Siddago is spreading Buddhism in India, but his teachings have had a great impact on other countries. Buddhists first visited China through the Silk Road; this is a caravan network connecting the rest of China and Central Asia to the Mediterranean. Buddhist monks also entered China with Buddhist sutras and Buddhist art. It is the first time that Buddhism had a major influence on Chinese people. Soon many Chinese began to convert to a new religion brought to China.
Another popular form of Buddhist art comes from a place like India. The arrival of Buddhism in China had a great influence on the Chinese art of many dynasties. According to Chinese art Craig Cronus, Wei Jin began in 386 and ended in 535. It is an era when Buddhism is indispensable to nobility and private culture. In most of Wei, artists and sculptors were slaves of the country. In the meantime, various styles of Buddhist art are prevalent. First, artists
In China, Buddhism appeared in the first century CE, bringing the concept of statues to Chinese art. One of the earliest Buddhist arts in China is a sculpture discovered in the tomb of the Han Dynasty in Sichuan province, which was made around the year 200 AD and shows the strong influence of Gedaro. In the era of the Tang dynasty, artists were influenced by the Gupta era, but in 845 Mu Mitsuko prohibited foreign religions such as supporting worship, nest anarchism, Buddhism, indigenous Taoism. He grabbed all Buddhist art and pushed religion to the ground. However, under the Song dynasty, Zen (later became Zen Buddhism) prospered. China is the country with the wealthiest Buddhist art, including Mogao Caves of Gansu Province, Longmen Caves of Henan Province, and the most important Buddhist sculpture traces - big foot stone carvings.
Some of the earliest known Buddhist relics discovered in China are figurines of "golden tree" of the age of c. In the year 200 AD, a typical Gandharan painting style. During the Northern Wei era, between 460 and 525 AD, the Chinese built a cave of Yungang and a cave of Longmen, including several impressive monumental sculptures. In the 5th century AD, Chinese Buddhists also developed new schools and traditions such as Tendai School, Hua Lin School, Pure Earth School, Zen Buddhism and so on.