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Kūkai
![Painting of Kūkai from the ''Shingon Hassozō'', a set of scrolls depicting the first eight patriarchs of the Shingon school. Japan, [[Kamakura period]] (13th-14th centuries).](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8c/Eight_Patriarchs_of_the_Shingon_Sect_of_Buddhism_Kukai_Cropped.jpg)
Because of his importance in Japanese Buddhism, Kūkai is associated with many stories and legends. One such legend attribute the invention of the ''kana'' syllabary to Kūkai, with which the Japanese language is written to this day (in combination with ''kanji''), as well as the ''Iroha'' poem, which helped to standardise and popularise ''kana''.
Shingon followers usually refer to Kūkai by the honorific title of , and the religious name of . Provided by Wikipedia
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