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Difference between revisions of "Buddhist Sites in Afghanistan and Central Asia"

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BUDDHISM
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[[BUDDHISM]]
  
 
iv. [[BUDDHIST]] SITES IN AFGHANISTAN AND CENTRAL ASIA
 
iv. [[BUDDHIST]] SITES IN AFGHANISTAN AND CENTRAL ASIA
  
The spread of [[Buddhism]] [[beyond]] the [[Indian]] subcontinent accelerated under the {{Wiki|Mauryan}} [[king]] [[Aśoka]] (r. 265–238 BCE; see BUDDHISM i). An active proponent of [[Buddhism]], he sent out [[religious]] missions and stated some of the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|principles}} in inscriptions. In his Edict XIII he wrote that he had dispatched [[missionaries]] to other peoples, in particular to the [[Kambojas]], an {{Wiki|Iranian}} [[people]], and to the [[Yonas]], that is, the [[Greeks]] (see AŠOKA and INDIA ii). This is confirmed by the finds in southern {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}, in the vicinity of {{Wiki|modern}} Laḡmān, of three Aramaic inscriptions of [[Aśoka]]; {{Wiki|Greek}}, Aramaic, and bilingual Greek-Aramaic texts were found in Kandahar. This shows that [[Buddhism]] appeared in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} as early as the mid-3rd century BCE. According to the [[Pali]] [[Mahāvaṃsa]] chronicle, [[Buddhist]] [[monks]] from the countries of Pallavabhogga and Alasandra arrived at the court of [[King]] Duṭṭhagāmani (r. 101-77 BCE) to take part in a [[Buddhist festival]] ([[Mahāvaṃsa]] 29.38-39). Alasandra was probably Alexandria in the Caucasus, in the region of {{Wiki|modern}} {{Wiki|Kabul}}, while Pallavabhogga lay on the eastern frontier of Parthia—in Margiana or a [[Wikipedia:Parthian Empire|Parthian]] [[subject]] state in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} (Litvinsky, 1967, pp. 88-91 with bibliography). {{Wiki|Evidence}} provided by the {{Wiki|Greek}} [[philosopher]], geographer, and historian Alexander Polyhistor (105-35 BCE) about the Samanioi (Sk. šramana) Bactrians shows that, as early as the 1st century BCE, [[Buddhism]] was already widespread in {{Wiki|Bactria}} (Lévi, 1891, p. 36; Asmussen 1965, p. 135). Later it penetrated other {{Wiki|Central Asia}}n regions, reached [[Xinjiang]] from {{Wiki|Central Asia}} and [[Kashmir]], and continued moving eastward. A [[Buddhist]] preacher, An Shih-kao, who came from one of the [[Wikipedia:Parthian Empire|Parthian]] {{Wiki|possessions}} (probably Margiana), reached [[China]] in 148 CE and began translating [[Buddhist]] [[books]] into {{Wiki|Chinese}}. We know about several generations of translators who reached [[China]] from the {{Wiki|west}}; they included Yüeh-chi (that is, Bactrians), Sogdians, and Parthians. [[Buddhism]] came very early (according to a legend, during Aśoka’s [[life]]) to southern [[Xinjiang]], in particular to [[Khotan]], whose inhabitants used the {{Wiki|Iranian}} {{Wiki|Khotanese}} [[language]]. The date for the arrival of [[Buddhism]] there is given by a [[Tibetan]] chronicle as 84 BCE and appears probable (Emmerick, 1967, p. 23; Litvinsky, 1999, pp. 37-38). A 1st-2nd-century CE {{Wiki|manuscript}} of the [[Buddhist canonical]] text, the [[Dharmapada]], was found in [[Khotan]], and so it is likely that other {{Wiki|canonical}} works would have been in circulation there in that period (Brough, p. 24).
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The spread of [[Buddhism]] [[beyond]] the [[Indian]] subcontinent accelerated under the {{Wiki|Mauryan}} [[king]] [[Aśoka]] (r. 265–238 BCE; see [[BUDDHISM]] i). An active proponent of [[Buddhism]], he sent out [[religious]] missions and stated some of the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|principles}} in {{Wiki|inscriptions}}. In his {{Wiki|Edict}} XIII he wrote that he had dispatched [[missionaries]] to other peoples, in particular to the [[Kambojas]], an {{Wiki|Iranian}} [[people]], and to the [[Yonas]], that is, the [[Greeks]] (see AŠOKA and INDIA ii). This is confirmed by the finds in southern {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}, in the vicinity of {{Wiki|modern}} Laḡmān, of three [[Aramaic]] {{Wiki|inscriptions}} of [[Aśoka]]; {{Wiki|Greek}}, [[Aramaic]], and bilingual Greek-Aramaic texts were found in {{Wiki|Kandahar}}. This shows that [[Buddhism]] appeared in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} as early as the mid-3rd century BCE. According to the [[Pali]] [[Mahāvaṃsa]] chronicle, [[Buddhist]] [[monks]] from the countries of Pallavabhogga and Alasandra arrived at the court of [[King]] Duṭṭhagāmani (r. 101-77 BCE) to take part in a [[Buddhist festival]] ([[Mahāvaṃsa]] 29.38-39). Alasandra was probably [[Alexandria]] in the {{Wiki|Caucasus}}, in the region of {{Wiki|modern}} {{Wiki|Kabul}}, while Pallavabhogga lay on the eastern frontier of Parthia—in Margiana or a [[Wikipedia:Parthian Empire|Parthian]] [[subject]] [[state]] in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} (Litvinsky, 1967, pp. 88-91 with [[bibliography]]). {{Wiki|Evidence}} provided by the {{Wiki|Greek}} [[philosopher]], geographer, and historian [[Alexander]] Polyhistor (105-35 BCE) about the Samanioi (Sk. šramana) {{Wiki|Bactrians}} shows that, as early as the 1st century BCE, [[Buddhism]] was already widespread in {{Wiki|Bactria}} (Lévi, 1891, p. 36; Asmussen 1965, p. 135). Later it penetrated other {{Wiki|Central Asia}}n regions, reached [[Xinjiang]] from {{Wiki|Central Asia}} and [[Kashmir]], and continued moving eastward. A [[Buddhist]] preacher, [[An Shih-kao]], who came from one of the [[Wikipedia:Parthian Empire|Parthian]] {{Wiki|possessions}} (probably Margiana), reached [[China]] in 148 CE and began translating [[Buddhist]] [[books]] into {{Wiki|Chinese}}. We know about several generations of [[translators]] who reached [[China]] from the {{Wiki|west}}; they included Yüeh-chi (that is, {{Wiki|Bactrians}}), [[Sogdians]], and [[Parthians]]. [[Buddhism]] came very early (according to a legend, during [[Aśoka’s]] [[life]]) to southern [[Xinjiang]], in particular to [[Khotan]], whose inhabitants used the {{Wiki|Iranian}} {{Wiki|Khotanese}} [[language]]. The date for the arrival of [[Buddhism]] there is given by a [[Tibetan]] chronicle as 84 BCE and appears probable (Emmerick, 1967, p. 23; Litvinsky, 1999, pp. 37-38). A 1st-2nd-century CE {{Wiki|manuscript}} of the [[Buddhist canonical]] text, the [[Dharmapada]], was found in [[Khotan]], and so it is likely that other {{Wiki|canonical}} works would have been in circulation there in that period (Brough, p. 24).
 
[[File:Jetavana1as.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Jetavana1as.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
It also follows that [[Buddhism]] must have arrived early in some other eastern {{Wiki|Iranian}} areas besides [[Khotan]], such as Nagarahāra, Arachosia, Kapiśa, {{Wiki|Bactria}}, Parthia, and Sogdiana (see BUDDHISM i. and iii.). Of the numerous [[Buddhist]] ruins in these regions, the earliest are dated to the {{Wiki|Kushan dynasty}} (1st-3rd centuries). [[Buddhist tradition]] describes [[Kaniṣka]] (r. 1st century CE), the most famous {{Wiki|Kushan}} ruler, as a zealous [[Buddhist]] who took an active part in [[religious]] [[activities]] and built numerous [[Buddhist]] [[religious]] structures. His coinage carries images of {{Wiki|Iranian}} and Hellenistic-Roman [[deities]] and—rarely—the [[Buddha]]. The Rabāṭak inscription made in Kaniṣka’s [[name]] (Sims-Williams and Cribb, pp. 77-79, 107-9) says [[nothing]] about the [[Buddha]] or [[Buddhist]] [[deities]] when dealing with his [[religious]] convictions.
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It also follows that [[Buddhism]] must have arrived early in some other eastern {{Wiki|Iranian}} areas besides [[Khotan]], such as Nagarahāra, Arachosia, Kapiśa, {{Wiki|Bactria}}, {{Wiki|Parthia}}, and [[Sogdiana]] (see [[BUDDHISM]] i. and iii.). Of the numerous [[Buddhist]] ruins in these regions, the earliest are dated to the {{Wiki|Kushan dynasty}} (1st-3rd centuries). [[Buddhist tradition]] describes [[Kaniṣka]] (r. 1st century CE), the most famous {{Wiki|Kushan}} [[ruler]], as a zealous [[Buddhist]] who took an active part in [[religious]] [[activities]] and built numerous [[Buddhist]] [[religious]] structures. His coinage carries images of {{Wiki|Iranian}} and Hellenistic-Roman [[deities]] and—rarely—the [[Buddha]]. The Rabāṭak inscription made in Kaniṣka’s [[name]] (Sims-Williams and Cribb, pp. 77-79, 107-9) says [[nothing]] about the [[Buddha]] or [[Buddhist]] [[deities]] when dealing with his [[religious]] convictions.
  
In the 1st century BCE-1st century CE, [[Buddhism]] became an {{Wiki|iconic}} [[religion]] (see {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} [[art]]), and one of the earliest {{Wiki|representations}} of the {{Wiki|anthropomorphic}} [[Buddha]] is found on a {{Wiki|gold}} token or [[temple]] coin from the Tillya-Tepe necropolis in {{Wiki|Bactria}} (Fussman, 1987, pp. 71-72). [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} [[art]] spread not only to {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} but also to the {{Wiki|south}} of {{Wiki|Central Asia}} and [[Xinjiang]] and created several schools across this vast territory. {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} [[art]], in {{Wiki|individual}} works and cycles of works, functioned as an organic part of [[Buddhist]] constructions. These were, especially, [[vihāras]] ([[Buddhist]] [[monasteries]]), [[caityas]] ([[sacred]] places or [[objects]]), and [[stūpas]] ([[Buddhist]] commemorative monuments housing [[sacred]] [[relics]] of the [[Buddha]] or other saintly persons); their chief architectural and compositional [[ideas]] had originated in [[India]], but then were adjusted to local climates, construction materials, and [[traditions]] of building and architecture. Each main type of [[Buddhist]] cultic building underwent a long [[evolution]]. In addition to freestanding [[Buddhist]] [[temples]], etc., {{Wiki|cave}} [[monasteries]] (likewise originally found in [[India]]) also became a local feature in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}, southern {{Wiki|Central Asia}}, [[Xinjiang]], and northern [[China]].
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In the 1st century BCE-1st century CE, [[Buddhism]] became an {{Wiki|iconic}} [[religion]] (see {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} [[art]]), and one of the earliest {{Wiki|representations}} of the {{Wiki|anthropomorphic}} [[Buddha]] is found on a {{Wiki|gold}} token or [[temple]] coin from the Tillya-Tepe necropolis in {{Wiki|Bactria}} (Fussman, 1987, pp. 71-72). [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} [[art]] spread not only to {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} but also to the {{Wiki|south}} of {{Wiki|Central Asia}} and [[Xinjiang]] and created several schools across this vast territory. {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} [[art]], in {{Wiki|individual}} works and cycles of works, functioned as an organic part of [[Buddhist]] constructions. These were, especially, [[vihāras]] ([[Buddhist]] [[monasteries]]), [[caityas]] ([[sacred]] places or [[objects]]), and [[stūpas]] ([[Buddhist]] commemorative monuments housing [[sacred]] [[relics]] of the [[Buddha]] or other saintly persons); their chief architectural and compositional [[ideas]] had originated in [[India]], but then were adjusted to local climates, construction materials, and [[traditions]] of building and [[architecture]]. Each main type of [[Buddhist]] cultic building underwent a long [[evolution]]. In addition to freestanding [[Buddhist]] [[temples]], etc., {{Wiki|cave}} [[monasteries]] (likewise originally found in [[India]]) also became a local feature in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}, southern {{Wiki|Central Asia}}, [[Xinjiang]], and northern [[China]].
  
Haḍḍa ({{Wiki|ancient}} Nagarāhāra), near {{Wiki|modern}} Jalālābād, was the site of one of the largest [[Buddhist]] centers in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}, and as such was visited and described by the {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[pilgrims]] (such as [[Fa-hsien]] [ca. 337-ca. 422] and [[Hsüan-tsang]] [602-64]). There an area of about 15 km² {{Wiki|remains}} covered with traces of numerous [[monasteries]] (Bāgh Gai, Deh Ghundi, Tepe Kāfirihā, Tepe Kalān, Tepe Shutur, Gan Nao, and others), large and small [[stūpas]], sanctuaries, and artificial [[caves]]. The [[monasteries]] had square or rectangular courts surrounded by sanctuaries, cells, community halls, and other buildings. The center was occupied by a large [[stūpa]] and several small ones. Sometimes there were two courts, one lined with cells, the other with small sanctuaries. Next to the [[monasteries]] and between them there were numerous [[stūpas]], [[caityas]], and sculptures. The [[stūpas]] (there were over 500 of them) stood on multi-tier foundations with rich {{Wiki|stucco}} or (rarely) stone decorative relief, architectural details including cornices, Corinthian columns, arches, etc., and rows of sculptural figures (sitting and [[standing]] [[Buddhas]], other [[Buddhist]] and secular personages). The [[vihāras]] were similarly decorated. The [[art]] of Haḍḍa constitutes a special school of {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} [[art]], more free, more expressive and realistic than the [[art]] of the [[Gandhāra]] region. The sculptors more fully demonstrated their talent when presenting secular personages—being relatively free of canonic requirements in these cases—rather than [[deities]]; and the sculptured heads and figures are [[extraordinary]] [[beautiful]] (see Barthoux, 1930 and 1933; Mustamindi and Mustamindi, 1969; Rowland, 1971, pp. 27-33; Tarzi, 1976).
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Haḍḍa ({{Wiki|ancient}} [[Nagarāhāra]]), near {{Wiki|modern}} Jalālābād, was the site of one of the largest [[Buddhist]] centers in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}, and as such was visited and described by the {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[pilgrims]] (such as [[Fa-hsien]] [ca. 337-ca. 422] and [[Hsüan-tsang]] [602-64]). There an area of about 15 km² {{Wiki|remains}} covered with traces of numerous [[monasteries]] (Bāgh Gai, Deh Ghundi, Tepe Kāfirihā, Tepe Kalān, Tepe Shutur, Gan Nao, and others), large and small [[stūpas]], sanctuaries, and artificial [[caves]]. The [[monasteries]] had square or rectangular courts surrounded by sanctuaries, {{Wiki|cells}}, {{Wiki|community}} halls, and other buildings. The center was occupied by a large [[stūpa]] and several small ones. Sometimes there were two courts, one lined with {{Wiki|cells}}, the other with small sanctuaries. Next to the [[monasteries]] and between them there were numerous [[stūpas]], [[caityas]], and sculptures. The [[stūpas]] (there were over 500 of them) stood on multi-tier foundations with rich {{Wiki|stucco}} or (rarely) stone decorative relief, architectural details [[including]] cornices, Corinthian columns, arches, etc., and rows of sculptural figures (sitting and [[standing]] [[Buddhas]], other [[Buddhist]] and {{Wiki|secular}} personages). The [[vihāras]] were similarly decorated. The [[art]] of Haḍḍa constitutes a special school of {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} [[art]], more free, more expressive and {{Wiki|realistic}} than the [[art]] of the [[Gandhāra]] region. The sculptors more fully demonstrated their talent when presenting {{Wiki|secular}} personages—being relatively free of canonic requirements in these cases—rather than [[deities]]; and the sculptured heads and figures are [[extraordinary]] [[beautiful]] (see Barthoux, 1930 and 1933; Mustamindi and Mustamindi, 1969; Rowland, 1971, pp. 27-33; Tarzi, 1976).
 
[[File:Sb39.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Sb39.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
There were other [[Buddhist]] centers in Nagarāhāra; at one of them, Bimārān, a {{Wiki|gold}} reliquary with the earliest {{Wiki|anthropomorphic}} {{Wiki|representations}} of [[Buddha]] was found (see MASSON). In the Kabul-Kapiśa area, a series of [[monasteries]] with [[stūpas]] flourished in the 1st-3rd centuries CE and were decorated with sculptures analogous to those of Haḍḍa (sites include Šotorak, Qalʿa-ye Nāder, Top Dara, and Paitāva; see ; Hackin, 1933; Meunié, 1942 and 1959, pp. 115-27).
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There were other [[Buddhist]] centers in [[Nagarāhāra]]; at one of them, Bimārān, a {{Wiki|gold}} reliquary with the earliest {{Wiki|anthropomorphic}} {{Wiki|representations}} of [[Buddha]] was found (see MASSON). In the Kabul-Kapiśa area, a series of [[monasteries]] with [[stūpas]] flourished in the 1st-3rd centuries CE and were decorated with sculptures analogous to those of Haḍḍa (sites include Šotorak, Qalʿa-ye Nāder, Top Dara, and Paitāva; see ; Hackin, 1933; Meunié, 1942 and 1959, pp. 115-27).
  
Also supporting the early date of [[Buddhism]] in {{Wiki|Bactria}} is a ceramic reliquary from the Kunduz area; it carries a kharoṣṭhī inscription which says that there was a [[Buddhist]] [[vihāra]] in the vicinity and that the [[teaching]] of the [[Dharmaguptaka]] sect was widespread there. The inscription is dated to the 1st-2nd centuries CE (Fussman, 1974, pp. 58-61). A “[[Buddhist]] platform” at Sorḵ Kotal, dated, together with the [[statues]], to the 2nd-3rd century CE, is an [[outstanding]] monument (Schlumberger, Le Berre, and Fussman, 1983, pp. 75-81). The foundation of a [[Buddhist]] [[monastery]] at Kunduz can be probably dated to the end of the {{Wiki|Kushan}} period (Hackin, 1959, pp. 19-22). Additional [[Buddhist]] [[temples]] are found in Dilberjin, Haibak, and other places.
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Also supporting the early date of [[Buddhism]] in {{Wiki|Bactria}} is a ceramic reliquary from the [[Kunduz]] area; it carries a kharoṣṭhī inscription which says that there was a [[Buddhist]] [[vihāra]] in the vicinity and that the [[teaching]] of the [[Dharmaguptaka]] [[sect]] was widespread there. The inscription is dated to the 1st-2nd centuries CE (Fussman, 1974, pp. 58-61). A “[[Buddhist]] platform” at Sorḵ Kotal, dated, together with the [[statues]], to the 2nd-3rd century CE, is an [[outstanding]] monument (Schlumberger, Le Berre, and Fussman, 1983, pp. 75-81). The foundation of a [[Buddhist]] [[monastery]] at [[Kunduz]] can be probably dated to the end of the {{Wiki|Kushan}} period (Hackin, 1959, pp. 19-22). Additional [[Buddhist]] [[temples]] are found in Dilberjin, Haibak, and other places.
  
Systematic {{Wiki|archeological}} research in northern {{Wiki|Bactria}} (that is, {{Wiki|north}} of the Amu Darya, in the {{Wiki|south}} of {{Wiki|modern}} [[Uzbekistan]] and Tajikistan) has revealed numerous [[Buddhist]] monuments, mainly [[concentrated]] at Termez. In the northwestern part of Termez proper, not far from the Amu Darya, there was a large [[Buddhist]] center with a {{Wiki|cave}} [[monastery]], [[Kara]] Tepe (Karā Tappe) and an adjacent freestanding [[monastery]] Fayaz Tepe (Fayyāż Tappe). The [[Kara]] Tepe [[monastery]] covered about 7 ha and consisted of a series of adjacent complexes dating from different periods. Many of them had an above-ground section as well as an underground. The underground part contained in the center a massive stone pillar (or two pillars), surrounded by a corridor and frequently with [[an inner chamber]]. In front of the platform at the entrance to the underground part, there was a surface construction in the [[form]] of a square court with colonnade, a [[stūpa]], a [[water]] tank, and pedestals and niches for sculptures. There were also complexes with different plans, and some two-tiered constructions. Numerous artistic [[objects]] were found at [[Kara]] Tepe (stone and {{Wiki|stucco}} sculptures, paintings), and stone architectural details. Over 150 [[Indian]] inscriptions in kharoṣṭhī and brāhmī scripts were recovered. Construction started in the 1st-2nd centuries CE, and the complex reached its peak in the 3rd-4th centuries before declining in the 5th-6th (Staviskiǐ, pp. 23-24).
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Systematic {{Wiki|archeological}} research in northern {{Wiki|Bactria}} (that is, {{Wiki|north}} of the [[Amu Darya]], in the {{Wiki|south}} of {{Wiki|modern}} [[Uzbekistan]] and [[Tajikistan]]) has revealed numerous [[Buddhist]] monuments, mainly [[concentrated]] at Termez. In the northwestern part of Termez proper, not far from the [[Amu Darya]], there was a large [[Buddhist]] center with a {{Wiki|cave}} [[monastery]], [[Kara]] Tepe (Karā Tappe) and an adjacent freestanding [[monastery]] Fayaz Tepe (Fayyāż Tappe). The [[Kara]] Tepe [[monastery]] covered about 7 ha and consisted of a series of adjacent complexes dating from different periods. Many of them had an above-ground section as well as an underground. The underground part contained in the center a massive stone pillar (or two pillars), surrounded by a corridor and frequently with [[an inner chamber]]. In front of the platform at the entrance to the underground part, there was a surface construction in the [[form]] of a square court with colonnade, a [[stūpa]], a [[water]] tank, and pedestals and niches for sculptures. There were also complexes with different plans, and some two-tiered constructions. Numerous artistic [[objects]] were found at [[Kara]] Tepe (stone and {{Wiki|stucco}} sculptures, paintings), and stone architectural details. Over 150 [[Indian]] {{Wiki|inscriptions}} in kharoṣṭhī and brāhmī scripts were recovered. Construction started in the 1st-2nd centuries CE, and the complex reached its peak in the 3rd-4th centuries before declining in the 5th-6th (Staviskiǐ, pp. 23-24).
  
The Fayaz Tepe [[monastery]], 1 km away from [[Kara]] Tepe, consists of three adjacent parts with courts and surrounding rooms. There is a large chamber in the {{Wiki|central}} section with walls covered by splendid polychrome paintings of figures of [[Buddhist]] personages, clay and {{Wiki|stucco}} sculptures, and a [[Buddhist]] stone relief. Thirty-five [[Indian]] inscriptions were also found there. Outside the chamber was a [[stūpa]], initially round, later reconstructed. The coins found at the site date it to the 1st century CE. Some of the [[art]] (the wall paintings) was added later, in the 3rd, or probably 4th, century (Al’baum, pp. 18-27).
+
The Fayaz Tepe [[monastery]], 1 km away from [[Kara]] Tepe, consists of three adjacent parts with courts and surrounding rooms. There is a large chamber in the {{Wiki|central}} section with walls covered by splendid polychrome paintings of figures of [[Buddhist]] personages, clay and {{Wiki|stucco}} sculptures, and a [[Buddhist]] stone relief. Thirty-five [[Indian]] {{Wiki|inscriptions}} were also found there. Outside the chamber was a [[stūpa]], initially round, later reconstructed. The coins found at the site date it to the 1st century CE. Some of the [[art]] (the wall paintings) was added later, in the 3rd, or probably 4th, century (Al’baum, pp. 18-27).
 
[[File:Aluvihara-rock-cave-temple.jpg‎|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Aluvihara-rock-cave-temple.jpg‎|thumb|250px|]]
A [[Buddhist]] complex was also found in Ayrtam on the Amu Darya, {{Wiki|west}} of Termez. There was found a decorative limestone frieze attributed to the {{Wiki|Kushan}} period, depicting {{Wiki|male}} and {{Wiki|female}} musicians ornately dressed and garlanded, with [[drum]], lute, and harp—a spectacular {{Wiki|evidence}} of {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} [[art]] spreading to {{Wiki|Bactria}}. The [[Buddhist]] chapel and a [[stūpa]] at Zar Tepe (25 km from Termez) should also be mentioned. A town now known as Dalverzin Tepe on the border between the Surkhan (Sorḵān) and Hissar (Heṣār) valleys in [[Uzbekistan]] was another large [[Buddhist]] center; sanctuaries are found both inside and outside the town. In the place where the Kafirnigan [[River]] flows into the Amu Darya there was a [[Buddhist]] [[monastery]] of {{Wiki|Kushan}} times called Uštur-mullo. Its [[stūpa]] was faced (as at Ayrtam) with stone slabs carrying reliefs; inside, the [[monastery]] was decorated with paintings. Finally, there were also [[Buddhist]] constructions in the city of Marv in the late [[Wikipedia:Parthian Empire|Parthian]] period (1st-2nd centuries CE).
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A [[Buddhist]] complex was also found in Ayrtam on the [[Amu Darya]], {{Wiki|west}} of Termez. There was found a decorative limestone frieze attributed to the {{Wiki|Kushan}} period, depicting {{Wiki|male}} and {{Wiki|female}} musicians ornately dressed and garlanded, with [[drum]], lute, and harp—a spectacular {{Wiki|evidence}} of {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} [[art]] spreading to {{Wiki|Bactria}}. The [[Buddhist]] chapel and a [[stūpa]] at Zar Tepe (25 km from Termez) should also be mentioned. A town now known as Dalverzin Tepe on the border between the Surkhan (Sorḵān) and Hissar (Heṣār) valleys in [[Uzbekistan]] was another large [[Buddhist]] center; sanctuaries are found both inside and outside the town. In the place where the Kafirnigan [[River]] flows into the [[Amu Darya]] there was a [[Buddhist]] [[monastery]] of {{Wiki|Kushan}} times called Uštur-mullo. Its [[stūpa]] was faced (as at Ayrtam) with stone slabs carrying reliefs; inside, the [[monastery]] was decorated with paintings. Finally, there were also [[Buddhist]] constructions in the city of Marv in the late [[Wikipedia:Parthian Empire|Parthian]] period (1st-2nd centuries CE).
  
As was noted above, [[Buddhism]] reached [[Khotan]] at an early stage as well. What {{Wiki|remains}} of [[Buddhist]] constructions can be seen in several places of the southern oases of [[Xinjiang]], the easternmost of them {{Wiki|being}} Mirān. A large [[Buddhist]] center existed there with about two dozen sanctuaries and [[monasteries]] scattered over an area of 4 x 5 km². Parts of them are well-preserved, especially rectangular, domed sanctuaries with round rooms inside with round [[stūpas]]. The constructions were decorated with paintings, sculptures, and reliefs. The paintings are clearly of the {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} type, although there is an opinion that they were executed by the same [[masters]] who made sculptures for the [[Buddhist]] constructions of Swāt ({{Wiki|Pakistan}}). The earliest constructions and the paintings at Mirān are dated to the 3rd century C.E. (Stein, I, pp. 456-543). The [[Buddhist]] [[sanctuary]] in Karadong is a contemporary or even earlier structure (mid-3rd century CE) with splendid [[Buddhist]] paintings that display {{Wiki|Greek}} {{Wiki|features}} and have a similarity to {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} [[art]] (Keriya, pp. 82-105). “During the first through the third centuries C.E., the [[Buddhist]] Church was undergoing fundamental changes in the {{Wiki|theological}} concepts and {{Wiki|social}} bases” (Rosenfield, 1967, p. 220). Precisely at that [[time]] the [[Mahāyana]] school of [[Buddhism]] developed, although the [[Hīnayāna]] school preserved its positions in many areas. These [[religious]] {{Wiki|processes}}, common to [[Buddhism]] everywhere, were also typical of Nagarāhāra, Kapiśa, {{Wiki|Bactria}}, [[Khotan]] and the neighboring regions. There is [[information]] that [[people]] of Bactrian-Tokhari background worked actively on {{Wiki|theological}} problems—such as the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|theologian}} [[Ghoṣaka]], who was born and worked in Tokharistan. He represented the [[Vaibhāṣika]] school that was connected with Tokharistan and was a branch of the [[Sarvāstivāda]] school, which was widely accepted in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} and {{Wiki|Central Asia}}, including [[Khotan]]. It belonged to the [[Hīnayāna]], yet some of the [[elements]] of the [[Sarvāstivāda]] [[doctrine]] were connected with [[Mahāyāna]] (Bailey, pp. 400-3; Bagchi, pp. 32-33; Litvinsky, 1968, p. 9).
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As was noted above, [[Buddhism]] reached [[Khotan]] at an early stage as well. What {{Wiki|remains}} of [[Buddhist]] constructions can be seen in several places of the southern oases of [[Xinjiang]], the easternmost of them {{Wiki|being}} Mirān. A large [[Buddhist]] center existed there with about two dozen sanctuaries and [[monasteries]] scattered over an area of 4 x 5 km². Parts of them are well-preserved, especially rectangular, domed sanctuaries with round rooms inside with round [[stūpas]]. The constructions were decorated with paintings, sculptures, and reliefs. The paintings are clearly of the {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} type, although there is an opinion that they were executed by the same [[masters]] who made sculptures for the [[Buddhist]] constructions of Swāt ({{Wiki|Pakistan}}). The earliest constructions and the paintings at Mirān are dated to the 3rd century C.E. (Stein, I, pp. 456-543). The [[Buddhist]] [[sanctuary]] in Karadong is a contemporary or even earlier {{Wiki|structure}} (mid-3rd century CE) with splendid [[Buddhist]] paintings that display {{Wiki|Greek}} {{Wiki|features}} and have a similarity to {{Wiki|Gandhāran}} [[art]] (Keriya, pp. 82-105). “During the first through the third centuries C.E., the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|Church}} was undergoing fundamental changes in the {{Wiki|theological}} [[Wikipedia:concept|concepts]] and {{Wiki|social}} bases” (Rosenfield, 1967, p. 220). Precisely at that [[time]] the [[Mahāyana]] school of [[Buddhism]] developed, although the [[Hīnayāna]] school preserved its positions in many areas. These [[religious]] {{Wiki|processes}}, common to [[Buddhism]] everywhere, were also typical of [[Nagarāhāra]], Kapiśa, {{Wiki|Bactria}}, [[Khotan]] and the neighboring regions. There is [[information]] that [[people]] of Bactrian-Tokhari background worked actively on {{Wiki|theological}} problems—such as the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|theologian}} [[Ghoṣaka]], who was born and worked in Tokharistan. He represented the [[Vaibhāṣika]] school that was connected with Tokharistan and was a branch of the [[Sarvāstivāda]] school, which was widely accepted in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} and {{Wiki|Central Asia}}, [[including]] [[Khotan]]. It belonged to the [[Hīnayāna]], yet some of the [[elements]] of the [[Sarvāstivāda]] [[doctrine]] were connected with [[Mahāyāna]] (Bailey, pp. 400-3; [[Bagchi]], pp. 32-33; Litvinsky, 1968, p. 9).
 
[[File:Sb41.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Sb41.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
Several [[Hīnayāna]] schools or sects were represented in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}: [[Mahāsāṃghika]], [[Sarvāstivādin]], [[Dharmaguptaka]], and others (Konow, pp. 265 ;ff.; Fussman, p. 61). Epigraphic materials from northern {{Wiki|Bactria}} directly refer to the [[Mahāsāṃghika]] school. Toward the end of the {{Wiki|Kushan}} period there appeared proponents of the Sāṃmatiya school as well as, according to certain authors, of the [[Sarvāstivādin]] school (Vertogradova, 1995, pp. 41-43). There was no rigid dividing line between these schools and the [[Mahāyana]] school; their contemporaries looked at the proponents of [[Mahāsāṃghika]], [[Sarvāstivādin]], and [[Dharmaguptaka]] as [[Hīnayāna]] followers, yet they also promoted [[Mahāyāna]] (Bareau, pp. 303-5). Theological distinctions apart, not infrequently followers of [[Hīnayāna]] and [[Mahāyāna]] lived and studied in the same [[monasteries]].
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Several [[Hīnayāna]] schools or sects were represented in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}: [[Mahāsāṃghika]], [[Sarvāstivādin]], [[Dharmaguptaka]], and others (Konow, pp. 265 ;ff.; Fussman, p. 61). [[Epigraphic]] materials from northern {{Wiki|Bactria}} directly refer to the [[Mahāsāṃghika]] school. Toward the end of the {{Wiki|Kushan}} period there appeared proponents of the Sāṃmatiya school as well as, according to certain authors, of the [[Sarvāstivādin]] school (Vertogradova, 1995, pp. 41-43). There was no rigid dividing line between these schools and the [[Mahāyana]] school; their contemporaries looked at the proponents of [[Mahāsāṃghika]], [[Sarvāstivādin]], and [[Dharmaguptaka]] as [[Hīnayāna]] followers, yet they also promoted [[Mahāyāna]] (Bareau, pp. 303-5). {{Wiki|Theological}} {{Wiki|distinctions}} apart, not infrequently followers of [[Hīnayāna]] and [[Mahāyāna]] lived and studied in the same [[monasteries]].
  
 
[[Buddhism]] first penetrated the southern [[Xinjiang]] oases, [[Khotan]] in particular, in the [[form]] of [[Hīnayāna]] (especially the schools of [[Sarvāstivāda]] and [[Mahāsāṃghika]]). In the 3rd century CE, [[Khotan]] became known as a [[Mahāyāna]] center. There a {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Mahāyānist]] discovered, soon after 260, a complete [[Sanskrit]] text of Prajñā-pāramitā-sutra. Later the role of [[Mahāyāna]] in [[Khotan]] became even [[greater]] (Litvinsky, 1999, pp. 37-41).
 
[[Buddhism]] first penetrated the southern [[Xinjiang]] oases, [[Khotan]] in particular, in the [[form]] of [[Hīnayāna]] (especially the schools of [[Sarvāstivāda]] and [[Mahāsāṃghika]]). In the 3rd century CE, [[Khotan]] became known as a [[Mahāyāna]] center. There a {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Mahāyānist]] discovered, soon after 260, a complete [[Sanskrit]] text of Prajñā-pāramitā-sutra. Later the role of [[Mahāyāna]] in [[Khotan]] became even [[greater]] (Litvinsky, 1999, pp. 37-41).
  
After the Kushans, [[Buddhism]] developed intensively in the provinces of {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}, including the Iranian-populated areas. One of the best-known monuments of this period of Sasanian and Hephthalite domination (3rd-6th centsuries) was the [[Buddhist]] center in Bāmiān, where the Sasanian artistic [[influences]] that appear in [[Buddhist art]] are especially notable. The valley of Bāmiān is 250 km {{Wiki|west}} of {{Wiki|Kabul}}; at its northern boundary, at the foot of the Kuh-e Bābā range, a cliff face about 1,800 m long was honeycombed by the [[monks]] with some 750 artificial [[caves]]. The [[caves]] had intricate architectural designs and magnificent [[Buddhist]] wall paintings; only two contained [[stūpas]]. Also built into the cliff were two [[standing]] [[Buddhas]], 38 and 53 m high, in huge niches excavated in the soft rock; these were completely destroyed by the Taliban regime in March 2001. Initially there were six figures: three colossi and three smaller [[statues]]. A “reclining” [[Buddha]], showing him in the moment of “[[extinction]]” or “blowing-out” ([[parinirvāna]]), that is, his demise, was several times larger than the [[standing]] [[Buddhas]] ([[Hsüan-tsang]] et al.,, pp. 50-51). The cores of the [[standing]] figures were hewn in the rock, then overlaid with several layers of {{Wiki|stucco}}, in which the [[body]] and [[robes]] were modeled. The hands were sculpted over wooden armatures and attached with wooden dowels. The two giant niches, like the other, smaller ones in the cliff, were decorated with paintings. The sculptures too were polychrome; initially they were gilded and encrusted with [[precious]] stones. There are remnants of a [[stūpa]] next to the cliff.
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After the [[Kushans]], [[Buddhism]] developed intensively in the provinces of {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}, [[including]] the Iranian-populated areas. One of the best-known monuments of this period of {{Wiki|Sasanian}} and [[Hephthalite]] {{Wiki|domination}} (3rd-6th centsuries) was the [[Buddhist]] center in Bāmiān, where the {{Wiki|Sasanian}} artistic [[influences]] that appear in [[Buddhist art]] are especially notable. The valley of Bāmiān is 250 km {{Wiki|west}} of {{Wiki|Kabul}}; at its northern boundary, at the foot of the Kuh-e Bābā range, a cliff face about 1,800 m long was honeycombed by the [[monks]] with some 750 artificial [[caves]]. The [[caves]] had intricate architectural designs and magnificent [[Buddhist]] wall paintings; only two contained [[stūpas]]. Also built into the cliff were two [[standing]] [[Buddhas]], 38 and 53 m high, in huge niches excavated in the soft rock; these were completely destroyed by the {{Wiki|Taliban}} regime in March 2001. Initially there were six figures: three colossi and three smaller [[statues]]. A “reclining” [[Buddha]], showing him in the [[moment]] of “[[extinction]]” or “blowing-out” ([[parinirvāna]]), that is, his demise, was several times larger than the [[standing]] [[Buddhas]] ([[Hsüan-tsang]] et al.,, pp. 50-51). The cores of the [[standing]] figures were hewn in the rock, then overlaid with several layers of {{Wiki|stucco}}, in which the [[body]] and [[robes]] were modeled. The hands were sculpted over wooden armatures and [[attached]] with wooden dowels. The two giant niches, like the other, smaller ones in the cliff, were decorated with paintings. The sculptures too were polychrome; initially they were gilded and encrusted with [[precious]] stones. There are remnants of a [[stūpa]] next to the cliff.
 
[[File:Kanakamuni00.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Kanakamuni00.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
All the [[caves]] were small. Many of then were completely covered with [[Buddhist]] paintings, and there was at least one [[Buddhist]] statue in them, perhaps more. None of the [[caves]] could have been a [[vihāra]]; few of them could be used as meeting-rooms for the [[community of monks]] ([[sangha]]); there are no traces of [[permanent]] residence. It seems that the [[monks]] lived in the [[vihāra]] at the foot of the cliff (mentioned by the famous {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Buddhist]] traveler, [[scholar]], and translator [[Hsüan-tsang]]), while the [[caves]] were mainly used for [[ritual]] {{Wiki|worship}} or [[meditation]]. [[Opinions]] about the dates differ: the colossi probably date to the 6th century, and the [[monastic]] complex to the 7th and 8th centuries (Godard et al.; Hackin and Carl; Tarzi, 1977; Klimburg-Salter).
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All the [[caves]] were small. Many of then were completely covered with [[Buddhist]] paintings, and there was at least one [[Buddhist]] statue in them, perhaps more. None of the [[caves]] could have been a [[vihāra]]; few of them could be used as meeting-rooms for the [[community of monks]] ([[sangha]]); there are no traces of [[permanent]] residence. It seems that the [[monks]] lived in the [[vihāra]] at the foot of the cliff (mentioned by the famous {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Buddhist]] traveler, [[scholar]], and [[translator]] [[Hsüan-tsang]]), while the [[caves]] were mainly used for [[ritual]] {{Wiki|worship}} or [[meditation]]. [[Opinions]] about the dates differ: the colossi probably date to the 6th century, and the [[monastic]] complex to the 7th and 8th centuries (Godard et al.; Hackin and Carl; Tarzi, 1977; Klimburg-Salter).
  
 
About 4 km from Bāmiān, the tributary Fulādi valley contains over fifty artificial [[caves]] that preserved [[Buddhist]] paintings (later than those of Bāmiān) on their walls and ceilings. In another tributary valley, Kakrāk, there is a [[standing]] [[Buddha]], about 7 m high and about 100 artificial [[caves]] with wall paintings. Halfway between Bāmiān and {{Wiki|Kabul}}, in the Ḡorband valley, in the area called Fundukistan (Fondoqestān), there is a [[Buddhist]] [[monastery]]. ;Its {{Wiki|central}} court with a [[stūpa]] is surrounded with vaulted niches. Inside them were groups of magnificent [[statues]], while the walls were covered with paintings. Benjamin Rowland described these works as showing a “[[formula]] of refined [[religious]] expression” while the entire composition “must have given the effect of a kind of a [[religious]] peep-show, in which, as on a stage, the visitor obtained a glimpse of [[celestial]] [[realms]]” (Rowland, 1971, pp. 45-46; for a description, see Hackin, Carl, and Meunié, pp. 49-58). Twenty km from {{Wiki|Kabul}}, the Gul Dara [[monastery]] in the Kapiśa area was built in the 5th or 6th century; it has one courtyard, and the [[stūpas]] lie outside the [[monastery]] proper (Fussman and Le Berre).
 
About 4 km from Bāmiān, the tributary Fulādi valley contains over fifty artificial [[caves]] that preserved [[Buddhist]] paintings (later than those of Bāmiān) on their walls and ceilings. In another tributary valley, Kakrāk, there is a [[standing]] [[Buddha]], about 7 m high and about 100 artificial [[caves]] with wall paintings. Halfway between Bāmiān and {{Wiki|Kabul}}, in the Ḡorband valley, in the area called Fundukistan (Fondoqestān), there is a [[Buddhist]] [[monastery]]. ;Its {{Wiki|central}} court with a [[stūpa]] is surrounded with vaulted niches. Inside them were groups of magnificent [[statues]], while the walls were covered with paintings. Benjamin Rowland described these works as showing a “[[formula]] of refined [[religious]] expression” while the entire composition “must have given the effect of a kind of a [[religious]] peep-show, in which, as on a stage, the visitor obtained a glimpse of [[celestial]] [[realms]]” (Rowland, 1971, pp. 45-46; for a description, see Hackin, Carl, and Meunié, pp. 49-58). Twenty km from {{Wiki|Kabul}}, the Gul Dara [[monastery]] in the Kapiśa area was built in the 5th or 6th century; it has one courtyard, and the [[stūpas]] lie outside the [[monastery]] proper (Fussman and Le Berre).
  
Among the numerous other [[Buddhist]] monuments of {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} dated to the 5th-8th centuries, Tepe Sardar (Tappe Sardār) at Ḡazni is notable. It is a [[monastery]] complex with a huge [[stūpa]] and numerous smaller ones, sanctuaries with paintings, reliefs, and sculptures, including a 15-m long reclining [[Buddha]]. There is also a [[Hindu]] [[shrine]] with sculptures (Taddei and Verardi, pp. 33-136).
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Among the numerous other [[Buddhist]] monuments of {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} dated to the 5th-8th centuries, Tepe Sardar (Tappe Sardār) at Ḡazni is notable. It is a [[monastery]] complex with a huge [[stūpa]] and numerous smaller ones, sanctuaries with paintings, reliefs, and sculptures, [[including]] a 15-m long reclining [[Buddha]]. There is also a [[Hindu]] [[shrine]] with sculptures (Taddei and Verardi, pp. 33-136).
 
[[File:Ima-47-8.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Ima-47-8.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
[[Buddhism]] retained its positions in northern {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} and in the {{Wiki|south}} of [[Uzbekistan]] and Tajikistan, at the [[time]] of the Arab conquest called Tokharistan (Toḵārestān), not {{Wiki|Bactria}} or (Mid. Pers.) Baxl. Several [[Buddhist]] constructions were discovered in its southern (Afghan) part (see, e.g., Hackin, Carl, and Meunié, pp. 19-22; Foucher, pp. 123-29), such as Taḵt-e Rostam near Balḵ—a site with ruins of an early {{Wiki|medieval}} [[Buddhist]] monastery—and Tappe Rostam with a [[stūpa]]. According to [[Hsüan-tsang]], in the first quarter of the 7th century there were about 100 [[Buddhist]] [[monasteries]] and about 3,000 [[monks]] in Balḵ, the {{Wiki|capital}} of Tokharistan. A new [[monastery]] (Novasanghārāma) with gilded [[statues]] and halls encrusted with [[precious]] stones was built not far from the city. Known in {{Wiki|Arabic}} and Persian sources as Nawbahār, it was destroyed after the Arab conquest (Barthold, Turkestan³, p. 77; see also BARMAKIDS).
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[[Buddhism]] retained its positions in northern {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} and in the {{Wiki|south}} of [[Uzbekistan]] and [[Tajikistan]], at the [[time]] of the Arab conquest called Tokharistan (Toḵārestān), not {{Wiki|Bactria}} or (Mid. Pers.) Baxl. Several [[Buddhist]] constructions were discovered in its southern (Afghan) part (see, e.g., Hackin, Carl, and Meunié, pp. 19-22; Foucher, pp. 123-29), such as Taḵt-e Rostam near Balḵ—a site with ruins of an early {{Wiki|medieval}} [[Buddhist]] monastery—and Tappe Rostam with a [[stūpa]]. According to [[Hsüan-tsang]], in the first quarter of the 7th century there were about 100 [[Buddhist]] [[monasteries]] and about 3,000 [[monks]] in Balḵ, the {{Wiki|capital}} of Tokharistan. A new [[monastery]] (Novasanghārāma) with gilded [[statues]] and halls encrusted with [[precious]] stones was built not far from the city. Known in {{Wiki|Arabic}} and [[Persian]] sources as Nawbahār, it was destroyed after the Arab conquest (Barthold, Turkestan³, p. 77; see also BARMAKIDS).
  
In his travel notes, [[Hsüan-tsang]] wrote under the year 628 that there were [[Buddhist]] [[monasteries]] also in northern Tokharistan; for example, in Ta-mi (the city now called Termez) there were about a dozen [[monasteries]] and about 1,000 [[monks]]. In 726, Huei-ch’ao, another {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Buddhist]] [[pilgrim]], wrote about the Tokhari principality Ko-to-lo or Khuttal in {{Wiki|modern}} southern Tajikistan: “The [[king]], the nobles and the [[people]] {{Wiki|worship}} the faithful in [[triratna]] [see above]; many [[monasteries]] and [[monks]] are followers of the [[Hinayāna]] school” (tr. Fuchs, pp. 452-53). In this territory in the eastern part of northern Tokharistan, [[Buddhist]] construction dating to the 7th-8th centuries were discovered. The Adjina Tepe [[monastery]] was studied completely; it belonged to the two-courtyard type with the main and smaller [[stūpas]] in the center of one of the yards enclosed with corridors; the latter were decorated with niches with sculptures of seated [[Buddhas]] and a 14-m-high figure of the reclining [[Buddha]]. The courtyard of the other part was encircled with [[monastic]] cells and other premises (Litvinsky and Zeimal’). Other sites included the Khisht Tepe [[monastery]], the Kalai Kafirnigan and Kafyr [[Kala]] sanctuaries, and the [[stūpas]] of the second period of Uštur-mullo (Litvinsky, 1981, pp. 35-66; Litvinskiǐ and Solov’ev, pp. 21-22, 60-62, 78-80).
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In his travel notes, [[Hsüan-tsang]] wrote under the year 628 that there were [[Buddhist]] [[monasteries]] also in northern Tokharistan; for example, in Ta-mi (the city now called Termez) there were about a dozen [[monasteries]] and about 1,000 [[monks]]. In 726, Huei-ch’ao, another {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Buddhist]] [[pilgrim]], wrote about the [[Tokhari]] principality Ko-to-lo or Khuttal in {{Wiki|modern}} southern [[Tajikistan]]: “The [[king]], the [[nobles]] and the [[people]] {{Wiki|worship}} the [[faithful]] in [[triratna]] [see above]; many [[monasteries]] and [[monks]] are followers of the [[Hinayāna]] school” (tr. Fuchs, pp. 452-53). In this territory in the eastern part of northern Tokharistan, [[Buddhist]] construction dating to the 7th-8th centuries were discovered. The Adjina Tepe [[monastery]] was studied completely; it belonged to the two-courtyard type with the main and smaller [[stūpas]] in the center of one of the yards enclosed with corridors; the [[latter]] were decorated with niches with sculptures of seated [[Buddhas]] and a 14-m-high figure of the reclining [[Buddha]]. The courtyard of the other part was encircled with [[monastic]] {{Wiki|cells}} and other premises (Litvinsky and Zeimal’). Other sites included the Khisht Tepe [[monastery]], the Kalai Kafirnigan and Kafyr [[Kala]] sanctuaries, and the [[stūpas]] of the second period of Uštur-mullo (Litvinsky, 1981, pp. 35-66; Litvinskiǐ and Solov’ev, pp. 21-22, 60-62, 78-80).
 
[[File:Sb42.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Sb42.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
The city of Marv was another large [[Buddhist]] center that yielded [[Buddhist]] buildings and manuscripts (Pugachenkova and Usmanova, pp. 51-82). [[Buddhist]] structures were also found in Ferghana (see FARḠĀNA) and especially in Semirechie (Bulatova, pp. 52-77; Goryacheva and Peregudova, pp. 168-83). [[Buddhist]] monuments of the Islamic period were studied in Semirechie and Marv; in Sogd, according to written sources and {{Wiki|archeological}} finds, [[Buddhism]] was not widespread.
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The city of Marv was another large [[Buddhist]] center that yielded [[Buddhist]] buildings and [[manuscripts]] (Pugachenkova and Usmanova, pp. 51-82). [[Buddhist]] structures were also found in [[Ferghana]] (see FARḠĀNA) and especially in Semirechie (Bulatova, pp. 52-77; Goryacheva and Peregudova, pp. 168-83). [[Buddhist]] monuments of the [[Islamic]] period were studied in Semirechie and Marv; in Sogd, according to written sources and {{Wiki|archeological}} finds, [[Buddhism]] was not widespread.
  
[[Buddhism]] was extremely popular in [[Khotan]]. According to the {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Buddhist]] [[pilgrim]] [[Fa-hsien]], in 401 all dwellers of [[Khotan]] were [[Buddhists]]. He wrote about 14 large and numerous small [[monasteries]] ([[Fa-hsien]], p. 18). According to [[Tibetan]] sources in the 8th-9th centuries, there were several thousand large, {{Wiki|medium}}, and small [[monasteries]] and sanctuaries, some of them in private houses (Thomas, ed. and tr., p. 105; Emmerick 1967, pp. 25-31). In the [[Khotan]] principality, archeologists (especially M. {{Wiki|Aurel Stein}}) discovered and excavated several sanctuaries, [[stūpas]], and [[monasteries]] of the 5th-8th centuries. These were decorated with wall paintings and sculptures—Rawak, Farhad-Beg Yaliaki, Dandān-öiliq, Khadalik, Balawaste, and others. These continued and developed the compositional [[ideas]] born in [[India]] and radically [[transformed]] them (as in Rawak; for a detailed survey and bibliography see Yaldiz, pp. 186-219; Rowland, 1974, pp. 121-39).
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[[Buddhism]] was extremely popular in [[Khotan]]. According to the {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Buddhist]] [[pilgrim]] [[Fa-hsien]], in 401 all dwellers of [[Khotan]] were [[Buddhists]]. He wrote about 14 large and numerous small [[monasteries]] ([[Fa-hsien]], p. 18). According to [[Tibetan]] sources in the 8th-9th centuries, there were several thousand large, {{Wiki|medium}}, and small [[monasteries]] and sanctuaries, some of them in private houses (Thomas, ed. and tr., p. 105; Emmerick 1967, pp. 25-31). In the [[Khotan]] principality, {{Wiki|archeologists}} (especially M. {{Wiki|Aurel Stein}}) discovered and excavated several sanctuaries, [[stūpas]], and [[monasteries]] of the 5th-8th centuries. These were decorated with wall paintings and sculptures—Rawak, Farhad-Beg Yaliaki, Dandān-öiliq, Khadalik, Balawaste, and others. These continued and developed the compositional [[ideas]] born in [[India]] and radically [[transformed]] them (as in Rawak; for a detailed survey and [[bibliography]] see Yaldiz, pp. 186-219; Rowland, 1974, pp. 121-39).
 
[[File:31japan.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:31japan.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
[[Religious]] [[doctrine]] was further developed in the post-Kushan period and is reflected in numerous works dated to this period. Hināyāna and numerous other schools (Bareau) still existed; according to [[Hsüan-tsang]], in the 7th century followers of Hināyāna comprised nearly two-thirds of the [[Indian]] [[monks]]; the remaining one-third were [[Mahāyāna]] followers. [[Evolution]] and development of [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|theological}} [[thought]] were not limited to [[India]] proper—they also occurred in the Iranian-populated territories. In each region, [[Buddhism]] had specific {{Wiki|features}}. In {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} and {{Wiki|Central Asia}}, it came into [[contact]] with other [[religions]] of the Iranians: {{Wiki|Zoroastrianism}}, Manicheism, {{Wiki|Christianity}}, {{Wiki|Judaism}}, and [[Hinduism]] borrowed from [[India]]. This gave rise to various syncretistic [[beliefs]], a process reflected in such [[religious]] centers as Tepe Sardār and in {{Wiki|Zoroastrian}} and Sasanian [[influence]] on [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|iconography}} (Rowland, 1972, pp. 379-82). Certain Hināyāna schools (especially the Sārvāstivādin, [[Mahāsāṃghika]], and [[Lokottaravādin]]) developed the [[ideas]] that promoted [[Mahāyāna]] [[doctrines]] (Bareau, pp. 290-382). There was no insurmountable wall between the two [[Buddhist]] trends; late in the 8th century, a [[Buddhist]] [[pilgrim]] had to admit that it was hard to identify some of the schools as belonging to Hināyāna or [[Mahāyāna]] (I-Tsing, pp. 13-15). In their descriptions of the states of {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} and {{Wiki|Central Asia}} (especially Kapiśa, Bāmiān, and Tokharistan) [[Hsüan-tsang]] (ca. 628-32) and later Huei-ch’ao (726) wrote that the rulers, [[nobility]], and common [[people]] were all zealous [[Buddhists]], and that at many [[monasteries]] the [[monks]] included [[scholars]] of [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|theology}}. Balkh was even known as “Little [[Rājagṛha]],” after one of the holy [[Buddhist]] centers in [[India]], the place where, according to [[tradition]], the first [[Buddhist council]] took place after the [[death]] of Šakyamuni [[Buddha]]. Hināyāna was widespread in Tokharistan; according to [[Hsüan-tsang]], [[Lokottaravādin]], a Hināyāna school, was popular in Bāmiān; there were also preachers of the [[Mahāsāṃghika]] school there; and Huei-ch’ao reported about [[Mahāyāna]] and Hināyāna supporters. [[Hsüan-tsang]] wrote that in Kapiśa the majority followed the [[Mahāyāna]] school and that there were also learned [[monks]] of the [[Sarvāstivādin]] and Mahiśāsana schools. Later, Huei-ch’ao reported that the Hināyāna school predominated there ([[Hsüan-tsang]] et al., pp. 44, 49-45; Hui-li, pp. 49, 53-57; Fuchs, pp. 448-49). Fragments of 6th-8th-century manuscripts related to the [[Mahāsāṃghika]] and Sarvastivādin schools came to [[light]] in Bāmiān (Lévi, 1932, pp. 2-8). “These dates and {{Wiki|sectarian}} identifications become particularly important when coupled with the fact that the manuscripts were written in scripts and [[languages]] from [[India]], [[Khotan]], and [[Kucha]]. These {{Wiki|Central Asia}}n [[religious]] centers were connected to Bamian by trade routes. Thus ... we can discern a parallel between the {{Wiki|cultural}} and [[religious]] {{Wiki|milieu}} of Bamian and [[intellectual]] climate of major {{Wiki|Central Asia}}n [[Buddhist]] centers in the sixth through eight centuries” (Klimburg-Salter, p. 58).
+
[[Religious]] [[doctrine]] was further developed in the post-Kushan period and is reflected in numerous works dated to this period. Hināyāna and numerous other schools (Bareau) still existed; according to [[Hsüan-tsang]], in the 7th century followers of Hināyāna comprised nearly two-thirds of the [[Indian]] [[monks]]; the remaining one-third were [[Mahāyāna]] followers. [[Evolution]] and [[development]] of [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|theological}} [[thought]] were not limited to [[India]] proper—they also occurred in the Iranian-populated territories. In each region, [[Buddhism]] had specific {{Wiki|features}}. In {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} and {{Wiki|Central Asia}}, it came into [[contact]] with other [[religions]] of the Iranians: {{Wiki|Zoroastrianism}}, {{Wiki|Manicheism}}, {{Wiki|Christianity}}, {{Wiki|Judaism}}, and [[Hinduism]] borrowed from [[India]]. This gave rise to various {{Wiki|syncretistic}} [[beliefs]], a process reflected in such [[religious]] centers as Tepe Sardār and in {{Wiki|Zoroastrian}} and {{Wiki|Sasanian}} [[influence]] on [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|iconography}} (Rowland, 1972, pp. 379-82). Certain Hināyāna schools (especially the Sārvāstivādin, [[Mahāsāṃghika]], and [[Lokottaravādin]]) developed the [[ideas]] that promoted [[Mahāyāna]] [[doctrines]] (Bareau, pp. 290-382). There was no insurmountable wall between the two [[Buddhist]] trends; late in the 8th century, a [[Buddhist]] [[pilgrim]] had to admit that it was hard to identify some of the schools as belonging to Hināyāna or [[Mahāyāna]] ([[I-Tsing]], pp. 13-15). In their descriptions of the states of {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} and {{Wiki|Central Asia}} (especially Kapiśa, Bāmiān, and Tokharistan) [[Hsüan-tsang]] (ca. 628-32) and later Huei-ch’ao (726) wrote that the rulers, [[nobility]], and common [[people]] were all zealous [[Buddhists]], and that at many [[monasteries]] the [[monks]] included [[scholars]] of [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|theology}}. [[Balkh]] was even known as “Little [[Rājagṛha]],” after one of the {{Wiki|holy}} [[Buddhist]] centers in [[India]], the place where, according to [[tradition]], the first [[Buddhist council]] took place after the [[death]] of Šakyamuni [[Buddha]]. Hināyāna was widespread in Tokharistan; according to [[Hsüan-tsang]], [[Lokottaravādin]], a Hināyāna school, was popular in Bāmiān; there were also preachers of the [[Mahāsāṃghika]] school there; and Huei-ch’ao reported about [[Mahāyāna]] and Hināyāna supporters. [[Hsüan-tsang]] wrote that in Kapiśa the majority followed the [[Mahāyāna]] school and that there were also learned [[monks]] of the [[Sarvāstivādin]] and Mahiśāsana schools. Later, Huei-ch’ao reported that the Hināyāna school predominated there ([[Hsüan-tsang]] et al., pp. 44, 49-45; [[Hui-li]], pp. 49, 53-57; Fuchs, pp. 448-49). Fragments of 6th-8th-century [[manuscripts]] related to the [[Mahāsāṃghika]] and [[Sarvastivādin]] schools came to [[light]] in Bāmiān (Lévi, 1932, pp. 2-8). “These dates and {{Wiki|sectarian}} identifications become particularly important when coupled with the fact that the [[manuscripts]] were written in scripts and [[languages]] from [[India]], [[Khotan]], and [[Kucha]]. These {{Wiki|Central Asia}}n [[religious]] centers were connected to [[Bamian]] by trade routes. Thus ... we can discern a parallel between the {{Wiki|cultural}} and [[religious]] {{Wiki|milieu}} of [[Bamian]] and [[intellectual]] climate of major {{Wiki|Central Asia}}n [[Buddhist]] centers in the sixth through eight centuries” (Klimburg-Salter, p. 58).
 
[[File:Hua-hin 9.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Hua-hin 9.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
Manuscripts on birch bark were found in Tokharistan: a [[vinaya]] (one of the three divisions of the [[Buddhist scriptures]]) fragment from Zang Tepe and small fragments from Kafyr Kaly in brāhmī script (7th-8th centuries). A [[Sanskrit]] {{Wiki|manuscript}} in brāhmī, of which 150 pages came down to us, was found in Bayram-Ali (at Marv). It was either a concise exposition of certain [[Buddhist]] works or a preacher’s notebook. The colophon indicates that the {{Wiki|manuscript}} and its author belonged to the [[Sarvāstivādin]] school (Vorob’eva-Desyatovskaya, pp. 63-89).
+
Manuscripts on birch bark were found in Tokharistan: a [[vinaya]] (one of the [[three divisions]] of the [[Buddhist scriptures]]) fragment from [[Zang]] Tepe and small fragments from Kafyr Kaly in brāhmī [[script]] (7th-8th centuries). A [[Sanskrit]] {{Wiki|manuscript}} in brāhmī, of which 150 pages came down to us, was found in Bayram-Ali (at Marv). It was either a concise [[exposition]] of certain [[Buddhist]] works or a preacher’s notebook. The colophon indicates that the {{Wiki|manuscript}} and its author belonged to the [[Sarvāstivādin]] school (Vorob’eva-Desyatovskaya, pp. 63-89).
  
At that [[time]] [[Khotan]] was the largest center of [[Iranian Buddhism]] (Emmerick, 1983, pp. 962-64) and possessed a considerable number of [[Buddhist]] [[Sanskrit]] works that had arrived from [[India]]; from [[Khotan]] these were passed on to [[China]]. [[Mahāyāna]] became more popular in [[Khotan]] than it was in Tokharistan; at the [[time]] of [[Hsüan-tsang]] its domination was uncontested, although there remained Hināyāna supporters. This domination became even more obvious in the 8th century (Fuchs, p. 457). A [[Tibetan]] chronicle of the 8th-9th century compares the number of [[Mahāyāna]] supporters with the number of hairs on a horse’s [[body]] and the number of Hināyāna supporters, with the number of hairs on its {{Wiki|ear}} (Thomas, ed. and tr., p. 311). For a long [[time]], the {{Wiki|Khotanese}} learned [[Buddhism]] from [[Sanskrit]] works, [[Sanskrit]] {{Wiki|being}} the liturgical [[language]]. It was approaching the 10th century when they created a {{Wiki|Khotanese}} [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|literature}} that included translations of the major [[Sanskrit]] [[Buddhist]] works. Parts of some works reveal local interpretations of [[Buddhist]] [[doctrines]]. Original works also appeared (e.g., the [[Book]] of Zambasta); these were neither expositions of [[Sanskrit]] compositions nor translations (Emmerick, ed., 1968; 1977, pp. 65-74). The [[Buddhist]] [[doctrines]] these works contained reflected the [[religious]] situation in [[Khotan]] (Williams, pp. 114-15; for a detailed [[analysis]] of {{Wiki|Khotanese}} [[Buddhism]], see Litvinsky, 1999, pp. 38-54).
+
At that [[time]] [[Khotan]] was the largest center of [[Iranian Buddhism]] (Emmerick, 1983, pp. 962-64) and possessed a considerable number of [[Buddhist]] [[Sanskrit]] works that had arrived from [[India]]; from [[Khotan]] these were passed on to [[China]]. [[Mahāyāna]] became more popular in [[Khotan]] than it was in Tokharistan; at the [[time]] of [[Hsüan-tsang]] its {{Wiki|domination}} was uncontested, although there remained Hināyāna supporters. This {{Wiki|domination}} became even more obvious in the 8th century (Fuchs, p. 457). A [[Tibetan]] chronicle of the 8th-9th century compares the number of [[Mahāyāna]] supporters with the number of hairs on a [[horse’s]] [[body]] and the number of Hināyāna supporters, with the number of hairs on its {{Wiki|ear}} (Thomas, ed. and tr., p. 311). For a long [[time]], the {{Wiki|Khotanese}} learned [[Buddhism]] from [[Sanskrit]] works, [[Sanskrit]] {{Wiki|being}} the liturgical [[language]]. It was approaching the 10th century when they created a {{Wiki|Khotanese}} [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|literature}} that included translations of the major [[Sanskrit]] [[Buddhist]] works. Parts of some works reveal local interpretations of [[Buddhist]] [[doctrines]]. Original works also appeared (e.g., the [[Book]] of Zambasta); these were neither [[expositions]] of [[Sanskrit]] compositions nor translations (Emmerick, ed., 1968; 1977, pp. 65-74). The [[Buddhist]] [[doctrines]] these works contained reflected the [[religious]] situation in [[Khotan]] ([[Williams]], pp. 114-15; for a detailed [[analysis]] of {{Wiki|Khotanese}} [[Buddhism]], see Litvinsky, 1999, pp. 38-54).
  
Many of the Sogdians who lived in [[Xinjiang]], [[China]], and [[Mongolia]] were [[Buddhists]]; settlements and even towns were populated by them. [[Buddhism]] for them was one of the major [[religions]], in contrast to its [[standing]] in their homeland. Numerous Sogdian [[Buddhist]] manuscripts were discovered, the [[absolute]] majority of them {{Wiki|being}} translations of {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Buddhist]] works of the [[Mahāyāna]] school dated to the 7th-10th century (see Utz, with detailed bibliography).
+
Many of the [[Sogdians]] who lived in [[Xinjiang]], [[China]], and [[Mongolia]] were [[Buddhists]]; settlements and even towns were populated by them. [[Buddhism]] for them was one of the major [[religions]], in contrast to its [[standing]] in their homeland. Numerous [[wikipedia:Sogdiana|Sogdian]] [[Buddhist]] [[manuscripts]] were discovered, the [[absolute]] majority of them {{Wiki|being}} translations of {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Buddhist]] works of the [[Mahāyāna]] school dated to the 7th-10th century (see Utz, with detailed [[bibliography]]).
 
[[File:F09sindpt30.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:F09sindpt30.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
[[Buddhism]] thus played an important role in the {{Wiki|history}} and {{Wiki|culture}} of several {{Wiki|Iranian}} peoples. It brought not only the [[Indian]] [[religion]], but also [[philosophy]], {{Wiki|literature}}, and [[art]] within the Iranians’ reach. It served a bridge of sorts between them and [[Indian]] {{Wiki|culture}} as a whole; and it intensified {{Wiki|cultural}} exchange between {{Wiki|Central Asia}} and [[India]] (Bagchi; Litvinskiǐ, 1996 and 1997).
+
[[Buddhism]] thus played an important role in the {{Wiki|history}} and {{Wiki|culture}} of several {{Wiki|Iranian}} peoples. It brought not only the [[Indian]] [[religion]], but also [[philosophy]], {{Wiki|literature}}, and [[art]] within the Iranians’ reach. It served a bridge of sorts between them and [[Indian]] {{Wiki|culture}} as a whole; and it intensified {{Wiki|cultural}} exchange between {{Wiki|Central Asia}} and [[India]] ([[Bagchi]]; Litvinskiǐ, 1996 and 1997).
  
Finally, the [[Buddhist]] heritage can be discerned among the Iranians in the Islamic epoch as well. In the early Islamic period, descendants of [[Buddhist]] [[religious]] figures filled high-ranking posts (see BARMAKIDS). There is an opinion that [[Buddhism]] greatly influenced the ideology and practice of early eastern {{Wiki|Sufism}}. Madrasas, [[higher]] Islamic educational institutes, appeared in the 10th century precisely in {{Wiki|Central Asia}} and were probably in some respects genetically connected with [[Buddhist]] [[monasteries]]. Since the 10th century New Persian [[poetry]] has preserved the [[word]] bot “[[Buddha]]”, [[meaning]] “idol, [[beauty]], the beloved”; and other [[Buddhist]] traces can be found in the {{Wiki|literature}}, [[art]], and {{Wiki|culture}} of the Iranians in the {{Wiki|Muslim}} period (Litvinsky, 1968, pp. 66-67; Gimaret; Melikian-Chirvani; Scott).
+
Finally, the [[Buddhist]] heritage can be discerned among the Iranians in the [[Islamic]] epoch as well. In the early [[Islamic]] period, descendants of [[Buddhist]] [[religious]] figures filled high-ranking posts (see BARMAKIDS). There is an opinion that [[Buddhism]] greatly influenced the ideology and practice of early eastern {{Wiki|Sufism}}. Madrasas, [[higher]] [[Islamic]] educational institutes, appeared in the 10th century precisely in {{Wiki|Central Asia}} and were probably in some respects genetically connected with [[Buddhist]] [[monasteries]]. Since the 10th century New [[Persian]] [[poetry]] has preserved the [[word]] bot “[[Buddha]]”, [[meaning]] “[[idol]], [[beauty]], the beloved”; and other [[Buddhist]] traces can be found in the {{Wiki|literature}}, [[art]], and {{Wiki|culture}} of the Iranians in the {{Wiki|Muslim}} period (Litvinsky, 1968, pp. 66-67; Gimaret; Melikian-Chirvani; Scott).
  
 
See also [[buddhism]] ii. IN ISLAMIC TIMES; AFGHANISTAN viii and ix.
 
See also [[buddhism]] ii. IN ISLAMIC TIMES; AFGHANISTAN viii and ix.
  
Bibliography:
+
[[Bibliography]]:
 
[[File:Sb43.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Sb43.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
Abbreviation. MDAFA—Mémoires de la Délégation Archéologique Française en {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}.
 
Abbreviation. MDAFA—Mémoires de la Délégation Archéologique Française en {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}.
  
L. I. Al’baum, “Zhivopis’ svyatilishcha Fayaz-tepe” (Paintings of the Fayyāż Tappe [[sanctuary]]), in Kul’tura Srednego Vostoka s drevneǐshikh vremen do nashikh dneǐ. Izobrazitel’noe i prikladnoe iskusstvo ({{Wiki|Culture}} of the {{Wiki|Middle East}} from the earliest times up to our days. Fine and applied arts), Tashkent, 1990, pp. 18-27.
+
L. I. Al’baum, “Zhivopis’ svyatilishcha Fayaz-tepe” (Paintings of the Fayyāż Tappe [[sanctuary]]), in Kul’tura Srednego Vostoka s drevneǐshikh vremen do nashikh dneǐ. Izobrazitel’noe i prikladnoe iskusstvo ({{Wiki|Culture}} of the {{Wiki|Middle East}} from the earliest times up to our days. Fine and applied [[arts]]), [[Tashkent]], 1990, pp. 18-27.
  
J. P. Asmussen, Xuā̄tvānīft. Studies in Manichaeism, Copenhagen, 1965.
+
J. P. Asmussen, Xuā̄tvānīft. Studies in {{Wiki|Manichaeism}}, [[Copenhagen]], 1965.
  
 
H. Bailey, “Indo-Iraniana (III, 5). Tarmita,” BSOAS 13/2 1950, pp. 400-3.
 
H. Bailey, “Indo-Iraniana (III, 5). Tarmita,” BSOAS 13/2 1950, pp. 400-3.
  
P. C. Bagchi, [[India]] and {{Wiki|Central Asia}}, {{Wiki|Calcutta}}, 1955.
+
P. C. [[Bagchi]], [[India]] and {{Wiki|Central Asia}}, {{Wiki|Calcutta}}, 1955.
  
A. Bareau, Les sectes bouddhiques de Petit Véhicule, Publication de l’École Française d’Extrême-orient 38, Saigon, 1955.
+
A. Bareau, Les sectes bouddhiques de Petit Véhicule, Publication de l’École Française d’Extrême-orient 38, [[Saigon]], 1955.
  
J. Barthoux, Les fouilles de Haḍḍa, III. Figures et figurines, MDAFA 6, Paris, 1930.
+
J. Barthoux, Les fouilles de Haḍḍa, III. Figures et figurines, MDAFA 6, {{Wiki|Paris}}, 1930.
  
Idem, Les fouilles de Haḍḍa, I. Stupes et sites. Texte et dessins, MDAFA 4, Paris, 1933.
+
Idem, Les fouilles de Haḍḍa, I. Stupes et sites. Texte et dessins, MDAFA 4, {{Wiki|Paris}}, 1933.
 
[[File:Sb67.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Sb67.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
J. Brough, The Gandhāri [[Dharmapada]], {{Wiki|London}} et al., 1962.
+
J. Brough, The [[Gandhāri]] [[Dharmapada]], {{Wiki|London}} et al., 1962.
  
V. A. Bulatova, Drevnyaya Kuva ({{Wiki|Ancient}} Kuva), Tashkent, 1972.
+
V. A. Bulatova, Drevnyaya Kuva ({{Wiki|Ancient}} Kuva), [[Tashkent]], 1972.
  
C. Debaine-Francroft and A. Idriss, eds., Keriya, mémoires d’un fleuve. Archéologie et {{Wiki|civilization}} des oasis du Taklamakan, Paris, 2001.
+
C. Debaine-Francroft and A. Idriss, eds., Keriya, mémoires d’un fleuve. Archéologie et {{Wiki|civilization}} des oasis du [[Taklamakan]], {{Wiki|Paris}}, 2001.
  
R. E. Emmerick, [[Tibetan]] Texts Concerning [[Khotan]], {{Wiki|London}}, 1967.
+
[[R. E. Emmerick]], [[Tibetan]] Texts Concerning [[Khotan]], {{Wiki|London}}, 1967.
  
 
Idem, ed., The [[Book]] of Zambasta. A {{Wiki|Khotanese}} Poem on [[Buddhism]], {{Wiki|London}}, 1968.
 
Idem, ed., The [[Book]] of Zambasta. A {{Wiki|Khotanese}} Poem on [[Buddhism]], {{Wiki|London}}, 1968.
Line 98: Line 106:
 
[[Fa-hsien]], tr. Li Yung-hsi as A Record of the [[Buddhist]] Countries, {{Wiki|Beijing}}, 1957.
 
[[Fa-hsien]], tr. Li Yung-hsi as A Record of the [[Buddhist]] Countries, {{Wiki|Beijing}}, 1957.
  
A. Foucher, La vieille route de l’Inde, de Bactres a {{Wiki|Taxila}}, 2 vols., MDAFA 1, Paris, 1942-47.
+
A. Foucher, La vieille route de l’Inde, de Bactres a {{Wiki|Taxila}}, 2 vols., MDAFA 1, {{Wiki|Paris}}, 1942-47.
 
[[File:304.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:304.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
W. Fuchs, “Huei-ch’ao’s Pilgerreise durch Nordwest-Indien und Zentral-Asien um 726,” SPAW 30, 1938, pp. 426-57; repr. {{Wiki|Berlin}}, 1939.
 
W. Fuchs, “Huei-ch’ao’s Pilgerreise durch Nordwest-Indien und Zentral-Asien um 726,” SPAW 30, 1938, pp. 426-57; repr. {{Wiki|Berlin}}, 1939.
Line 104: Line 112:
 
G. Fussman, “Documents épigraphiques Koushans,” Bulletin de l’École Française d’Extrême-Orient 61, 1974, pp. 1-66.
 
G. Fussman, “Documents épigraphiques Koushans,” Bulletin de l’École Française d’Extrême-Orient 61, 1974, pp. 1-66.
  
Idem, “Numismatic and Epigraphic {{Wiki|Evidence}} for the Chronology of Early {{Wiki|Gandharan Art}},” in Investigating [[Indian]] [[Art]]. Proceedings of a Symposium on the Early [[Buddhist]] and [[Hindu]] {{Wiki|Iconography}} held at the Museum of [[Indian]] [[Art]], {{Wiki|Berlin}} 1986, {{Wiki|Berlin}}, 1987, pp. 89-104.
+
Idem, “Numismatic and [[Epigraphic]] {{Wiki|Evidence}} for the {{Wiki|Chronology}} of Early {{Wiki|Gandharan Art}},” in Investigating [[Indian]] [[Art]]. Proceedings of a Symposium on the Early [[Buddhist]] and [[Hindu]] {{Wiki|Iconography}} held at the Museum of [[Indian]] [[Art]], {{Wiki|Berlin}} 1986, {{Wiki|Berlin}}, 1987, pp. 89-104.
  
G. Fussman and M. Le Berre, Monuments bouddhiques de la région de Caboul I. Le monastère de Gul Dara, MDAFA 22, Paris, 1976.
+
G. Fussman and M. Le Berre, Monuments bouddhiques de la région de Caboul I. Le monastère de Gul Dara, MDAFA 22, {{Wiki|Paris}}, 1976.
  
 
D. Gimaret, “Bouddha et les bouddhistes dans la [[tradition]] musulmane,” JA 257/3-4, 1969, pp. 273-316.
 
D. Gimaret, “Bouddha et les bouddhistes dans la [[tradition]] musulmane,” JA 257/3-4, 1969, pp. 273-316.
  
A. Godard, Y. Godard, and J. Hackin, Les antiquités bouddhiques de {{Wiki|Bamiyan}}, MDAFA 2, Paris, 1928.
+
A. Godard, Y. Godard, and J. Hackin, Les antiquités bouddhiques de {{Wiki|Bamiyan}}, MDAFA 2, {{Wiki|Paris}}, 1928.
  
 
V. D. Goryacheva and S. Ya. Peregudova, “Buddiǐskie pamyatniki Kirgizii” ([[Buddhist]] monuments of Kirghizia), VDI, 1996, no. 2. 168-83.
 
V. D. Goryacheva and S. Ya. Peregudova, “Buddiǐskie pamyatniki Kirgizii” ([[Buddhist]] monuments of Kirghizia), VDI, 1996, no. 2. 168-83.
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J. Hackin, L’oeuvre de la Délégation Archéologique Française en {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} (1922-1932). Archéologie bouddhique, {{Wiki|Tokyo}}, 1933.
 
J. Hackin, L’oeuvre de la Délégation Archéologique Française en {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} (1922-1932). Archéologie bouddhique, {{Wiki|Tokyo}}, 1933.
  
Idem, “Fouilles de Kunduz (1936),” MDAFA 7, Paris, 1959, pp. 19-22.
+
Idem, “Fouilles de [[Kunduz]] (1936),” MDAFA 7, {{Wiki|Paris}}, 1959, pp. 19-22.
 
[[File:Es 3.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Es 3.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
Idem and J. Carl, Nouvelles recherches archéologiques a Bāmiyān, MDAFA 3, Paris, 1933.
+
Idem and J. Carl, Nouvelles recherches archéologiques a Bāmiyān, MDAFA 3, {{Wiki|Paris}}, 1933.
  
J. Hackin, J. Carl, and J. Meunié, Diverses recherches archéologiques en {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} (1933-1940), MDAFA 8, Paris, 1959.
+
J. Hackin, J. Carl, and J. Meunié, Diverses recherches archéologiques en {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} (1933-1940), MDAFA 8, {{Wiki|Paris}}, 1959.
  
[[Hsüan-tsang]] et al., Si-yu-ki; tr. S. Beal as Si-yu-ki. [[Buddhist]] Records on the Western [[World]], {{Wiki|London}}, 1884; repr. {{Wiki|London}}, 2000.
+
[[Hsüan-tsang]] et al., [[Si-yu-ki]]; tr. S. Beal as [[Si-yu-ki]]. [[Buddhist]] Records on the [[Western]] [[World]], {{Wiki|London}}, 1884; repr. {{Wiki|London}}, 2000.
  
Hui-li, The [[Life]] of Hsüan-tsang,the Tripitaka-Master of the [[Great]] Tzu En [[Monastery]], {{Wiki|Beijing}}, 1959.
+
[[Hui-li]], The [[Life]] of Hsüan-tsang,the Tripitaka-Master of the [[Great]] Tzu En [[Monastery]], {{Wiki|Beijing}}, 1959.
  
I-Tsing, A Record of the [[Buddhist]] [[Religion]] as Practiced in [[India]] and in the Malay Archipelago (C.E. 671-695), tr. J. Takakusu, Oxford, 1996.
+
[[I-Tsing]], A Record of the [[Buddhist]] [[Religion]] as Practiced in [[India]] and in the {{Wiki|Malay}} Archipelago (C.E. 671-695), tr. J. [[Takakusu]], [[Oxford]], 1996.
  
D. Klimburg-Salter, The {{Wiki|Kingdom}} of Bāmiyān. [[Buddhist Art]] and {{Wiki|Culture}} of the Hundu Kush, Naples and {{Wiki|Rome}}, 1989.
+
D. Klimburg-Salter, The {{Wiki|Kingdom}} of Bāmiyān. [[Buddhist Art]] and {{Wiki|Culture}} of the Hundu Kush, [[Naples]] and {{Wiki|Rome}}, 1989.
  
 
S. Konow, Karoshthi Inscriptions with the Exception of those of [[Aśoka]], Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum, II/1, {{Wiki|Calcutta}}, 1929.
 
S. Konow, Karoshthi Inscriptions with the Exception of those of [[Aśoka]], Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum, II/1, {{Wiki|Calcutta}}, 1929.
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(Boris A. Litvinsky)
 
(Boris A. Litvinsky)

Latest revision as of 18:06, 16 February 2024

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The spread of Buddhism beyond the Indian subcontinent accelerated under the Mauryan king Aśoka (r. 265–238 BCE). An active proponent of Buddhism, he sent out religious missions.

 

BUDDHISM

iv. BUDDHIST SITES IN AFGHANISTAN AND CENTRAL ASIA

The spread of Buddhism beyond the Indian subcontinent accelerated under the Mauryan king Aśoka (r. 265–238 BCE; see BUDDHISM i). An active proponent of Buddhism, he sent out religious missions and stated some of the Buddhist principles in inscriptions. In his Edict XIII he wrote that he had dispatched missionaries to other peoples, in particular to the Kambojas, an Iranian people, and to the Yonas, that is, the Greeks (see AŠOKA and INDIA ii). This is confirmed by the finds in southern Afghanistan, in the vicinity of modern Laḡmān, of three Aramaic inscriptions of Aśoka; Greek, Aramaic, and bilingual Greek-Aramaic texts were found in Kandahar. This shows that Buddhism appeared in Afghanistan as early as the mid-3rd century BCE. According to the Pali Mahāvaṃsa chronicle, Buddhist monks from the countries of Pallavabhogga and Alasandra arrived at the court of King Duṭṭhagāmani (r. 101-77 BCE) to take part in a Buddhist festival (Mahāvaṃsa 29.38-39). Alasandra was probably Alexandria in the Caucasus, in the region of modern Kabul, while Pallavabhogga lay on the eastern frontier of Parthia—in Margiana or a Parthian subject state in Afghanistan (Litvinsky, 1967, pp. 88-91 with bibliography). Evidence provided by the Greek philosopher, geographer, and historian Alexander Polyhistor (105-35 BCE) about the Samanioi (Sk. šramana) Bactrians shows that, as early as the 1st century BCE, Buddhism was already widespread in Bactria (Lévi, 1891, p. 36; Asmussen 1965, p. 135). Later it penetrated other Central Asian regions, reached Xinjiang from Central Asia and Kashmir, and continued moving eastward. A Buddhist preacher, An Shih-kao, who came from one of the Parthian possessions (probably Margiana), reached China in 148 CE and began translating Buddhist books into Chinese. We know about several generations of translators who reached China from the west; they included Yüeh-chi (that is, Bactrians), Sogdians, and Parthians. Buddhism came very early (according to a legend, during Aśoka’s life) to southern Xinjiang, in particular to Khotan, whose inhabitants used the Iranian Khotanese language. The date for the arrival of Buddhism there is given by a Tibetan chronicle as 84 BCE and appears probable (Emmerick, 1967, p. 23; Litvinsky, 1999, pp. 37-38). A 1st-2nd-century CE manuscript of the Buddhist canonical text, the Dharmapada, was found in Khotan, and so it is likely that other canonical works would have been in circulation there in that period (Brough, p. 24).

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It also follows that Buddhism must have arrived early in some other eastern Iranian areas besides Khotan, such as Nagarahāra, Arachosia, Kapiśa, Bactria, Parthia, and Sogdiana (see BUDDHISM i. and iii.). Of the numerous Buddhist ruins in these regions, the earliest are dated to the Kushan dynasty (1st-3rd centuries). Buddhist tradition describes Kaniṣka (r. 1st century CE), the most famous Kushan ruler, as a zealous Buddhist who took an active part in religious activities and built numerous Buddhist religious structures. His coinage carries images of Iranian and Hellenistic-Roman deities and—rarely—the Buddha. The Rabāṭak inscription made in Kaniṣka’s name (Sims-Williams and Cribb, pp. 77-79, 107-9) says nothing about the Buddha or Buddhist deities when dealing with his religious convictions.

In the 1st century BCE-1st century CE, Buddhism became an iconic religion (see Gandhāran art), and one of the earliest representations of the anthropomorphic Buddha is found on a gold token or temple coin from the Tillya-Tepe necropolis in Bactria (Fussman, 1987, pp. 71-72). Buddhist Gandhāran art spread not only to Afghanistan but also to the south of Central Asia and Xinjiang and created several schools across this vast territory. Gandhāran art, in individual works and cycles of works, functioned as an organic part of Buddhist constructions. These were, especially, vihāras (Buddhist monasteries), caityas (sacred places or objects), and stūpas (Buddhist commemorative monuments housing sacred relics of the Buddha or other saintly persons); their chief architectural and compositional ideas had originated in India, but then were adjusted to local climates, construction materials, and traditions of building and architecture. Each main type of Buddhist cultic building underwent a long evolution. In addition to freestanding Buddhist temples, etc., cave monasteries (likewise originally found in India) also became a local feature in Afghanistan, southern Central Asia, Xinjiang, and northern China.

Haḍḍa (ancient Nagarāhāra), near modern Jalālābād, was the site of one of the largest Buddhist centers in Afghanistan, and as such was visited and described by the Chinese pilgrims (such as Fa-hsien [ca. 337-ca. 422] and Hsüan-tsang [602-64]). There an area of about 15 km² remains covered with traces of numerous monasteries (Bāgh Gai, Deh Ghundi, Tepe Kāfirihā, Tepe Kalān, Tepe Shutur, Gan Nao, and others), large and small stūpas, sanctuaries, and artificial caves. The monasteries had square or rectangular courts surrounded by sanctuaries, cells, community halls, and other buildings. The center was occupied by a large stūpa and several small ones. Sometimes there were two courts, one lined with cells, the other with small sanctuaries. Next to the monasteries and between them there were numerous stūpas, caityas, and sculptures. The stūpas (there were over 500 of them) stood on multi-tier foundations with rich stucco or (rarely) stone decorative relief, architectural details including cornices, Corinthian columns, arches, etc., and rows of sculptural figures (sitting and standing Buddhas, other Buddhist and secular personages). The vihāras were similarly decorated. The art of Haḍḍa constitutes a special school of Gandhāran art, more free, more expressive and realistic than the art of the Gandhāra region. The sculptors more fully demonstrated their talent when presenting secular personages—being relatively free of canonic requirements in these cases—rather than deities; and the sculptured heads and figures are extraordinary beautiful (see Barthoux, 1930 and 1933; Mustamindi and Mustamindi, 1969; Rowland, 1971, pp. 27-33; Tarzi, 1976).

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There were other Buddhist centers in Nagarāhāra; at one of them, Bimārān, a gold reliquary with the earliest anthropomorphic representations of Buddha was found (see MASSON). In the Kabul-Kapiśa area, a series of monasteries with stūpas flourished in the 1st-3rd centuries CE and were decorated with sculptures analogous to those of Haḍḍa (sites include Šotorak, Qalʿa-ye Nāder, Top Dara, and Paitāva; see ; Hackin, 1933; Meunié, 1942 and 1959, pp. 115-27).

Also supporting the early date of Buddhism in Bactria is a ceramic reliquary from the Kunduz area; it carries a kharoṣṭhī inscription which says that there was a Buddhist vihāra in the vicinity and that the teaching of the Dharmaguptaka sect was widespread there. The inscription is dated to the 1st-2nd centuries CE (Fussman, 1974, pp. 58-61). A “Buddhist platform” at Sorḵ Kotal, dated, together with the statues, to the 2nd-3rd century CE, is an outstanding monument (Schlumberger, Le Berre, and Fussman, 1983, pp. 75-81). The foundation of a Buddhist monastery at Kunduz can be probably dated to the end of the Kushan period (Hackin, 1959, pp. 19-22). Additional Buddhist temples are found in Dilberjin, Haibak, and other places.

Systematic archeological research in northern Bactria (that is, north of the Amu Darya, in the south of modern Uzbekistan and Tajikistan) has revealed numerous Buddhist monuments, mainly concentrated at Termez. In the northwestern part of Termez proper, not far from the Amu Darya, there was a large Buddhist center with a cave monastery, Kara Tepe (Karā Tappe) and an adjacent freestanding monastery Fayaz Tepe (Fayyāż Tappe). The Kara Tepe monastery covered about 7 ha and consisted of a series of adjacent complexes dating from different periods. Many of them had an above-ground section as well as an underground. The underground part contained in the center a massive stone pillar (or two pillars), surrounded by a corridor and frequently with an inner chamber. In front of the platform at the entrance to the underground part, there was a surface construction in the form of a square court with colonnade, a stūpa, a water tank, and pedestals and niches for sculptures. There were also complexes with different plans, and some two-tiered constructions. Numerous artistic objects were found at Kara Tepe (stone and stucco sculptures, paintings), and stone architectural details. Over 150 Indian inscriptions in kharoṣṭhī and brāhmī scripts were recovered. Construction started in the 1st-2nd centuries CE, and the complex reached its peak in the 3rd-4th centuries before declining in the 5th-6th (Staviskiǐ, pp. 23-24).

The Fayaz Tepe monastery, 1 km away from Kara Tepe, consists of three adjacent parts with courts and surrounding rooms. There is a large chamber in the central section with walls covered by splendid polychrome paintings of figures of Buddhist personages, clay and stucco sculptures, and a Buddhist stone relief. Thirty-five Indian inscriptions were also found there. Outside the chamber was a stūpa, initially round, later reconstructed. The coins found at the site date it to the 1st century CE. Some of the art (the wall paintings) was added later, in the 3rd, or probably 4th, century (Al’baum, pp. 18-27).

Aluvihara-rock-cave-temple.jpg

A Buddhist complex was also found in Ayrtam on the Amu Darya, west of Termez. There was found a decorative limestone frieze attributed to the Kushan period, depicting male and female musicians ornately dressed and garlanded, with drum, lute, and harp—a spectacular evidence of Gandhāran art spreading to Bactria. The Buddhist chapel and a stūpa at Zar Tepe (25 km from Termez) should also be mentioned. A town now known as Dalverzin Tepe on the border between the Surkhan (Sorḵān) and Hissar (Heṣār) valleys in Uzbekistan was another large Buddhist center; sanctuaries are found both inside and outside the town. In the place where the Kafirnigan River flows into the Amu Darya there was a Buddhist monastery of Kushan times called Uštur-mullo. Its stūpa was faced (as at Ayrtam) with stone slabs carrying reliefs; inside, the monastery was decorated with paintings. Finally, there were also Buddhist constructions in the city of Marv in the late Parthian period (1st-2nd centuries CE).

As was noted above, Buddhism reached Khotan at an early stage as well. What remains of Buddhist constructions can be seen in several places of the southern oases of Xinjiang, the easternmost of them being Mirān. A large Buddhist center existed there with about two dozen sanctuaries and monasteries scattered over an area of 4 x 5 km². Parts of them are well-preserved, especially rectangular, domed sanctuaries with round rooms inside with round stūpas. The constructions were decorated with paintings, sculptures, and reliefs. The paintings are clearly of the Gandhāran type, although there is an opinion that they were executed by the same masters who made sculptures for the Buddhist constructions of Swāt (Pakistan). The earliest constructions and the paintings at Mirān are dated to the 3rd century C.E. (Stein, I, pp. 456-543). The Buddhist sanctuary in Karadong is a contemporary or even earlier structure (mid-3rd century CE) with splendid Buddhist paintings that display Greek features and have a similarity to Gandhāran art (Keriya, pp. 82-105). “During the first through the third centuries C.E., the Buddhist Church was undergoing fundamental changes in the theological concepts and social bases” (Rosenfield, 1967, p. 220). Precisely at that time the Mahāyana school of Buddhism developed, although the Hīnayāna school preserved its positions in many areas. These religious processes, common to Buddhism everywhere, were also typical of Nagarāhāra, Kapiśa, Bactria, Khotan and the neighboring regions. There is information that people of Bactrian-Tokhari background worked actively on theological problems—such as the Buddhist theologian Ghoṣaka, who was born and worked in Tokharistan. He represented the Vaibhāṣika school that was connected with Tokharistan and was a branch of the Sarvāstivāda school, which was widely accepted in Afghanistan and Central Asia, including Khotan. It belonged to the Hīnayāna, yet some of the elements of the Sarvāstivāda doctrine were connected with Mahāyāna (Bailey, pp. 400-3; Bagchi, pp. 32-33; Litvinsky, 1968, p. 9).

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Several Hīnayāna schools or sects were represented in Afghanistan: Mahāsāṃghika, Sarvāstivādin, Dharmaguptaka, and others (Konow, pp. 265 ;ff.; Fussman, p. 61). Epigraphic materials from northern Bactria directly refer to the Mahāsāṃghika school. Toward the end of the Kushan period there appeared proponents of the Sāṃmatiya school as well as, according to certain authors, of the Sarvāstivādin school (Vertogradova, 1995, pp. 41-43). There was no rigid dividing line between these schools and the Mahāyana school; their contemporaries looked at the proponents of Mahāsāṃghika, Sarvāstivādin, and Dharmaguptaka as Hīnayāna followers, yet they also promoted Mahāyāna (Bareau, pp. 303-5). Theological distinctions apart, not infrequently followers of Hīnayāna and Mahāyāna lived and studied in the same monasteries.

Buddhism first penetrated the southern Xinjiang oases, Khotan in particular, in the form of Hīnayāna (especially the schools of Sarvāstivāda and Mahāsāṃghika). In the 3rd century CE, Khotan became known as a Mahāyāna center. There a Chinese Mahāyānist discovered, soon after 260, a complete Sanskrit text of Prajñā-pāramitā-sutra. Later the role of Mahāyāna in Khotan became even greater (Litvinsky, 1999, pp. 37-41).

After the Kushans, Buddhism developed intensively in the provinces of Afghanistan, including the Iranian-populated areas. One of the best-known monuments of this period of Sasanian and Hephthalite domination (3rd-6th centsuries) was the Buddhist center in Bāmiān, where the Sasanian artistic influences that appear in Buddhist art are especially notable. The valley of Bāmiān is 250 km west of Kabul; at its northern boundary, at the foot of the Kuh-e Bābā range, a cliff face about 1,800 m long was honeycombed by the monks with some 750 artificial caves. The caves had intricate architectural designs and magnificent Buddhist wall paintings; only two contained stūpas. Also built into the cliff were two standing Buddhas, 38 and 53 m high, in huge niches excavated in the soft rock; these were completely destroyed by the Taliban regime in March 2001. Initially there were six figures: three colossi and three smaller statues. A “reclining” Buddha, showing him in the moment of “extinction” or “blowing-out” (parinirvāna), that is, his demise, was several times larger than the standing Buddhas (Hsüan-tsang et al.,, pp. 50-51). The cores of the standing figures were hewn in the rock, then overlaid with several layers of stucco, in which the body and robes were modeled. The hands were sculpted over wooden armatures and attached with wooden dowels. The two giant niches, like the other, smaller ones in the cliff, were decorated with paintings. The sculptures too were polychrome; initially they were gilded and encrusted with precious stones. There are remnants of a stūpa next to the cliff.

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All the caves were small. Many of then were completely covered with Buddhist paintings, and there was at least one Buddhist statue in them, perhaps more. None of the caves could have been a vihāra; few of them could be used as meeting-rooms for the community of monks (sangha); there are no traces of permanent residence. It seems that the monks lived in the vihāra at the foot of the cliff (mentioned by the famous Chinese Buddhist traveler, scholar, and translator Hsüan-tsang), while the caves were mainly used for ritual worship or meditation. Opinions about the dates differ: the colossi probably date to the 6th century, and the monastic complex to the 7th and 8th centuries (Godard et al.; Hackin and Carl; Tarzi, 1977; Klimburg-Salter).

About 4 km from Bāmiān, the tributary Fulādi valley contains over fifty artificial caves that preserved Buddhist paintings (later than those of Bāmiān) on their walls and ceilings. In another tributary valley, Kakrāk, there is a standing Buddha, about 7 m high and about 100 artificial caves with wall paintings. Halfway between Bāmiān and Kabul, in the Ḡorband valley, in the area called Fundukistan (Fondoqestān), there is a Buddhist monastery. ;Its central court with a stūpa is surrounded with vaulted niches. Inside them were groups of magnificent statues, while the walls were covered with paintings. Benjamin Rowland described these works as showing a “formula of refined religious expression” while the entire composition “must have given the effect of a kind of a religious peep-show, in which, as on a stage, the visitor obtained a glimpse of celestial realms” (Rowland, 1971, pp. 45-46; for a description, see Hackin, Carl, and Meunié, pp. 49-58). Twenty km from Kabul, the Gul Dara monastery in the Kapiśa area was built in the 5th or 6th century; it has one courtyard, and the stūpas lie outside the monastery proper (Fussman and Le Berre).

Among the numerous other Buddhist monuments of Afghanistan dated to the 5th-8th centuries, Tepe Sardar (Tappe Sardār) at Ḡazni is notable. It is a monastery complex with a huge stūpa and numerous smaller ones, sanctuaries with paintings, reliefs, and sculptures, including a 15-m long reclining Buddha. There is also a Hindu shrine with sculptures (Taddei and Verardi, pp. 33-136).

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Buddhism retained its positions in northern Afghanistan and in the south of Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, at the time of the Arab conquest called Tokharistan (Toḵārestān), not Bactria or (Mid. Pers.) Baxl. Several Buddhist constructions were discovered in its southern (Afghan) part (see, e.g., Hackin, Carl, and Meunié, pp. 19-22; Foucher, pp. 123-29), such as Taḵt-e Rostam near Balḵ—a site with ruins of an early medieval Buddhist monastery—and Tappe Rostam with a stūpa. According to Hsüan-tsang, in the first quarter of the 7th century there were about 100 Buddhist monasteries and about 3,000 monks in Balḵ, the capital of Tokharistan. A new monastery (Novasanghārāma) with gilded statues and halls encrusted with precious stones was built not far from the city. Known in Arabic and Persian sources as Nawbahār, it was destroyed after the Arab conquest (Barthold, Turkestan³, p. 77; see also BARMAKIDS).

In his travel notes, Hsüan-tsang wrote under the year 628 that there were Buddhist monasteries also in northern Tokharistan; for example, in Ta-mi (the city now called Termez) there were about a dozen monasteries and about 1,000 monks. In 726, Huei-ch’ao, another Chinese Buddhist pilgrim, wrote about the Tokhari principality Ko-to-lo or Khuttal in modern southern Tajikistan: “The king, the nobles and the people worship the faithful in triratna [see above]; many monasteries and monks are followers of the Hinayāna school” (tr. Fuchs, pp. 452-53). In this territory in the eastern part of northern Tokharistan, Buddhist construction dating to the 7th-8th centuries were discovered. The Adjina Tepe monastery was studied completely; it belonged to the two-courtyard type with the main and smaller stūpas in the center of one of the yards enclosed with corridors; the latter were decorated with niches with sculptures of seated Buddhas and a 14-m-high figure of the reclining Buddha. The courtyard of the other part was encircled with monastic cells and other premises (Litvinsky and Zeimal’). Other sites included the Khisht Tepe monastery, the Kalai Kafirnigan and Kafyr Kala sanctuaries, and the stūpas of the second period of Uštur-mullo (Litvinsky, 1981, pp. 35-66; Litvinskiǐ and Solov’ev, pp. 21-22, 60-62, 78-80).

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The city of Marv was another large Buddhist center that yielded Buddhist buildings and manuscripts (Pugachenkova and Usmanova, pp. 51-82). Buddhist structures were also found in Ferghana (see FARḠĀNA) and especially in Semirechie (Bulatova, pp. 52-77; Goryacheva and Peregudova, pp. 168-83). Buddhist monuments of the Islamic period were studied in Semirechie and Marv; in Sogd, according to written sources and archeological finds, Buddhism was not widespread.

Buddhism was extremely popular in Khotan. According to the Chinese Buddhist pilgrim Fa-hsien, in 401 all dwellers of Khotan were Buddhists. He wrote about 14 large and numerous small monasteries (Fa-hsien, p. 18). According to Tibetan sources in the 8th-9th centuries, there were several thousand large, medium, and small monasteries and sanctuaries, some of them in private houses (Thomas, ed. and tr., p. 105; Emmerick 1967, pp. 25-31). In the Khotan principality, archeologists (especially M. Aurel Stein) discovered and excavated several sanctuaries, stūpas, and monasteries of the 5th-8th centuries. These were decorated with wall paintings and sculptures—Rawak, Farhad-Beg Yaliaki, Dandān-öiliq, Khadalik, Balawaste, and others. These continued and developed the compositional ideas born in India and radically transformed them (as in Rawak; for a detailed survey and bibliography see Yaldiz, pp. 186-219; Rowland, 1974, pp. 121-39).

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Religious doctrine was further developed in the post-Kushan period and is reflected in numerous works dated to this period. Hināyāna and numerous other schools (Bareau) still existed; according to Hsüan-tsang, in the 7th century followers of Hināyāna comprised nearly two-thirds of the Indian monks; the remaining one-third were Mahāyāna followers. Evolution and development of Buddhist theological thought were not limited to India proper—they also occurred in the Iranian-populated territories. In each region, Buddhism had specific features. In Afghanistan and Central Asia, it came into contact with other religions of the Iranians: Zoroastrianism, Manicheism, Christianity, Judaism, and Hinduism borrowed from India. This gave rise to various syncretistic beliefs, a process reflected in such religious centers as Tepe Sardār and in Zoroastrian and Sasanian influence on Buddhist iconography (Rowland, 1972, pp. 379-82). Certain Hināyāna schools (especially the Sārvāstivādin, Mahāsāṃghika, and Lokottaravādin) developed the ideas that promoted Mahāyāna doctrines (Bareau, pp. 290-382). There was no insurmountable wall between the two Buddhist trends; late in the 8th century, a Buddhist pilgrim had to admit that it was hard to identify some of the schools as belonging to Hināyāna or Mahāyāna (I-Tsing, pp. 13-15). In their descriptions of the states of Afghanistan and Central Asia (especially Kapiśa, Bāmiān, and Tokharistan) Hsüan-tsang (ca. 628-32) and later Huei-ch’ao (726) wrote that the rulers, nobility, and common people were all zealous Buddhists, and that at many monasteries the monks included scholars of Buddhist theology. Balkh was even known as “Little Rājagṛha,” after one of the holy Buddhist centers in India, the place where, according to tradition, the first Buddhist council took place after the death of Šakyamuni Buddha. Hināyāna was widespread in Tokharistan; according to Hsüan-tsang, Lokottaravādin, a Hināyāna school, was popular in Bāmiān; there were also preachers of the Mahāsāṃghika school there; and Huei-ch’ao reported about Mahāyāna and Hināyāna supporters. Hsüan-tsang wrote that in Kapiśa the majority followed the Mahāyāna school and that there were also learned monks of the Sarvāstivādin and Mahiśāsana schools. Later, Huei-ch’ao reported that the Hināyāna school predominated there (Hsüan-tsang et al., pp. 44, 49-45; Hui-li, pp. 49, 53-57; Fuchs, pp. 448-49). Fragments of 6th-8th-century manuscripts related to the Mahāsāṃghika and Sarvastivādin schools came to light in Bāmiān (Lévi, 1932, pp. 2-8). “These dates and sectarian identifications become particularly important when coupled with the fact that the manuscripts were written in scripts and languages from India, Khotan, and Kucha. These Central Asian religious centers were connected to Bamian by trade routes. Thus ... we can discern a parallel between the cultural and religious milieu of Bamian and intellectual climate of major Central Asian Buddhist centers in the sixth through eight centuries” (Klimburg-Salter, p. 58).

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Manuscripts on birch bark were found in Tokharistan: a vinaya (one of the three divisions of the Buddhist scriptures) fragment from Zang Tepe and small fragments from Kafyr Kaly in brāhmī script (7th-8th centuries). A Sanskrit manuscript in brāhmī, of which 150 pages came down to us, was found in Bayram-Ali (at Marv). It was either a concise exposition of certain Buddhist works or a preacher’s notebook. The colophon indicates that the manuscript and its author belonged to the Sarvāstivādin school (Vorob’eva-Desyatovskaya, pp. 63-89).

At that time Khotan was the largest center of Iranian Buddhism (Emmerick, 1983, pp. 962-64) and possessed a considerable number of Buddhist Sanskrit works that had arrived from India; from Khotan these were passed on to China. Mahāyāna became more popular in Khotan than it was in Tokharistan; at the time of Hsüan-tsang its domination was uncontested, although there remained Hināyāna supporters. This domination became even more obvious in the 8th century (Fuchs, p. 457). A Tibetan chronicle of the 8th-9th century compares the number of Mahāyāna supporters with the number of hairs on a horse’s body and the number of Hināyāna supporters, with the number of hairs on its ear (Thomas, ed. and tr., p. 311). For a long time, the Khotanese learned Buddhism from Sanskrit works, Sanskrit being the liturgical language. It was approaching the 10th century when they created a Khotanese Buddhist literature that included translations of the major Sanskrit Buddhist works. Parts of some works reveal local interpretations of Buddhist doctrines. Original works also appeared (e.g., the Book of Zambasta); these were neither expositions of Sanskrit compositions nor translations (Emmerick, ed., 1968; 1977, pp. 65-74). The Buddhist doctrines these works contained reflected the religious situation in Khotan (Williams, pp. 114-15; for a detailed analysis of Khotanese Buddhism, see Litvinsky, 1999, pp. 38-54).

Many of the Sogdians who lived in Xinjiang, China, and Mongolia were Buddhists; settlements and even towns were populated by them. Buddhism for them was one of the major religions, in contrast to its standing in their homeland. Numerous Sogdian Buddhist manuscripts were discovered, the absolute majority of them being translations of Chinese Buddhist works of the Mahāyāna school dated to the 7th-10th century (see Utz, with detailed bibliography).

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Buddhism thus played an important role in the history and culture of several Iranian peoples. It brought not only the Indian religion, but also philosophy, literature, and art within the Iranians’ reach. It served a bridge of sorts between them and Indian culture as a whole; and it intensified cultural exchange between Central Asia and India (Bagchi; Litvinskiǐ, 1996 and 1997).

Finally, the Buddhist heritage can be discerned among the Iranians in the Islamic epoch as well. In the early Islamic period, descendants of Buddhist religious figures filled high-ranking posts (see BARMAKIDS). There is an opinion that Buddhism greatly influenced the ideology and practice of early eastern Sufism. Madrasas, higher Islamic educational institutes, appeared in the 10th century precisely in Central Asia and were probably in some respects genetically connected with Buddhist monasteries. Since the 10th century New Persian poetry has preserved the word bot “Buddha”, meaningidol, beauty, the beloved”; and other Buddhist traces can be found in the literature, art, and culture of the Iranians in the Muslim period (Litvinsky, 1968, pp. 66-67; Gimaret; Melikian-Chirvani; Scott).

See also buddhism ii. IN ISLAMIC TIMES; AFGHANISTAN viii and ix.

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(Boris A. Litvinsky)

Source

www.iranicaonline.org