- Timeline of Buddhism
Foundation to the Common Era
Some sources give the date of the Buddha's birth as 563 BCE and others as 624 BCE; Theravada Buddhist countries tend to use the latter figure. This displaces all the dates in the following table about 61 years further back. See [http://www.buddhanet.net/e-learning/history/thera_timeline.htm Theravada Buddhism] .
There is controversy about the base date of the
Buddhist Era , with544 BC and483 BC being advanced as the date of the "parinibbana" of the Buddha. AsWilhelm Geiger pointed out, theSri Lanka n chronicles, the "Dipavamsa " and "Mahawamsa " are the primary sources for ancientSouth Asia nchronology ; they date theconsecration ("abhisheka") ofAsoka to 218 years after the "parinibbana".Chandragupta Maurya ascended the throne 56 years prior to this, or 162 years after the "parinibbana". The approximate date of Chandragupta's ascension is known to be within two years of321 BC (fromMegasthenes ). Hence the approximate date of the "parinibbana" is between 485 and 481 BC - which accords well with theMahayana dating of 483 BC.cite book
last = Geiger (Tr)
first = Wilhelm
authorlink =
coauthors =
title = The Mahawamsa or Great Chronicle of Ceylon
publisher = Oxford University Press (for the Pali Text Society)
date = 1912
location = Oxford
pages = 300
url = http://lakdiva.org/culavamsa/vol_0.html
isbn = ]The difference between the two reckonings seems to have occurred at sometime between the reigns of the Sri Lankan kings Udaya III (
946 -954 or1007 -1015 )and Pârakkama Pandya (c.1046 -1048 ), when there was considerable unrest in the country.* 563 BCE: Siddhārtha Gautama, Buddha-to-be, is born in
Lumbini into a leading family in therepublic of theShakyas , which is now part of Nepal.
* 534 BCE: Prince Siddhartha goes outside the palace for the first time and seesThe Four Sights : an old man, an ill man, a dead man, and a holy man. He is shocked by the first three—he did not know what age, disease, and death were—but is inspired by the holy man to give up his wealth. He leaves his house and lives with threeascetics . However, he wants more than to starve himself, so he becomes a religious teacher.
* 528 BCE: Siddhartha attains Enlightenment inBuddha Gaya (modern-dayBodhgaya ), then travels to a deer park inSarnath (nearVaranasi ),India , and begins expounding theDharma .
*528 BCE According to legend, Trapusha and Bhallika, two trader-brothers from Okkala (modern-dayYangon ), offer the Gautama's first meal as the enlightened Buddha. The Buddha gives eight strands of his hair to the two brothers; the strands are brought back to Burma and enshrined in theShwedagon Pagoda . Thus, according to myth, this is the year when the Shwedagon Pagoda was built.
*c. 490–410 BCE: Life of the Buddha, according to recent research. [ [http://indology.info/papers/cousins/ INDOLOGY - The Dating of the Historical Buddha: A Review Article ] ]
*c.483 BCE :Gautama Buddha dies ('attains "parinibbana"') at Kusinara (now calledKushinagar ),India . Three months following his death, theFirst Buddhist Council is convened.
*383 BCE : TheSecond Buddhist Council is convened by KingKalasoka and held atVaisali .
*c.250 BCE :Third Buddhist Council , convened byAshoka the Great and chaired byMoggaliputta Tissa , compiles the "Kathavatthu " to refute the heretical views and theories held by some Buddhist sects. Ashoka issues a number of edicts (Edicts of Ashoka ) about the kingdom in support of Buddhism.
*c.250 BCE : EmperorAshoka the Great sends various Buddhist missionaries to faraway countries, as far asChina and the Mon & Malay kingdoms in the east and the Hellenistic kingdoms in the west, in order to make Buddhism known to them.
*c.250 BCE : First fully developed examples of Kharosthī script date from this period (the Aśokan inscriptions at Shāhbāzgarhī and Mānsehrā, a northwestern Indian subcontinent).
*200s BCE: Indian traders regularly visit ports inArabia , explaining the prevalence of place names in the region with Indian or Buddhist origin; e.g., "bahar" (from theSanskrit "vihara", a Buddhistmonastery ).Ashoka n emissary monks bring Buddhism toSuwannaphum , the location of which is disputed. The "Dipavamsa " and the Mon believe it was a Mon seafaring settlement in present-day Burma.
*c.220 BCE :Theravada Buddhism is officially introduced toSri Lanka by theVenerable Mahinda , son of the emperorAshoka of India during the reign of KingDevanampiya Tissa .
*185 BCE :Brahmin generalPusyamitra Sunga overthrows theMauryan dynasty and establishes theSunga dynasty , apparently starting a wave of persecution against Buddhism.
*180 BCE :Greco-Bactrian King Demetrius invades India as far asPataliputra and establishes theIndo-Greek kingdom (180–10 BCE), under which Buddhism flourishes.
*c.150 BCE :Indo-Greek kingMenander I converts toBuddhism under the sage Nāgasena, according to the account of theMilinda Panha .
*120 BCE : The Chinese EmperorHan Wudi (156–87 BCE) receives two golden statues of the Buddha, according to inscriptions in theMogao Caves ,Dunhuang .
*1st century BCE : The Indo-Greek governor Theodorus enshrines relics of the Buddha, dedicating them to the deified "LordShakyamuni ."
*29 BCE : According to the Sinhalese chronicles, thePali Canon is written down in the reign of King IAST|Vaṭṭagamiṇi (29–17 BCE)
*2 BCE : TheHou Hanshu records the visit in2 BCE ofYuezhi envoys to the Chinese capital, who give oral teachings onBuddhist sutras. [Baldev Kumar (1973). Exact source needed!]Common Era
*
65 :Liu Ying 's sponsorship of Buddhism is the first documented case of Buddhist practices in China.
*67: Buddhism comes toChina with the two monksMoton andChufarlan .
*68:Buddhism is officially established inChina with the founding of theWhite Horse Temple .
*78:Ban Chao , a Chinese General, subdues the BuddhistKingdom of Khotan .
*78–101: According toMahayana tradition, theFourth Buddhist council takes place underKushan a kingKanishka 's reign, nearJalandar ,India .
*116 CE: The Kushans, underKanishka , establish a kingdom centered onKashgar , also taking control ofKhotan and Yarkand—previously Chinese dependencies in theTarim Basin , modernXinjiang .
*148:An Shigao , a Parthian prince and Buddhist monk, arrives in China and proceeds to make the first translations ofTheravada texts into Chinese.
*178: TheKushan monkLokaksema travels to the Chinese capital ofLoyang and becomes the first known translator ofMahayana texts into Chinese.
*100s/200s: Indian and Central Asian Buddhists travel to Vietnam.
*200s: Use of Kharosthī script inGandhara stops.
*200s & 300s: Kharosthī script is used in the southernSilk Road cities ofKhotan andNiya .
*296 : The earliest surviving Chinese Buddhist scripture dates from this year ("Zhu Fo Yao Ji Jing", discovered inDalian , late2005 ).
*300s: Two Chinese monks take scriptures to theKorea n kingdom ofGoguryeo and establish papermaking in Korea.
*320-467: The University atNalanda grows to support 3,000–10,000 monks.
*399-414:Fa Xian travels from China to India, then returns to translate Buddhist works into Chinese.
*400s: The kingdom ofFunan (centered in modernCambodia ) begins to advocate Buddhism in a departure fromHindu ism. Earliest evidence of Buddhism inMyanmar (Pali inscriptions). Earliest evidence of Buddhism inIndonesia n (statues). Earliest reinterpretations of Pali texts. The stupa atDambulla (Sri Lanka ) is constructed.
*402: At the request ofYao Xing ,Kumarajiva travels toChangan and translates many Buddhist texts into Chinese.
*403: In China,Hui Yuan argues that Buddhist monks should be exempt from bowing to the emperor.
*405:Yao Xing honoursKumarajiva .
*425: Buddhism reachesSumatra .
*464:Buddhabhadra reaches China to preach Buddhism.
*495: The Shaolin temple is built in the name of Buddhabhadra, by edict of emperor Wei Xiao Wen. [ [http://www.easternmartialarts.com/kungfu_history.htm Kungfu History at EasternMartialArts.com] ] [cite journal | author = Canzonieri, Salvatore | year = 1998 | month = February–March | title = History of Chinese Martial Arts: Jin Dynasty to the Period of Disunity | journal = Han Wei Wushu | volume = 3 | issue = 9 | url = ]
*485: Five monks fromGandhara travel to the country ofFusang (Japan , or possibly theAmerican continent ), where they introduce Buddhism.
*500s:Zen adherents enterVietnam from China.Jataka stories are translated into Persian by order of theZoroastrian king,Khosrau I of Persia .
*527:Bodhidharma settles into the Shaolin monastery inHenan province of China. [ [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0804834393&id=gHSAiZMhxhwC&pg=PA13&lpg=PA13&dq=bodhidharma+china+martial+arts&sig=pT-2FI5jLcnXlH3I9SkuWOzO4uw] The Art of Shaolin Kung Fu: The Secrets of Kung Fu for Self-Defense, Health and Enlightenmentby Grandmaster Wong Kiew Kit]
*552: Buddhism is introduced toJapan viaBaekje (Korea ), according toNihonshoki ; some scholars place this event in 538.
*Early 600s:Jingwan begins carving sutras onto stone atFangshan ,Yuzhou , 75 km southwest of modern-dayBeijing .
*607: AJapan ese imperial envoy is dispatched to Sui,China to obtain copies of sutras.
*600s:Xuan Zang travels to India, noting the persecution of Buddhists bySasanka (king ofGouda , a state in northwestBengal ) before returning toChang An in China to translate Buddhist scriptures. End of sporadic Buddhist rule in theSindh . KingSongtsen Gampo ofTibet sends messengers to India to get Buddhist texts. Latest recorded use of the Kharosthī script amongst Buddhist communities aroundKucha .
*671: Chinese Buddhist pilgrim Yi Jing visitsPalembang , capital of the partly Buddhist kingdom ofSrivijaya on the island ofSumatra ,Indonesia , and reports over 1000 Buddhist monks in residence.Uisang returns toKorea after studying ChineseHuayan Buddhism and founds theHwaeom school.
*736:Huayan is transmitted toJapan viaKorea , whenRōben invites theKorea nHwaeom monkSimsang to lecture, and formally founds Japan'sKegon tradition in theTōdaiji temple.
*743–754: The Chinese monkJianzhen attempts to reachJapan eleven times, succeeding in 754 to establish the JapaneseRitsu school, which specialises in the "vinaya " (monastic rules).
*700s: BuddhistJataka stories are translated in toSyriac and Arabic asKalilag and Damnag . An account of Buddha's life is translated into Greek byJohn of Damascus and widely circulated to Christians as the story ofBarlaam andJosaphat . By the 1300s, this story ofJosaphat becomes so popular that he is made aCatholic saint.
*700s: Under the reign of KingTrisong Deutsen ,Padmasambhava travels from Afghanistan to establish tantric Buddhism in Tibet (later known as theNyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism), replacing Bonpo as the kingdom's main religion. Buddhism quickly spreads toSikkim andBhutan .
*c. 760: Construction is begun onBorobodur , the famous Indonesian Buddhist structure, probably as a non-Buddhist shrine. It is completed as a Buddhist monument in 830, after about 50 years of work.
*804: Under the reign ofEmperor Kammu of Japan, a fleet of four ships sets sail for mainlandChina . Of the two ships that arrive, one carries the monkKūkai —recently ordained by the Japanese government as aBhiksu —who absorbsVajrayana teachings inChang'an and returns to Japan to found the JapaneseShingon school. The other ship carries the monkSaichō , who returns to Japan to found the JapaneseTendai school, partly based upon the ChineseTiantai tradition.
*838–847:Ennin , a priest of theTendai school, travels in China for nine years. He reaches both the famous Buddhist mountain ofWutaishan and the Chinese capital,Chang'an , keeping a detailed diary that is a primary source for this period of Chinese history, including the Buddhist persecution.
*841–846: EmperorWuzong of theTang Dynasty (given name:Li Yan ) reigns inChina ; he is one of three Chinese emperors to prohibit Buddhism. From 843-845, Wuzong carries out theGreat Anti-Buddhist Persecution , permanently weakening the institutional structure of Buddhism in China.
*9th-century Tibet: Decline of Buddhism; persecution by King Langdarma.
*900s: Buddhist temple construction commences atBagan ,Myanmar . In Tibet, a strong Buddhist revival is begun. TheCaodong school ofZen is founded by Dongshan Liangjie and his disciples in southernChina .
*971: ChineseSong Dynasty commissionsChengdu woodcarvers to carve the entire Buddhist canon for printing. Work is completed in 983; 130,000 blocks are produced, in total.
*991: A printed copy of theSong Dynasty Buddhist canon arrives inKorea , impressing the government.
*1000s:Marpa ,Konchog Gyalpo ,Atisha , and others introduce theSarma lineages into Tibet.
*1009:Vietnam 's Ly Dynasty begins, which is partly brought about by an alliance with the Buddhist monkhood. Ly emperors patronizeMahayana Buddhism, in addition to traditional spirits.
*1010:Korea begins carving its own woodblock print edition of the Buddhist canon. No completion date is known; the canon is continuously expanded, with the arrival of new texts fromChina .
*1017: In Southeast Asia, and especially inSri Lanka , the Bhikkhuni (Buddhist nuns) Order dies out due to invasions. The bhikkhu line inSri Lanka is later revived with bhikkhus fromBurma .
*1025:Srivijaya , a Buddhist kingdom based inSumatra , is raided by the Chola empire of southernIndia ; it survives, but declines in importance. Shortly after the raid, the centre of the kingdom moves northward fromPalembang toJambi-Melayu .
*1044–1077: InBurma , Pagan's first kingAnoratha reigns. He converts the country toTheravada Buddhism with the aid of monks and books fromSri Lanka . He is said to have been converted toTheravada Buddhism by a Mon monk, though other beliefs persist.
*1057:Anawrahta ofMyanmar capturesThaton in northernThailand , strengtheningTheravada Buddhism in the country.
*1063: A copy of the Khitans' printed canon arrives inKorea from mainlandChina .
*1084–1113: InMyanmar , Pagan's second king,Kyanzittha (son ofAnawrahta ), reigns. He completes the building of theShwezigon pagoda, a shrine for relics of the Buddha, including a tooth brought fromSri Lanka . Various inscriptions refer to him as an incarnation ofVishnu , achakravartin , abodhisattva , anddharmaraja .
*1100s: Sanskrit is subsequently written inDevanagari .
*1100–1125: Huizong reigns during the Chinese Song Dynasty and outlaws Buddhism to promote the Dao. He is one of three Chinese emperors to have prohibited Buddhism.
*1113:Alaungsithu reigns inPagan, Myanmar until his sonNarathu smothers him to death and assumes the throne.
*1133–1212:Hōnen establishesPure Land Buddhism as an independent sect inJapan .
*1181: The self-styledbodhisattva Jayavarman VII , a devout follower ofMahayana Buddhism (though he also patronisedHinduism ), assumes control of the Khmer kingdom. He constructs theBayon , the most prominent Buddhist structure in theAngkor temple complex. This sets the stage for the later conversion of the Khmer people toTheravada Buddhism.
*1190: InMyanmar ,Anawrahta 's lineage regains control with the assistance of Sri Lanka. Pagan has been in anarchy. The new regime reforms Burmese Buddhism on Sri LankanTheravada models.
*Late 1100s: The great Buddhist educational centre atNalanda , where various subjects were taught subjects such asBuddhism ,Logic ,Philosophy ,Law ,Medicine ,Grammar ,Yoga ,Mathematics ,Alchemy , andAstrology , is sacked. Nalanda is supported by kings of several dynasties and serves as a great international centre of learning.
*1200s:Theravada overtakesMahayana —previously practised alongsideHinduism —as the dominant form of Buddhism inCambodia ;Sri Lanka is an influence in this change. In Persia, the historianRashid al-Din records some eleven Buddhist texts circulating in Arabic translation, amongst which the Sukhavati-vyuha and Karanda-vyuha Sutras are recognizable. Portions of the Samyutta and Anguttara-Nikayas, along with parts of the Maitreya-vyakarana, are identified in this collection.
*1222: Birth ofNichiren Daishonin (1222–1282), the Japanese founder of Nichiren Buddhism.
*c. 1238: The Thai Kingdom of Sukhothai is established, withTheravada Buddhism as the state religion.
*1227:Dogen Zenji takes theCaodong school ofZen fromChina toJapan as theSoto sect.
*1244:Eiheiji Soto Zen Temple and Monastery are established byDogen Zenji .
*1277:Burma 's Pagan empire begins to disintegrate after being defeated byKublai Khan at theBattle of Ngasaunggyan , atYunnan , near the Chinese border.
*1285:Arghun makes theIl-Khanate a Buddhist state.
*1287: TheTheravada kingdom atPagan, Myanmar falls to theMongols and is overshadowed by theShan capital atAva .
*c. 1279–1298: Sukhothai's third and most famous ruler,Ramkhamhaeng (Rama the Bold), reigns and makes vassals ofLaos , much of modernThailand ,Pegu (Burma ), and parts of theMalay Peninsula , thus giving rise to Sukhothai artistic tradition. After Ramkhamhaeng's death, Sukhothai loses control of its territories as its vassals become independent.
*1295:Mongol leader Ghazan Khan is converted toIslam , ending a line of Tantric Buddhist leaders.
*1305–1316: Buddhists in Persia attempt to convertUldjaitu Khan .
*1321:Sojiji Soto Zen Temple and Monastery established byKeizan Zenji .
*1351: InThailand , U Thong, possibly the son of a Chinese merchant family, establishes Ayutthaya as his capital and takes the name ofRamathibodi .
*1391–1474: Gyalwa Gendun Drubpa, firstDalai Lama ofTibet .
*1405–1431: The Chinese eunuch admiralZheng He makes seven voyages in this period, throughsoutheast Asia ,India , thePersian Gulf , EastAfrica , andEgypt . At the time, Buddhism is well-established in China, so visited peoples may have had exposure to Chinese Buddhism.
*1578:Altan Khan of theTümed gives the title ofDalai Lama toSonam Gyatso (later known as the third Dalai Lama).
*1600s & 1700s: WhenVietnam divides during this period, the Nguyen rulers of the south choose to supportMahayana Buddhism as an integrative ideology for the ethnically plural society of their kingdom, which is also populated by Chams and other minorities.
*1614: TheToyotomi family rebuilds a great image of Buddha at the Temple of Hōkōji in Kyōtō.
*1615: The Oirat Mongols convert to theGeluk school of Tibetan Buddhism.
*1635: In Zanabazar, the firstJebtsundamba Khutughtu is born as a great-grandson ofAbadai Khan of theKhalkha .
*1642:Güüshi Khan of theKhoshuud donates the sovereignty of Tibet to the fifth Dalai Lama.
*1766–67: InThailand , many Buddhist texts are destroyed as the Burmese invade Ayutthaya.
*1800s: In Thailand, KingMongkut —himself a former monk—conducts a campaign to reform and modernise the monkhood, a movement that has continued in the present century under the inspiration of several great ascetic monks from the northeast part of the country.
*1802–20:Nguyen Anh comes to the throne of the first unitedVietnam ; he succeeds by quelling theTayson rebellion in south Vietnam with help fromRama I in Bangkok, then takes over the north from the remaining Trinh. After coming to power, he creates a Confucianist orthodox state and is eager to limit the competing influence of Buddhism. He forbids adult men to attend Buddhist ceremonies.
*1820–41:Minh Mang reigns inVietnam , further restricting Buddhism. He insists that all monks be assigned tocloister s and carry identification documents. He also places new restrictions on printed material and begins the persecution ofCatholic missionaries and converts that his successors (not without provocation) continue.
*c. 1860: InSri Lanka , against all expectations, the monastic and lay communities bring about a major revival in Buddhism, a movement that goes hand in hand with growing nationalism; the revival follows a period of persecution by foreign powers. Since then, Buddhism has flourished, and Sri Lankan monks and expatriate lay people have been prominent in spreading Theravada Buddhism in Asia, the West, and even in Africa.
*1879: A council is convened under the patronage of KingMindon Min of Burma to re-edit the Pali canon. The king has the texts engraved on 729 stones, which are then set upright on the grounds of a monastery nearMandalay .
*1882:Jade Buddha Temple is founded inShanghai , China, with two Jade Buddha statues imported from Burma.
*1893: TheWorld Parliament of Religions meets inChicago ,Illinois ;Anagarika Dharmapala andSoyen Shaku attend.
*1896: UsingFa Xian 's records,Nepalese archaeologists rediscover the great stone pillar ofAshoka atLumbini .
*1899:Gordon Douglas is ordained inMyanmar ; he is the first Westerner to be ordained in theTheravada tradition.
*1922: Zenshuji Soto Mission is founded as the first Soto Zen temple in North America.
*1930:Soka Gakkai is founded inJapan .
*1949:Mahabodhi Temple inBodh Gaya is returned to partial Buddhist control.
*1950:World Fellowship of Buddhists is founded in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
*1954: TheSixth Buddhist Council is held in Yangon, Myanmar, organized byU Nu . It ends in time for the 2500th anniversary of the passing of the Buddha.
*1956: Indian untouchable leaderB.R. Ambedkar converts to Buddhism, with more than 350,000 followers—beginning the modernNeo-Buddhist movement.
*1956: TheZen Studies Society is founded inNew York to support the work ofD.T. Suzuki .
*1957: Caves near the summit of Pai-tai mountain,Fangshan district, 75km southwest ofBeijing , are reopened, revealing thousands of Buddhist sutras that had been carved onto stone since the 7th century. Seven sets of rubbings are made, and the stones are numbered, in work that continues until 1959.
*1959: Together with some 100,000 Tibetans, the 14thDalai Lama flees the Chinese occupation ofTibet and establishes an exile community in India. The Chinese invaders completely destroy all but a handful of monasteries and severely persecute Buddhist practitioners.
*1962: TheSan Francisco Zen Center is founded byShunryu Suzuki .
*1963:Thích Quảng Đức immolates himself to protest the oppression of the Buddhist religion byNgo Dinh Diem .
*1965: The Burmese government arrests over 700 monks inHmawbi , near Rangoon, for refusing to accept government rule.
*1966: TheWorld Buddhist Sangha Council is convened by Theravadins inSri Lanka with the hope of bridging differences and working together. The first convention is attended by leading monks from many countries and sects,Mahayana as well asTheravada . Nine "Basic Points Unifying the Theravada and Mahayana " are written by Ven.Walpola Rahula are approved unanimously.
*1970s: Indonesian Archaeological Service andUNESCO restoreBorobodur .
*1973: The firstvajrayana Buddhism centers are established inEurope byLama Ole Nydahl .
*1974:Wat Pah Nanachat , the first monastery dedicated to providing training and support for western Buddhist monks, is founded inThailand by VenerableAjahn Chah . The monks trained here would later establish branch monasteries throughout the world.
*1974: The Naropa Institute (nowNaropa University ) is founded inBoulder, Colorado .
*1974: InBurma , during demonstrations atU Thant 's funeral, 600 monks are arrested and several are bayoneted by government forces.
*1975:Lao Communist rulers attempt to change attitudes to religion—in particular, calling on monks to work, not beg. This causes many to return to lay life, but Buddhism remains popular.
*1975: TheInsight Meditation Society is established inBarre ,Massachusetts .
*1975–79: Cambodian communists underPol Pot try to completely destroy Buddhism, and very nearly succeed. By the time of the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia in 1978, nearly every monk and religious intellectual has been either murdered or driven into exile, and nearly every temple and Buddhist library has been destroyed.
*1976: Following a demonstration inBurma , the government seeks to discredit the critical monkLa Ba by claiming that he is a cannibal and a murderer.
*1978: In Burma, more monks and novices are arrested, disrobed, and imprisoned by the government. Monasteries are closed and property seized. The critical monkU Nayaka is arrested and dies, the government claiming it is suicide.
*1980: The Burmese military government asserts authority over thesangha , and violence against monks continues through the decade.
*1983: TheShanghai Institute of Buddhism is established atJade Buddha Temple , under theShanghai Buddhist Association .
*1988: During the 1988 uprising,SPDC troops gun down monks. After the uprising,U Nyanissara , a senior monk, records a tape that discusses democracy in Buddhist precepts; the tape is banned.
*1990,August 27 : Over 7000 monks meet inMandalay , inBurma , to call for a boycott of the military. They refuse to accept alms from military families or perform services for them. The military government seizes monasteries and arrests hundreds of monks, including senior monksU Sumangala andU Yewata . The monks face long-term imprisonment, and all boycotting monks are disrobed; some monks are tortured during interrogation.
*1992: The Buddha Statue in Hyderabad,India is installed, a work of former Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh, Late SriN.T. Rama Rao . The 16-meter tall, 350-ton monolithic colossus rises high from the placid waters of picturesqueHusain Sagar Lake. It is made of white granite, finely sculptured and stands majestically amidst the shimmering waters of the lake. It is later consecrated byDalai Lama .
*1996,India : The Bhikkhuni (Buddhist nuns) Order and lineage is revived in Sarnath,India through the efforts of Sakyadhita, an International Buddhist Women Association. The revival is done with some resistance from some of the more literal interpreters of the Buddhist Vinaya (monastic code) and lauded by others in the community.
*1998,January 25 : Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE ) terrorists commit a deadly suicide attack on Sri Lanka's most sacred Buddhist site and aUNESCO World Heritage centre: theTemple of the Tooth , where Buddha's tooth relic is enshrined. Eight civilians are killed and 25 others are injured and significant damage is done to the temple structure, which was first constructed in 1592 AD.
*2001, May: Two of the world's tallest ancient Buddha statues, theBuddhas of Bamyan , are completely destroyed by theTaliban inBamyan ,Afghanistan .
*2004, April: InSri Lanka , Buddhist monks acting as candidates for theJaathika Hela Urumaya party win nine seats in elections.
*2006, November: In theUnited States , two Buddhists are elected for the first time to the 110th Congress.
*2007 (September) Thousands of Burmese Buddhist monks and nuns protest against the military regime; the military regime responds with a bloody crackdown. Thousands are arrested, and hundreds flee to Thailand and India; the death toll is in the hundreds.
*2007,October 17 : The U.S. Congress presents the14th Dalai Lama with the U.S. Congressional Gold Medal and meets in public with PresidentGeorge W. Bush .
* 2008 (March): Tibetan monks protest in Lhasa, and many Tibetans join in calling for the end of Chinese rule. Many Chinese businesses are attacked and burned. The Chinese respond by sending in troops and ordering a strict lockdown of the capital city of Lhasa. Many Tibetans are killed, with the death toll maybe over a hundred. Outraged, thousands of exiled Tibetans around the world protest.Notes
ee also
*
History of Buddhism
*History of Hinduism
*Timeline of Jainism
*Timeline of Zen Buddhism in the United States External links
* [http://www.accesstoinsight.org/history.html Theravada Buddhist Chronology]
*Asakawa, K and Lodge, Henry Cabot (Ed.). "Japan From the Japanese Government History". (In Progress atProject Gutenberg )
* [http://www.buddhanet.net/e-learning/history/s_scripts.htm Buddhist Bark Texts Found] , BuddhaNet.
* [http://www.buddhism.kalachakranet.org/time_line.html A Buddhist Time-line]
* [http://ishi.lib.berkeley.edu/buddhist/bbrc/fang_shan_canon.html Rock cut canon in China]
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