Giác Hải
Giác Hải ({{langx|vi|覺海,}} fl. 1100) was a Vietnamese Buddhist Thiền monk and the most famous disciple of fisherman turned Thiền master Không Lộ (1016-1094). He is mentioned in a poem by emperor Lý Nhân Tông (1066–1127).David G. Marr, Anthony Crothers MilnerSoutheast Asia in the 9th to 14th Centuries - Page 147 1986 "[40] His most famous disciple, Giac Hai, was cited in a poem by King Ly Can Bifc,[41] and the court subsidized Giac Hai's ... royal compound at Thang-long (modern Hanoi) and is identified in his biography as "director of monks at the Ly court"; ... Chapter 11 of 15th Century writer Nam Ông's Nam Ông mộng lục entitled "Tăng đạo thần thông" ({{lang|vi|僧道神通)}} tells the story of how he joined forces with the Daoist master Thông Huyền to slay two demons.Journal of Asian martial arts 2004 - Volume 13 - Page 68 There is a famous story in which a Daoist, Thong Huyen, and a Buddhist monk, Giac Hai, combined their Daoist magic and Buddhist sorcery to slay two toad-like demons that attacked the palace "
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Category:12th-century Vietnamese people