Pu-k’ung [不空] (705–774) (PY Bukong; Amoghavajra; Fukū): An Indian monk who went to China to disseminate Esoteric Buddhism. Pu-k’ung is his Chinese name. Born in northern India (Central Asia or Sri Lanka according to some accounts), in 720 he journeyed to Lo-yang in China and became a disciple of Chin-kang-chih ( Vajrabodhi). In 741, after Chin-kang-chih’s death, he went to India and Sri Lanka in search of esoteric scriptures. In 746 he returned to China, where he won the patronage of Emperor Hsüan-tsung and his successors, and conducted esoteric rituals for the protection of the nation. Pu-k’ung propagated Esoteric Buddhism and also translated many esoteric scriptures, including the Diamond Crown Sutra, into Chinese. He is regarded as the sixth patriarch in the lineage of Esoteric Buddhism by the True Word ( Shingon) school. Among his six major disciples was Hui-kuo, who transferred Esoteric Buddhism to Kōbō, the founder of the True Word school.