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Chinese History - Tang and Five Dynasties (618~960)

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Tang, Five Dynasties, Ten States
religion

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Maturity and Decline of Buddhism

Chang'an was not only the capital of the vast Tang empire, but also a center where different cultures of whole Asia came together. It was the eastern end of the long caravan ways that led to the Near East ("near" the European standpoint). Buddhism once came along the Silkroad to China, and during the Tang Dynasty merchants brought Islam (Yisilanjiao 伊斯蘭教) Arabia and Persia. But even Zarathustrian (Xianjiao 祆教) and Manichean thought (Monijiao 摩尼教) Persia and Nestorian Christianity (Jingjiao 景教) reached China and found followers and believers. Even Jews were found under the foreign merchants that came to China.
Daoism (Daojiao 道教) was no state protected religion in China. The nature-near thought was held privately by many social classes, especially by the aristocracy of the Yangtse valley. During the Tang Dynasty, Taoism was held in high esteem by the court because the surname of the Taoist philosopher-god Laozi 老子 was Li 李, like the surname of the Tang emperors.
Buddhism (Fojiao 佛教) had reached its maturity at the begin of Tang Dynasty. All social groups in China showed believers in the foreign religion. But Buddhism had already become a Chinese religion by several steps of assimilation. Clerics and monks were not longer seen as independent state, law and society. Although Tang emperors generally were more fond of Taoism, most great personalities also protected Buddhism, especially empress Wu who sponsored some of the great works at the Longmen caves. But several reasons led to the great proscriptions of the 9th century, especially in 845, among them the accumulated wealth by the monasteries and the case that many people entered the Buddhist community to escape military service and tax duty. A third reason was the revival of Confucianism whose representants wrote manifests against the foreign religion, accusing it of destroying the social system of duty and rights of upper and lower persons.
The Tang era was the great age of pilgrimages to India, the cradle of Buddhism. The most important pilgrim was the translator Xuanzang 玄奘 (traveled 629-645) who brought back many sutras and created rules for translating the sutras into Chinese. Xuanzang travelled by land and wrote a report of the countries he saw, the Da Tang Xiyu Ji 大唐西域記 "Report of the regions west of Great Tang". His adventures became the object of many theatre plays and novels, like the famous Ming time novel Xiyouji 西游記 "Journey to the west". Another pilgrim who went to India and Ceylon by ship, was Yijing 義淨 who started his journey in 671. Chinese reports are the only sources we have about long periods of Indian history. Pilgrims did not only go to India, but Tang Buddhism produced an intensive flow of missionaries to and Korea and Japan. Chinese monks went to Japan, like Jianzhen 鑒真 (Japanese: Kanjin), and Japanese monks spent years in China, like Kukai 空海 (Chinese: Konghai), the founder of the Shingon School 真言宗 (Chinese: Zhenyan), and Ennin 圓仁 (Chinese: Yuanren) who wrote an impressive diary about his adventures in China.
With its features becoming more and more Chinese, Buddhism in China developed its own schools or sects (zong 宗 or jiao 教). The most impertant schools are the Pure Land School (Jingtu 淨土教) that focuses on the simple Amitabha cult; the Tiantai School 天台教 was founded by Zwiyi 智顗; Fazang 法藏 founded the Garland School 華嚴教, basing on the "Garland Sutra" Huayanjing 華嚴經; a very special school that renounced dogma, asceticism, rites and the traditional monastery system, was the Chan School 禪教 (better known with its Japanese pronunciation Zen), founded by Bodhidharma and Huineng 慧能. The believers of Chan relied on riddles and spontaneous actions to achieve enlightenment. It was the Chan School that also developed the worldwide known fighting techniques (gongfu 功夫, "Kung-fu") in the Shaolin Monastery 少林寺. For more about the Buddhist schools see the Buddhism chapter.
Other important Buddhist literature was the encyclopedia Fayuan Zhulin 法園珠林 "Forest of Gems in the Garden of Law" by Daoshi 道世, and the "Great Cloud Sutra" Dayunjing 大雲經 (sanskr.: Mahamegha-sutra) that Tang emperors had prayed for the benefit of the state.
The closing of the Central Asia routes by Arabs and Tibets in the 10th century, along with the persecutions of the 9th century, ended the great age of Buddhism in China. It became a silent religion, like Taoism, and could keep its many followers among the populace until today.

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Anxi 安西節度使 (Qiucizhen 龜茲鎮)
South:
Zhexi 浙西觀察使 (Runzhou 潤州)
Zhedong 浙東觀察使 (Yuezhou 越州)
Xuan-She 宣歙觀察使 (Xuanzhou 宣州)
Huainan 淮南節度使 (Yangzhou 揚州)
E-Yue 鄂嶽觀察使 (Wuchang 武昌節度使; Ezhou 鄂州)
Jiangxi 江西觀察使 (Hongzhou 洪州)
Fuzhou 福州觀察使 (Fujian 福建)
Jingnan 荊南節度使 (Jianglingfu 江陵府)
Hunan 湖南觀察使 (Tanzhou 潭州)
Shannan-Xidao 山南西道節度使 (Xingyuanfu 興元府)
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Qianzhou 黔州觀察使 (Qianzhou 黔州)
Jiannan-Dongchuan 劍南東川節度使 (Zizhou 梓州)
Jiannan-Xichuan 劍南西川節度使 (Chengdufu 成都府)
Gui 貴管經略使 (Guizhou 貴州)
Rong 容管經略使 (Rongzhou 容州)
Yong 邕管經略使 (Yongzhou 邕州)
Lingnan 嶺南節度使 (Guangzhou 廣州)
Annan 安南經略使 (Jiaozhou 交州)The neighboring regions of the Tang empire were administered as protectorate (duhufu 都護府) after the pacification by the Tang armies. There was an eastern, northern, western and southern protectorate (Andong 安東, Anbei 安北, Anxi 安西 and Annan duhufu 安南都護府; the last designation is the origin of the name Annam for northern Vietnam) whose seats changed by time. There existed also a handful of smaller protectorates in the north, like Yanran 燕然, Chanyu 單于, and Beiting 北庭. The citystates of the Tarim Basin along the silkroad became Chinese garrisons, especially the four cities of Yanqi 焉耆, Qiuci