China’s first emperor banned Buddhism, claims expert
May 12th, 2009 - 12:40 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )
New Delhi, May 12 (ANI): A researcher has said that the first emperor of a united China could go down in history not only for the Great Wall or the terra cotta army of guards and horses, but also for his attempt to crush Buddhism by banning it.
“China’s first and most influential history book, the Historical Records, stated clearly that Emperor Qin Shihuang (259 BC-210 BC) strictly banned Buddhism and Buddhist temples,” said Han Wei, a noted researcher with Shaanxi Provincial Institute of Archeology.
According to the Historical Records, the ban went alongside the emperor’s major military strategies including the deportation of the invading Huns, and applied far beyond the ancient capital Xianyang in today’s Xi’an to cover the whole country.
Though the book, written between 104 B.C. to 91 B.C., provided no evidence of temples destroyed or monks exiled, Han said he believed the ban had been very effective.
“Buddhism never appeared again in historical documents until 2 B.C.,” Han said.
Emperor Qin Shihuang’s ban on Buddhism indicated the religion was already popular in China’s interior regions in his reign, said Han, whose thesis on the subject was published rercently in Xi’an.
Han recommended that textbooks be changed to reflect his discovery.
Historians generally believed Buddhism was introduced into China around 67 A.D. in Han Dynasty that succeeded Qin.
But, Han held it must have spread to China from today’s Xinjiang Ugyur Autonomous Region and central Asian countries, along the ancient Silk Road, more than two centuries earlier.
Noted Silk Road archaeologist Wang Jianxin said that Han’s research finding, based on linguistic, historical as well as archeological studies, sounded “reasonable”.
“Another scholar raised the same hypothesis in the early 1900s,but couldn’t provide sufficient evidence,” Wang said. (ANI)
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Tags: ancient silk road, archeological studies, archeology, asian countries, autonomous region, buddhism, buddhist temples, deportation, early 1900s, emperor qin shihuang, han dynasty, historical documents, history book, interior regions, jianxin, military strategies, monks, provincial institute, terra cotta army, xianyang