Tenets & Spread of Buddhism and Jainism
Buddhism
Founded by Siddhartha Gautama (563-483 BCE), it opposed rigid Vedic orthodoxy. Its core tenet is cessation of Dukkha (suffering) through the Eightfold Path.
Historical Context & Developments
|
Era |
Social/Cultural Aspect |
Economic/Contextual Evolution |
|
Ancient |
Rejected Varna hierarchy; Sangha offered social mobility and equal austerity for all. |
Royal patronage (Ashoka, Kanishka) enabled rapid spread; Viharas became vital educational/trade centres. |
|
Medieval |
Declined due to assimilation into Puranic Hinduism and loss of state patronage (e.g. Pala dynasty decline). |
Monastic lands lost focus on economic utility, becoming reliant on grants; weakened its commercial link. |
|
Modern |
Revival fuelled by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar’s mass conversion (1956), underscoring its role in social reform. |
Global spread of .... |
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Indian History
- 1 Mughal Architecture, Music & Painting
- 2 Gupta Period: Classical Age of Art, Literature, Science & Architecture
- 3 Post-Mauryan Artistic Traditions
- 4 Temple-Building Traditions of Pallavas, Cholas & Hoysalas
- 5 Buddhist and Mural Paintings
- 6 Medieval Writers on Art and Culture
- 7 Literary Works of Medieval India
- 8 Classical Languages & their Status in Ancient India
- 9 Temple Architecture Styles
- 10 Rise and Decline of Artisan Industries in India

