Buddhism and Its Spread Along the Silk Road
"There one sees a structure of an elevation prodigious in height; it is
supported by gigantic pillars and covered with paintings of all the birds created
by God. In the interior are two immense idols carved in the rock and rising
from the foot of the mountains to the summit....One cannot see anything comparable
to these statues in the whole world."
---Yakut describing Bamiyan in his geographical dictionary in 1218
Besides silk, paper and other goods, the Silk Road carried another commodity which was equally significant in world history. Along with trade and migration, the world's oldest international highway was the vehicle which spread Buddhism through Central Asia. The transmission was launched from northwestern India to modern Pakistan, Afghanistan, Central Asia, Xinjiang (Chinese Turkistan), China, Korea and Japan. Buddhism not only affected the lives and cultures on those regions but also left us with a world of wonders in arts and literature. (Figure on the right: Princes from Central Asian states in Lamentation, Dunhuang Cave 158. After Sakyamuni entered nirvana, princes of different Central Asian states gathered to express their grief, crying, beating their chests, piercing themselves with swords or knives, or cutting off their noses or ears. This painting not only depicts their devotions to Buddha, but also accurately presents the appearances, garments and customs of different nations along the Silk Road and the history of cultural exchange between them.)
Birth of Buddha and the Development of Buddhism in India
According to legend, the Buddha (The Awakened), or Gotama (Sanskrit) lived in
northern India in the 6th century BC. Gotama was his family name and his personal
name was Siddhattha in Pali language. He was born in a noble family and ancient
lineage, the Sakyas. A title by which Siddhattha came to be known as 'the Sage
of the Sakyas', Sakyamuni. To the West, he is known as the Buddha.
What is known of the Buddha's life is based mainly on the evidence of the canonical
texts, the most extensive and comprehensive of which are those written in Pali,
an ancient Indian language. According to the canon, Buddha's birth place was
Lumbini, near the small city of Kapilavastu on the borders of Nepal and India.
In his twenties, he renounced his life in the palace and left home in search
of enlightenment after witnessing sights of suffering, sickness, aging and death.
He achieved Enlightenment at Bodh Gaya and gave the first sermon at Sarnath.
He spent his remaining life in travelling, teaching and spreading Buddhism.
It is not clear when the first Buddhist community was established in India.
By the time of Buddha's death at the age of 80 he had become a famous and respected
figure and had allies and supporters among rich and poor. In 484 BC, seven days
after the Buddha's death at Kushinagara (modern Kasia), his body was cremated
and the relics were divided equally among eight clans. Each of these built a
sacred cairn over the relics, a form of memorial known in India as a stupa,
which later became the focus for Buddhists' devotions. For the next two centuries,
there was a steady growth of Buddhism in India.
Not long after the Buddha's death, the followers gathered at Rajagriha for the
first general council. The second council was held in Vaishali one hundred years
after the death of Buddha. The third one is said to be held in Pataliputra in
the time of the Mauryan king Ashoka.
The Indian King Ashoka (273-232 BC), the grandson of the founder of the Mauryan
dynasty, demonstrated his conversion to Buddhism by vigorously promulgating
the religion across India. His edicts were carved on pillars of stone and wood,
from Bengal to Afghanistan and into the south. He celebrated the distribution
of the ashes of the Buddha, according to legend, placed inside 84,000 stupas.
His best-known dedications are the Sarnath lion capital imprinted on India's
currency and the Wheel of the Law at the center of the national flag of India.
Ashoka's empire extended to the northwestern borders of the Punjab. The Buddhist
monks were free to move throughout the whole area. As the result, the Buddhist
community probably had reached the Hellenized neighbor, the Kushan/Bactrian
kingdom, by the end of Ashoka's reign.
The Dissemination of Buddhism by Kushan/Bactria
..\images/Budmmap.jpg
..\images/Budmmap.jpgThe Kushans dominated the areas of Hindu Kush into
Kabul, Gandhara, northern Pakistan and north-western India. They controlled
the trade between India, China, Parthia and the Roman Empire. This provided
an ideal medium for the further spread of Buddhism. From the 2th century BC
to the 2nd century AD, Buddhism gradually developed in northwestern India and
the great Kushan ruler, Kanishak reigned from 144-172, was converted. Under
his influence, Gandhara, a Buddhist settlement, flourished and created a distinctive
Graeco-Buddhist art form, which affected the arts in Central Asia and eastward
in the first four centuries of our era, which is to be discussed later.
According to Prof. A. Litvinskii, Buddhism had reached Merv and Parthia as early
as Achaemenid times. The Mahavamsa, the Great Chronicle of Ceylon described
that Parthian and Alexandrian delegates were in attendance at a Buddhist council
held by King Duttha Gamani (108-77BC). With the extension of Kushan influence,
Buddhism further penetrated the realm of the Parthians and Sassanians. Parthian's
Buddhist faith was also confirmed by the Chinese records of the missions of
the Parthian Buddhist preachers, An-Shih-Kao and An Hsuan during the 2nd century.
Bactria was introduced to Buddhism by the 1st century AD as suggested by
the Buddhist settlement discovered at Airtam, 18 kilometers northwest of Termez.
For the next few centuries Kushan/Bactrian Buddhist centers were expanded to
Hadda, Bamiyan and Kondukistan. Among them the most important one is Bamiyan,
240 kilometers northwest of Kabul, Afghanistan. It became one of the greatest
Buddhist monastic communities in all Central Asia by the 4th century. At the
west stands the 53 meter Buddha (Figure on the left), still the largest statue
in the world. With its strategic location at the intersection of roads to Persia,
India, Tarim basin, and China, it developed an art style with a fusion of Iranian,
Indian, Gandharan and local style into an independent mode of its own. This
style of Buddhist art traveled eastward and was quickly adopted at Kizil, Xinjiang
and ultimately Dunhuang. Buddhism reached the height of its power in the 8th
and 9th centuries in Afghanistan before it fell to the Arabs.
In terms of the distribution of Buddhist schools, we rely on the travel accounts
of the pilgrims and envoys. Hadda was a center of Hinayana (Small Vehicle).
Bamiyan, described by Xuan Zang in the 7th century, practiced Hinayana Buddhism
whereas by 727 AD, another visitor Hui-chao described the monastery devoting
to Mahayana (Big Vehicle) Buddhism. Other centers such as Kapisa, Kakrak and
Fondukistan seemed to also follow Mahayana Buddhism, from the evidence of their
paintings and sculptures.
..\images/Budmmap1.jpg
..\images/Budmmap1.jpgBuddhism in the Tarim Basin
We learn that by the 7th century all the small kingdoms of the Tarim region
had been entirely won over to Buddhism, which brought with it so much of Indian
culture that Sanskrit had become the religious language. As Buddhism advanced
towards the Tarim basin, Kashgaria with Yarkand and Khotan in the west, Tumsuk,
Aksu and Kizil in the north, Loulan, Karasahr and Dunhuang in the east, and
Miran and Cherchen in the south became important centers of Buddhist art and
thought. The Buddhist texts were translated from Sanskrit into various local
Indo-European dialects such as Tocharian or Kuchean.
By 658 Kucha developed to be a leading center of Hinayana Buddhism and the
paintings were found at the cave temples of Kizil (near Kucha) (Figure on the
right: Goddess and Celestial Musician, Wall-painting at Kizil cave. 600-605
AD) dated from the 1st to 8th centuries. The early art form in the Tarim area
were strongly Indo-Persian in style, but Persian elements were gradually overlaid
by the Chinese in the 6th century after Tang's power dominated the Tarim basin.
It is impossible to make any general rules about the precise schools of Buddhism
that flourished in the Tarim basin, but the early pilgrims who traveled there
gave some clues. Fa-hsien and Xuan Zang appeared to indicate that most of the
kingdoms such as Kashgar, Kizil, Karashahr and Kucha on the northern route followed
the Hinayana Vehicle whereas Mahayana flourished along the southern route including
the kingdoms of Khotan and Yarkand.
The Nomads Established the Buddhist Faith in the Steppes
The information on how the nomads adopted Buddhism is fragmentary but the Chinese
seemed to indicate that Buddhism penetrated Hun, or Xiongnu (Early Hun), as
early as the 2nd century BC. The Xiongnu lost few major battles at Hexi Corridor
(Gansu province) and surrendered to Han general Ho. It was reported that the
Xiongnu chief Kun-hsieh offered General Ho a golden statue called "Great
Divinity". The statue was later placed in the Kanchuan Temple. People burned
incense and worshipped him. This incident seems to indicate that the conversion
to Buddhism had taken place among the Xiongnu at an early stage of Buddhism.
Buddhism certainly had a strong effect on some other lives in the steppes. Grousset
has pointed out that once a nomadic tribe adopted the Buddhist faith, they no
longer possessed tough barbaric and soldierly qualities. Eventually they lost
their nomadic identity and were absorbed by the civilized neighbors. This can
demonstrated by the Tobgatch Turks or the Toba, whose empire extended to Mongolia
and northern China. From 386-534, they controlled northern China under the Northern
Wei dynasty. These eastern Turks had contact with Chinese Buddhism early on.
Some of the Turkic emperors were foremost patrons of Buddhism. In 471 Toba king
Hung was so devoted to Buddhism that he had his son become a monk. This son,
Toba king Hung II (471-499), was equally devoted to Buddhism and under his influence
he introduced a more humane legislation. By the time he moved his capital from
Pingcheng in Jehol to the south, Loyang in 494, he and his Turkic people have
been completely sinicized. At his instigation, work began on the famous Buddhist
Longmen caves, south of Loyang. According to Chinese sources, Turkish Buddhist
temples were erected for the Turkish ruler, Mu-han (553-572) in Ch'angan and
other places during Northern Chou dynasty (556-581). Mu-han's successor and
younger brother Tapar Qayan (To-po, 572-581) was also devotee to Buddhism and
erected a Buddhist temple. In 680 Eastern Turks, the kingdom of Kok-Turks (682-745)
disassociated themselves from Chinese Buddhism and returned to their nomadic
native life style and religion.
The next time Buddhist activities were seen in this area were by the Uighur
Turks who became masters of the steppes around 745. Around 840 the Uighur Turks
were driven out from Mongolia and many settled in the area of the northern Tarim
oases, mainly Turfan from 850 to 1250. They practiced Manichaeism but quickly
abandoned it in favor of the local Buddhist faith. In the early 20th century,
much Turkish Buddhist literature was discovered in Turfan, Hami and Dunhuang.
At the end of 10th century, a Chinese envoy, Wang Yen-te, found in Kaochang
(near Turfan) a flourishing Buddhist culture with some fifty Buddhist convents
and a library of Chinese Buddhists texts. Turfan remained the main center of
Turkish Buddhism until the end of the 15th century when its ruler converted
to Islam.
As for the Western Turks, who came in power in the steppes during the middle
of 8th century, we have the records that they established Buddhist sanctuaries
in the Kapisa (Begram) area. When the Chinese Buddhist monk Wu-kung visited
Gandhara between 759-764, he found there Buddhist temples, which as he believed,
were built by the Turkish kings. Even though their empire stretched far to the
Sassanian border and may have included some Buddhist communities, little is
known of their Buddhist activities.
While the Mongols were controlling the Silk Road, Kublai Khan clearly showed
his preference for Buddhism even though most of the Mongol kingdoms converted
to Islam. Buddhist doctrine was expounded by Na-mo, who won the debate with
Taoists in 1258. Marco Polo tell us that Kublai Khan accorded a magnificent
ceremonial reception to the relics of the Buddha, sent him by the raja of Ceylon.
Most of Kublai's successors were equally fervent Buddhists. Khaishan Khan (1307-1311)
had many Buddhist texts translated into Mongolian.
Buddhism Introduced to China from the Silk Road
It is not certain when Buddhism reached China, but with the Silk Road opened
in the second century BC, missionaries and pilgrims began to travel between
China, Central Asia and India. The record described that Chang Ch'ien, on his
return from Ta-hsia (Ferghana) in the 2nd century BC, heard of a country named
Tien-chu (India) and their Buddhist teaching. This is probably the first time
a Chinese heard about Buddhism. A century later, a Buddhist community is recorded
at the court of a Han prince. However the most famous story is the Han emperor
Mingdi's dream about Buddha. In 68 AD, Mingdi sent his official Cai Yin to Central
Asia to learn more about Buddhism after a vision of a golden figure appeared
to him in a dream. The next morning he asked his ministers what the dream meant
and was told that he had seen the Buddha - the god of the West. Cai Yin returned
after 3 years in India and brought back with him not only the images of Buddha
and Buddhist scriptures but also two Buddhist monks named She-mo-teng and Chu-fa-lan
to preach in China. This was the first time that China had Buddhist monks and
their ways of worship. A few years later, a Buddhist community was established
in Loyang, the capital, itself. From then on, the Buddhist community grew continuously.
They introduced the sacred books, texts and most importantly the examples of
Buddhist art, never before seen in China. In 148 AD, a Parthian missionary,
An Shih-kao arrived China.
He set up a Buddhist temple at Loyang and began the long work of the translation
of the Buddhist scriptures into the Chinese language. The work of scripture
translation continued until the 8th century when access to Central Asia and
India by land was cut off by the Arabs. In 166 AD Han Emperor Huan formally
announced Buddhism by having Taoist and Buddhist ceremonies performed in the
palace. The unrest situation in China at the end of the Han dynasty was such
that people were in a receptive mood for the coming of a new religion.
During the 4th century, Kumarajiva, a Buddhist from Central Asia organized the
first translation bureau better than anything that had existed before in China.
He and his team translated some 98 works from many languages into Chinese, of
which 52 survive and are included in the Buddhist canon. By around 514, there
were 2 million Buddhists in China. Marvelous monasteries and temples were built
and the work of translating the scriptures into Chinese was undertaken with
great industry.
Buddhism in China reached its apogee during the Sui and Tang dynasties (581-907).
Popular forms of Buddhism percolated down to the ordinary folk. A fully sinicized
Buddhist religion and art. (Figure on the right: Buddha preaching to his disciples.
Silk banner from the Dunhuang cave, 8th century) emerged and spread into Korea,
and thence into Japan by the end of the sixth century. However in 845 a persecution
of Buddhists in China had 4600 temples destroyed and 260,500 monks and nuns
defrocked; this was a severe setback Buddhism.
While numerous pilgrims arrived China from the West, Chinese Buddhist pilgrims
were sent to India during different times and the accounts which some of them
have left of their travels in the Silk Road provide valuable evidence of the
state of Buddhism in Central Asia and India from the 4th to the 7th centuries.
Some of the more famous Chinese pilgrims were Fa-hsien (399 to 414), Xuan-zang
(629-645), and I-tsing (671-695).
Decline of Buddhism
The decline of Buddhism along the Silk Road was due to the collapse of the Tang
Dynasty in the East and the invasion of Arabs in the West. The conversion to
Islam started in the 8th century in Central Asia. Since Islam condemned the
iconography, most of the Buddhist statues and wall-paintings were damaged or
destroyed. Buddhist temples and stupas were abandoned and buried beneath the
sand. By the 15th century, the entire Central Asia basin had been converted
to Islam.
Buddhist Art and its Impact
It is impossible to talk about Buddhism without mentioning its profound impact
on the development of Central Asian art. It is through those artworks that a
fusion of eastern and western cultures was demonstrated. The art of Buddhism
left the world the most powerful and enduring monuments along the Silk Road,
and among them, some of the most precious Buddhist sculptures, paintings and
murals.
Furthermore the contact with the Hellenized Gandharan culture resulted in
the development of a new art form, the Buddha statue, sometimes referred as
a Buddha image. Before Buddhism reached Gandhara in the 3rd century BC, there
had been no representation of the Buddha, and it was in the Gandharan culture
that the use of Buddha images had begun. The earliest Buddha images resembled
the Greek god Apollo. (Figure on the left: Buddha image, Gandhara, 2-3 century)
It has been suggested by the scholars that the earliest Buddha images in Gandhara
were created by the local Greeks who carried their classic artistic conception
and Indianized it by transforming it into the figure of the Greek-featured Buddha,
dressed in a toga and seated in the yoga pose. The Gandhara style represented
a union of classical, Indian, and Iranian elements continued in Afghanistan
and the neighboring regions throughout most of the first millennium until the
end of the 8th century.
Though it was largely as a result of Greek influence that Gandhara became the
center of development in Buddhist sculpture, it was on the Indian foundation
from which Buddhist architecture evolved. The development of Buddhism along
the Silk Road resulted in a proliferation of monasteries, grottoes, vishanas
and stupas throughout the entire Buddhist communities. However the cave temples
hold the most unique position in the development of Buddhist architecture. The
Buddhists' devotion was deeply reflected by the wall paintings of its rock-cut
caves. From Gandhara, Bamyin, Kumtura, Kizil, to Bezeklik, and Dunhuang, the
Buddhist artists, with arduous labor , created the most impressive wall paintings
of cave temples dedicated to the Buddha, his saints, and his legend. They present
us an astonishing pageant of local societies with kings, queens, knights, ladies,
monks and artists. Aside from their artistic values, those cave temples provide
us with an immense amount of historical information. The portraits of Kizil
donors with light complexions, blue eyes, and blond or reddish hair teach us
they are more Indo-European than Mongol in appearance. The processions of Uighur
prince and princess from Dunhuang illustrate how Uighurs dressed in the 9th
century. It is from these wall paintings that we can have a glance at the lives
and cultures of these fascinating but vanished ancient peoples.