Gong Ha
Kyunghee (1849 ~ 1912) is a prominent archbishop who reformed modern Korean Buddhism. He was born in 1849 in Chonju, Korea, as the son of his father Song Doo-ok and his mother, Milyang Park. The main building is Yeosan, and its name is Dongwook. The law is Kyunghee (鏡 虛), and the official name is 惺 牛 (惺 牛). When he was 9 years old, he went to Cheonggye Temple in Cheongye Mountain in Gwacheon, Gyeonggi Province. On November 15, 1879, a word from Lee Chae-sa, a jinja who lived under the history of Donghak, said, "Even if it is a cow, it must become a cow without a nostril." When I heard this word, I immediately realized it. The cow-free cattle are the elders of the Chinese legislature, which are listed in the footnotes of the prefectural government. At that time, Sammyung Won Kyu was the disciple of Kyungmyong, the priest of Kyunghee. In 1880, his mother and his brother, a Buddhist monk, moved to the ceiling arm of Yeonam,