Buddhism:
- Siddhartha Gautama, who lived from approximately 563 B.C.E. to 483 B.C.E., became an important axial-age [Philosopher Karl Jaspers calls the period around 600 B.C.E. when major religions and philosophies emerged the Axial Age because axial represents the core ideas around which a society revolves] thinker in India
- He was raised as a prince in a small state near present-day Nepal
- After living a sheltered life, he decided to leave the palace in search of answers to such questions as:
- Why is there so much suffering in the world?
- Is there a way out of suffering?
- After meditating under a Bodhi tree, the prince reached enlightenment and became known as the Buddha (enlightened one)
- The Buddha made a crucial decision that helped to transform his ideas from the thoughts of one man into a world religion: He decided to teach what he had learned to others
- The Buddha taught that there were four noble truths:
- All life is suffering.
- Suffering is caused by desire.
- There is a way out of suffering.
- The way out of suffering is to follow the Eightfold Path.
a)The Eightfold Path includes right understanding, purpose, speech, conduct, livelihood, effort, awareness, and concentration
- The idea was that if you want to stop suffering, you must stop desiring, and if you want to stop desiring, you must live in a righteous manner by following the Eightfold Path
- The ultimate goal for Buddhists is to reach nirvana, which is the release from the cycles of reincarnation and the achievement of union with the universe
- Buddhism took the central ideas of Hinduism such as dharma, karma, and samsara, but then altered them significantly
- According to Buddhism, people did not need the rituals of the Brahmins
- Gods and goddesses are not necessary – everyone can seek enlightenment on her own, and no one is an outcast by birth (challenging the caste system, very important to India.)
- There is, it espouses, complete equality among all believers
- Buddhism was a religion that ‘hit the road.’
- The followers of the Buddhists acted as missionaries spreading his message.
- These ideas particularly appealed to the low-caste Hindus as well as women.
- The Mauryan emperor Asoka actively encouraged the spread of Buddhism.
- Back at home in India, however, some Buddhist beliefs were absorbed into Hinduism, which remained the dominant religion.
- Buddhism traveled to Asia, however, along the Silk Roads, where it met with great success.
- It later went on to influence Central Asia, China, Japan, Korea, and Southeast Asia.
- As it spread, it would blend with the native ideas of the lands it encountered (syncretism).
- It was its flexibility and its message of universal acceptance that helped make Buddhism a major world religion.
- From the start, Buddhism was a missionary religion.
- Theravada Buddhism, the stricter form of the religion, spread to Southeast Asia, while Mahayana Buddhism spread to Central and East Asia.
- The latter form focused more on meditation and on rituals, and included the worship of holy people, known as bodhisattvas.
- Also, it had a greater tolerance for prior cultural traditions.
- Along the Silk Road, Buddhism traveled to Central Asia and adapted to polytheism.
- In Tibet, Buddhism became popular as it combined shamanism and the importance of rituals.
- In East Asia, monks, merchants, and missionaries adapted Buddhism to the political ideas of Confucianism by including ancestor-worship and a focus on familyThey also mixed in Daoist ideas.
- Particular during chaotic times, Buddhism appealed to people as an avenue toward personal salvation.
- Chinese Buddhism spread to Korea, where it received royal support, and to Japan.
- In Japan, it was initially resisted by Shinto leaders, but eventually, syncretism (the fusion of differing systems of beliefs) occurred after Buddhism blended in the worship of Shinto divinities.
- Because Buddhism lacked an organized church, it was able to merge with the local ideas of the peopleHowever; it did become vulnerable to more organized forces.
- In Central Asia, for instance, Islam eventually replaced Buddhism.
- In China, the Tang dynasty turned against it in the ninth century.
Russian Serfdom:
- After the Mongol rule of Russia, many free peasants fell into great debt and were forced to become serfs.
- The Russian government encouraged this process beginning in the 1500s because it was a way to satisfy the nobility and to regulate the peasants at the same time.
- As new territories were added to the empire, serfdom extended along with it.
- In 1649, an act proclaimed that serfs were born into their status and could not escape it.
- Serfs could be bought and sold, gambled away, and punished by their masters.
- Whole villages could be sold to supply manufacturing labor, but serfs were not literally slaves.
- Serfs who were illiterate and poor had to pay high taxes and owed extensive labor service to their landlords in the form of agriculture, mining, or manufacturing.
At Lumen-Empty Monastery, Visiting the Hermitage of Master Jung, My Departed Friend; by Meng Hao-jan; translated by David Hinton
The blue-lotus roof standing beside a pond,
White-Horse Creek tumbling through forests,
and my old friend some strange thing now.
A lingering visitor, alone and grief-stricken
after graveside rites among pines, I return,
Looking for your sitting-mat spread on rock.
Bamboo that seems always my own thoughts:
It keeps fluttering here at your thatch hut.