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The Spread of Buddhism

2024-01-31 14:55:31

The spread of Buddhist Buddhism is the philosophy, moral norms of some religious beliefs that started in India in 530 BC. When Hinduism began to become extremely complicated due to the sacrifice of the name of God, Buddhism developed into Hindu modifications. Today, an estimated 300 million people are following one of many kinds of Buddhism. Budda, or Siddhartha Guatama means "awakened man" because he built the idea behind Buddhism and has a religion named after him.

The spread of Buddhism was delayed until King Ashoka dominated the majority of the Indian subcontinent from around BC 268 BC to around 232 BC. Like his descendants, he supported the spread of Buddhism, made great efforts in the construction of Sri Lanka and the religious monuments of Central Asia and the spread of Buddhism. Central Asia's efforts eventually brought Buddhism to China, and the mission of Sri Lanka spread religion in coastal areas of Southeast Asia.

Buddhism in India spread during Ashoka's reign of Maurya, where it was taught Buddhism in the 3rd century BC and unified the Indian subcontinent. He sent missionaries and spread Buddhism throughout Asia. The Jainists began in the golden era of the reign of Kalinga emperor Kharavela in the 2nd century BC. The floods and Muesse took the period from 200 BC to 500 BC as a different period in which the epic and the first planar were written. Michaels requires a period of from the period from 200 BC to 1100 AD, the so-called "classical Hinduism" during the Gupta Empire, its "golden age" period.

During this period I showed the first spread of Buddhism outside India. According to Apaka's orders, messengers were dispatched to various countries in western India, especially the eastern provinces of the neighboring Seymour Empire, and even the Hellenistic Kingdom of the Mediterranean to spread Buddhism. Whether these messengers accompany Buddhist missionaries or not, this is a question of disagreement. In Central Asia and West Asia, the impact of Buddhism has expanded through the Greek-speaking Buddhist monarch and the trading path of ancient Asia. Like Mirindapana and Gandhara's Greek Buddhist art, the Buddhist records of China and Barry prove this. Milindapanha explained the dialogue between a Buddhist monk of the 2nd century BC and King Menander of Greece, after which Menander retired and entered a monastery to pursue Nieana.