Hinduism & Buddhism is connected with India & Aryans culture. While other is conncted with people of china.
Buddhism have always been a great in influence in ancient china and now modern chin society. It shape the way china society is today, a lot of basic philosophy of Buddhism is use in everyday life.
I know one of the major things China influenced Japan on was religion. China helped bring Buddhism to Japan. In fact almost the entire country is Buddhist or Shinto (A derivative from Buddhism that the Japanese formed over the years).
different culture and sport thy do so it is different
Buddhism, which originated in ndia, was brought to China around the 1st century A.D.
With the rise of Buddhism, Korea’s contacts with the outside world grew, and scholarship, arts, science and technology which were imported to Korea from China, India and regions beyond brought about the enrichment of Korean culture.
Prince Shotoku inspired Japan to learn from China and helped spread Buddhism to Japan.
The Tang emporer suppressed Buddhism to gain the wealth of the Buddhist monasteries. After this, Buddhism in China declined.
China had the most influence on Japanese culture, particularly in the fields of language, religion, philosophy, art, and government systems. Many aspects of Japanese culture, such as writing characters, Buddhism, Confucianism, and governmental structures, were borrowed or adapted from China.
The culture of Buddhism is when the way they they believe that they will soon be reincarnated and be set in a higher social class.
This depends of the form of Buddhism you're talking about. Early Buddhism came from India, and so has strong Hindu roots. Mahayana Buddhism was most popular in China, and has very strong Taoist elements. regional forms of Buddhism - particularly Tibetan Buddhism and Japanese Zen - are often influenced by local religious traditions.
There are many differences between China's language and culture and Japan's language and culture. So it is hardly surprising that Buddhist practices in the two cultures are slightly different. Zen Buddhism originated in China when Buddhist practices from India were blended with Daoist practices. Eventually difference schools of Zen Buddhism emerged in China and then found their way to Korea and Japan. It's not that the practices themselves are very different, but they are practiced slightly differently in China than they are in Japan. For example, practicing zazen in China is less rigid and formal than it is in Japan. On the other hand, these differences are relatively minor. At first, monks from Japan traveled to China to learn from Chinese masters and then returned to Japan with what they had learned. So anyone familiar with doing zazen in Japan could quickly adopt to doing zazen in China and vice-versa. With respect to beliefs, there are no differences. Since there is no Buddhist creed, there are no doctrinal differences between Japanese Buddhism and Chinese Buddhism. There are, of course, slightly different ideas about practicing, but, as noted, there are even different schools of Buddhism in China. Most of the differences beyond that are very minor. .