- Buddhism is a non-theistic Religion, based on the Teachings of Gautama Buddha (563-483 BCE).
- Although it began in India, Buddhism is mainly practised today in Southeast Asia and China.
Buddha
- Siddhartha Gautama or Buddha was a Prince who relinquished his wealth in order to discover poverty and suffering. He was the Founder of Buddhism.
- Buddha taught the path of release from human suffering in order to achieve Enlightenment.
- Buddha means The Awakened One.
- Buddha was born in Nepal, the date is uncertain, but possibly between 583-563 BCE.
- He died in Uttar Pradesh, India, the date is also uncertain, possibly between 483-400 BCE.
- He was a Prince born into a life of wealth. At the age of 29, he left his palace and discovered poverty and suffering.
- He sold all his possessions and experienced starvation and destitution.
- He concluded that there must be a Middle Path between the extremes of great wealth and grinding poverty.
- In the following decades, Buddha traveled throughout Northern India, teaching the Middle Path.
- After he died, Buddha was cremated and his remains divided.
- Acccording to the Ashokavadana, the Indian Emperor Ashoka (c.268-232 BCE) commissioned and built 84,000 Stupas to house the remains of Buddha.
- In Sri Lanka, The Great Stupa of Ruwanwelisaya in the city of Anuradhapura, contains a Relic of Gautama Buddha, built c. 140 BCE.
The History of Buddhism
- Buddhism is a non-theistic Religion, based on the Teachings of Gautama Buddha.
- Buddhism arose in part as a reaction to the authority of the Vedas and Brahmanism.
- Buddha taught the path of release from human suffering in order to achieve Enlightenment.
- Once the person has been ‘Awakened’ (Enlightened), the person exists in new state of being, known as Nirvana.
King Ashoka
- After Buddha died, groups of monks and nuns, followed his routes, dressed in yellow, spreading his philosophy.
- When King Ashoka created the Mauryan Empire in the 3rd century BCE, he wanted to end the cycle of warfare and devastation.
- He converted to Buddhism and adopted a policy of non-violence and sent Buddhist monks into neighbouring Territories to spread the teachings of Buddha.
- Consequently, Buddhism spread throughout India and abroad into Sri Lanka, Burma, Nepal, Tibet, Asia, China and Japan.
The Philosophy of Buddhism
- Buddhism is based on the ending of human suffering by the ending of all ignorance.
- This is achieved by a greater understanding of the following:
- The Three Marks of Existence
- The Five Aggregates
- Dependent origination
- Karma and rebirth
- The Four Noble Truths
- The Noble Eightfold Path
- Nirvana
The Three main Branches of Buddhism
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- Theravada
- ‘The School of the Elders’
- Mahayana
- ‘The Great Vehicle’ which developed between 100 BCE and 100 CE.
- Vajrayana
- This is considered to be an esoteric version of Mahayana mainly practised in Tibet.
- Theravada
Countries following Buddhism
-
Theravada
- Sri Lanka
- Cambodia
- Laos
- Thailand
- Phuket has 40 Buddhist Temples.
- Myanamar (Burma)
-
Mahayana
- China
- Korea
- Vietnam
- Singapore
- Japan and Zen Buddhism
- Taiwan
Vajrayana (Part of Mahayana)
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- Tibet
- Bhutan
- Nepal
- Mongolia
- India
- By the late Middle Ages, Buddhism had virtually died out in India.
Tibet, India and China