refuge, recitation of Buddha's name, sermon on dharma, and the recitation of 7 chapters of repentances and oaths. In 1017, Emperor Zhenzong not only provided for restoration of monastic ponds but also declared the animals of a wide stretch of the Huai River protected by imperial edict.