Economic influence of good, evil, ugly China against Central Asia China - Central Asia A brief introduction of the economic impact China's response to these challenges has on Central Asia in China. Central Asian countries have abundant reserves of oil, natural gas and nonferrous metals, and there is great potential for hydroelectric power generation.
In the 1st century BC, the Chinese Han Dynasty expanded the power of China to Central Asia, and trade and culture ties between China and Central Asia also increased. In this way, the Chinese understand Buddhism, and by the middle of the first century AD Chinese Buddhist communities already existed. As interest in Buddhism rises, it is urgent to translate Buddhist texts from Hindi into Chinese. This led to the arrival of translators from Central Asia and India. First attention is Anshiga in Central Asia, who came to China in the middle of the second century. With the translation of increasingly Chinese Buddhist texts, Buddhism has become increasingly widely known and forms the order of Chinese monasteries. The first famous monk is said to be a disciple of Anshigao.
Between 399 and 414, Fa-Hsien (Fa Hien) visited Central Asia, visited India, studied Buddhism, found scriptures and artifacts, and obtained Buddhist books that were not available in China at that time Did. He departed from Xi'an in the central part of China and went to Central Asia on the western part of the southern Silk Road, where he explained about the monasteries, monks, and pagodas. Then he crossed the Himalayan Mountains to India, then advanced to Sri Lanka southward and passed through today's Indonesia, and then boarded China on a boat. His whole journey took 15 years
Central Asia is another problem as well. Mukasu, a part of the pastoral world, is strongly aware of the need to maintain military hegemony at the northern border of China. Prior to 1644, Central Asia issues were established by a new institution, colonial court. The central Asian policy of Qing Dynasty often deviates from the tributary ideal, and the relationship between China and Russia is an example. Early rulers tried to confirm Russia's progress in North Asia and used Russians as a buffer against Mongolia. The Sino-Norksk Treaty (1689), which seeks to restore the common border, is an equivalent agreement. "Pagoda's contract" (1727) extended the agreement on the Western border and pioneered the trade market