Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Mogao Caves' has mentioned 'Monk' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The caves are usually referred to in Chinese as the Thousand Buddha Caves (Chinese: xe5x8dx83xe4xbdx9bxe6xb4x9e; pinyin: qixc4x81nfxc3xb3 dxc3xb2ng), a name that some scholars have speculated to have come from the legend of its founding, when a monk Yuezun had a vision of a thousand Buddhas at the site.
According to a book written during the reign of Tang Empress Wu, Fokan Ji (xe4xbdx9bxe9xbex95xe8xa8x98, An Account of Buddhist Shrines) by Li Junxiu (xe6x9dx8exe5x90x9bxe4xbfxae), a Buddhist monk named Lxc3xa8 Zxc5xabn (xe6xa8x82xe5xb0x8a, which may also be pronounced Yuezun) had a vision of a thousand Buddhas bathed in golden light at the site in 366 AD, inspiring him to build a cave here.
[15] He was later joined by a second monk Faliang (xe6xb3x95xe8x89xaf), and the site gradually grew, by the time of the Northern Liang a small community of monks had formed at the site.
It is located off the entrance leading to cave 16 and was originally used as a memorial cave for a local monk Hongbian on his death in 862.
The original function of the "Library Cave" was as a shrine commemorating Hong Bian, the 9th-century monk.