Nanquan Puyuan (Chinese: Ã¥ÂÂæ³ÂæÂ®é¡Â; Wade-Giles: Nan-châÂÂüan PâÂÂu-yüan; Pinyin: Nánquán PÃÂyuàn; Japanese: Nansen Fugan; Korean: ë¨ì²Âë³´ì Namcheon Bowon) (c. 749 â c. 835) was a Chan (Zen) Buddhist master in China during the Tang dynasty. He was a student and Dharma successor of Master Mazu Daoyi (709âÂÂ788).
In the year 795, after his enlightenment experience under Mazu, he settled in a self-made hut on Mount Nanquan, from which his dharma name is derived, and lived there in eremitic solitude for three decades. In time, monks persuaded him to come down the mountain and found a monastery; from that time forward, he always had hundreds of students.
Nanquan appears in several gong'ans:
Two gong'ans from the Blue Cliff Record (#28 & #69) depict Nanquan as an advanced student interacting with fellow students of Mazu, and the others depict him as a teacher in his own right.
A well-known koan is case #14 of the Gateless Gate, "Nanquan kills the cat":
Nanquan had seventeen Dharma successors, the most famous of whom was Zhaozhou Congshen (J. Joshu)(778âÂÂ897). Case #19 of the Gateless Gate recounts an interaction between Nanquan and Zhaozhou that led to the latter having a profound realization; some translators/editors, for example Paul Reps, interpret this as Zhaozhou's enlightenment moment.