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Tang China and the Buddhist Silk Roads: The Historical Geographies of Daxingshan Temple

DOI: 10.4236/aa.2023.133015, PP. 235-244

Keywords: China, Buddhism, Sacred Space, Silk Roads, Cultural Globalization

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Abstract:

Tang China’s capital was the wealthiest and most cosmopolitan city in the world from the early seventh to mid-eighth centuries. Crucial to its prestige was its tolerance of multiple religious traditions and support for long-distance commerce. The Silk Roads, a series of paths through deserts, mountains and grasslands traversing 5000 kilometers of China and Central Asia carried world-transforming cosmologies and luxury products between China, India and Persia. This paper explores how this dynamic circulation created sacred places and iconographic landscapes in Xi’an, Shaanxi, China. I deploy insights from world history and historical geography as an interpretive framework to engage Daxingshan, a Tantric Vajrayana temple and crucial site for the translation of Mahayana Buddhist sutras. Finally, I describe experiential fieldwork at the site, an engagement with an otherworldly sacred space that was and is a creation of a previous era of cultural globalization.

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