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Chinese description of Ancient South Asia

ghaja

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Fahein who is also known as Faxian was a Chinese traveller who had come to India to visit the holy Buddhist places and to collect sacred works connected with the life and the teachings of the Buddha. He came here in the beginning of the 5th century A.D. He came to India by land and returned by the sea-route. He started from China in 399 A.D. and crossed through the Gobi desert. He suffered great hardships while travelling through Khotan, Taskhand, Pamir, Swat and Gandhara before reaching Peshwar and Taxila. After visiting the holy places in the North-West of India he travelled through such places as Mathura, Kanauj, Kausambi, Pataliputra and Kasi etc. He also undertook pilgrimage to the holy places of the Buddhists like Kapilvastu, Gaya, Sarnath and Kushinagar. On his return journey, he visited Ceylon, Java, Sumatra before he reached home in 414 A.D. In India, he stayed for about 6 years (405-411 A.D) whatever he observed and recorded here is being summed up below:
Fahein (Fahsien) has lavishly praised, the administration of the Gupta Dynasty. He says: the administration was well-organized and liberal. The officials least interfered in the private affairs of the people. There was freedom of travel and they were not forced to attend to any magistrate or his rule. If they desired to go, they would go, if they liked to stop, they would stop. Punishments were mild. In most cases, fines were considered sufficient. The capital punishment was never awarded. Only in case of persistent criminals their right hands were chopped off. Public highways were safe from thieves and highwaymen. Fahein himself travelled widely without ever being robed. Taxes were low and people could easily pay them . Land was the chief source of revenue which was collected both in cash and kind. Government officials were paid wages in cash, which were both sufficient and promptly regular. It made them honest and they never did wrong to the people or accepted bribes.
Fahein says that the people were rich, prosperous and happy. They excelled in charity and vied with one another. People possessed high moral and were afraid of doing any sin. They had built several chartable rest-houses where the wearied travelers could stay for rest. They had also built charitable hospitals where the poor were given free treatment besides food and clothing. People were mostly vegetarians and practiced ahimsa. Fahein writes, “Throughout the whole country, the people do not kill any living thing, nor drink any intoxicating liquor, nor wine, or eat onions. Only the Chandalas practiced hunting and ate animals flesh. They lived outside the city bounds. They had to seek permission before entering the city lest other people should get polluted by their touch. India had a prosperous trade.Foreign trade was carried through the ports of Broach, Cambay and Sopara.
Fahein was a religious visitor and a holyman. Therefore, he gave more attention to the religious conditions of his times. He writes: Buddhism flourished in the border provinces of the Punjab, Bengal and Mathura. The people followed the principle of Ahimsa and honoured the Buddhist monks. Fahein nowhere observed hat Buddhism was declining. Nevertheless it is clear from his other observations that Hinduism was gaining popularity. His other observations that important Buddhist places like Gaya, Sarnath, Kapilvastu, and Kushinagar were decaying in importance sufficient to prove that gradually the religion of the Buddha was declining. Though the rulers of the Gupta Empire were Hindus and built beautiful temples for the Hindu gods they observed tolerance towards other religions and treated them with equal care. Protection was offered to the Buddhist and the Jains as well.
 
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Xuanzang also made a similar journey, starting from the heartland of Chinese civilization (Zhongyuan)... across the Gobi desert, across the mighty Himalayas, into the Indian subcontinent.

Even today, with good roads and GPS software on my phone, I still wouldn't make such a journey on foot.

Imagine walking non-stop for 17 years, across such treacherous terrain, into unknown lands.
 
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Xuanzang also made a similar journey, starting from the heartland of Chinese civilization (Zhongyuan)... across the Gobi desert, across the mighty Himalayas, into the Indian subcontinent.

Even today, with good roads and GPS software on my phone, I still wouldn't make such a journey on foot.

Imagine walking non-stop for 17 years, across such treacherous terrain, into unknown lands.
Yes you are right
Both of them had an incredible willpower.
When Fahien reached eastern India where Buddha lived tears filled his eyes and
he stated: "Buddha formerly lived here, I Fahien born at a time too late to meet Buddha
can only gaze upon his traces."
 
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Xuanzang also made a similar journey, starting from the heartland of Chinese civilization (Zhongyuan)... across the Gobi desert, across the mighty Himalayas, into the Indian subcontinent.

Even today, with good roads and GPS software on my phone, I still wouldn't make such a journey on foot.

Imagine walking non-stop for 17 years, across such treacherous terrain, into unknown lands.
I hope its not rude to ask.
Are you a Buddhist?
 
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I hope its not rude to ask.
Are you a Buddhist?

The only truly religious people in China are the ones burning themselves, since he's still here I assume not. Oh and it's not rude to ask, Chinese belief system and the western not the same, we have no priest class because there is no need.
 
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The only truly religious people in China are the ones burning themselves, since he's still here I assume not. Oh and it's not rude to ask, Chinese belief system and the western not the same, we have no priest class because there is no need.

I heard Chinese people don't have religions they have culture. And majority follow Cufusiouss/Buddha's/Taoism's teachings and for them that is their culture/religion.
 
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The only truly religious people in China are the ones burning themselves, since he's still here I assume not. Oh and it's not rude to ask, Chinese belief system and the western not the same, we have no priest class because there is no need.
How many Chinese people are Buddhists?
 
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I hope its not rude to ask.
Are you a Buddhist?

My parents are both Chinese Buddhists.

I personally am an Atheist, but in cultural terms I still practice rituals of Ancestor worship (during the Qingming festival for instance), and still give my respects to Buddhist deities such as Guanyin and of course Buddha himself.
 
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How many Chinese people are Buddhists?

Really? It's hard to say, It's not like Christian where if you are a christian you are a christian.

In Western terms, you know how you guys say Destiny? Fate? Well that's as far as Chinese beliefs go. Some may be true Buddhists though. We prey in the way you guys wish good luck. Not as a confession or something like that.

We don't follow any confucius or Taoism. These are not the same as say a religious belief, it's more like how you guys belief in Freedom we believe in confucius, it's a way of life, not really a belief system in the western way of thinking.
 
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The rule of Chandragupta II is often referred to as the Golden Age of India. Here is a metallurgical masterpiece from that era, 1500 yrs have passed and this thing still hasnt rusted.

QtubIronPillar.JPG
 
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Really? It's hard to say, It's not like Christian where if you are a christian you are a christian.

In Western terms, you know how you guys say Destiny? Fate? Well that's as far as Chinese beliefs go. Some may be true Buddhists though. We prey in the way you guys wish good luck. Not as a confession or something like that.

We don't follow any confucius or Taoism. These are not the same as say a religious belief, it's more like how you guys belief in Freedom we believe in confucius, it's a way of life, not really a belief system in the western way of thinking.
I see, thanks for clarifying.
 
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Xuanzang travelled as far as Afghanistan. He has described the Bamiyan Buddhas in his memoirs.
 
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