What font is used to write the Heart Sutra?

The regular script of the heart sutra looks good.

It is most appropriate to use regular script in Heart Sutra. Every stroke is a kind of practice, a process of enlightenment, and makes the soul get peace. Heart Sutra is called "the Sutra in the Sutra" and is the essence of Prajna Sutra. This sutra is where the Buddha is, and it is more auspicious to eliminate disasters. If you read and recite, you will suffer all kinds of hardships and become supreme.

The Prajna Paramita Heart Sutra is a scripture that makes people happy from suffering. It takes one person to understand a word "empty". The full text is * * * 260 words. It is not easy to gather it neatly in fine gold fine print. Even if the fine print is good, the hand speed is faster than an hour.

Buddhist classics, referred to as "Prajna Heart Sutra" or "Heart Sutra", translated by Tang Xuanzang, are the essence of Prajna Sutra. Because the scriptures are short, pithy and easy to recite, they are very popular in China and Tibet. In modern times, it has been translated into many languages and spread all over the world.

Before Xuanzang's translation, there was a volume of Maha Prajna Paramita Mantra (formerly known as Maha Prajna Paramita Mantra Sutra), which was translated by Kumarajiva. There are six different versions: Tang Fayue translated Prajna Paramita Heart Sutra; Tang Prajna and Li Yan translated Prajna Paramita Heart Sutra; Tang Zhihui translated the Prajna Paramita Heart Sutra in turn; Tang Facheng translated Prajna Paramita Heart Sutra.

The main idea of Heart Sutra:

The purpose of this sutra comes from various items about the Buddhist relics in most of the Prajna Sutra, that is, the preface, offering bowls, learning, past lives and sighing in Qin's translation of Dapin Prajna Sutra (Volumes 1-2), and the origin in Tang's translation of the second part of Dapin Prajna Sutra.

The contents mentioned in each article are the significance and merits of the Prajna Question and Answer by the Buddha and the Buddhist relic, so this book will be summarized into one line. The book is 260 words in total, expounding the concepts of five connotations, three disciplines, four truths and twelve karma, and telling the Buddhist principle of self-emptiness. It is considered that if Prajna can endure all sufferings, it is the fruit of Nirvana Bodhi. This thought is regarded as the core of all Prajna theories, so it is called Heart Sutra.