Buddhist Expansion Along Silk Road
Browse timelines in Buddhist Expansion Along Silk Road.
Showing 1-15 of 17 timelines
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Evolution of Central Asian stupas, reliquaries, and monastic architecture (2nd–9th century CE)
101 - 700
Faxian's pilgrimage to India and its record (399–414 CE)
399 - 418
Gaochang and the Tocharian kingdoms: Buddhist courts in the Tarim Basin (4th–7th century CE)
442 - 700
Greco-Buddhist artistic transmission from Gandhara into Central Asia (1st–7th century CE)
100 BCE - 650
Khotan's royal monasteries and temple complexes (3rd–10th century CE)
200 - 1901
Kizil Caves monastery complex and patronage in the Kuqa region (3rd–8th century CE)
300 - 2014
Kushan Empire patronage and institutionalization of Buddhism (1st–3rd century CE)
30 - 240
Maritime Silk Road links from Gujarat/Gandhara to the Western Indian Ocean (1st–8th century CE)
6 - 750
Mogao Caves and the Dunhuang monastic community (4th–14th century CE)
366 - 1368
Northern Silk Road: Chang'an–Dunhuang corridor (2nd–10th century CE)
121 BCE - 1900
Sogdian and bilingual Buddhist translations and inscriptions on the Silk Road (5th–10th century CE)
500 - 1011
Southern Silk Road: Khotan–Kashgar–Kucha route (2nd–10th century CE)
101 - 1006
Tang dynasty policies and Buddhist administration in the Western Regions (7th–9th century CE)
640 - 848
The Dunhuang manuscript corpus: copying, preservation, and compilation (4th–11th century CE)
366 - 1994
Translation activities and scriptoria at Kucha (3rd–8th century CE)
300 - 790