answersLogoWhite

0

What is Wuzong?

User Avatar

Anonymous

12y ago
Updated: 8/20/2019

in 845, he ordered the destruction of 4,600 Buddhist monasteries and 40,000 temples.

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

When did Consort Wang - Wuzong - die?

Consort Wang - Wuzong - died in 846.


When did Emperor Wuzong of Tang die?

Emperor Wuzong of Tang died on 846-04-22.


When was Emperor Wuzong of Tang born?

Emperor Wuzong of Tang was born on 814-07-02.


What are facts about Shaolin Monks?

1. They first began to practice military weapons sometime prior to the 7th century in an attempt to protect their monastery's treasures from mountain bandits.2. They became famous when they aided Li Shimin in defeating his enemies, which allowed his family to found the Tang Dynasty (618-907).3. During the anti-Buddhist pogroms of 845, the Emperor Wuzong left Shaolin alone because of their past service to his family.4. They were defeated by Red Turban bandits during the Yuan dynasty (1279-1368), which caused them to create a legend to hide this fact. The legend states that their patron deity Vajrapani defeated the bandits and passed on his knowledge of pole fighting to the monks.5. They helped the Ming emperors combat Japanese pirates causing havoc on the eastern coast of China.6. They did not begin to practice boxing until the Ming to Qing Dynasty transition. This is when they also combined Daoist breathing and stretching exercises (qigong) with boxing to create a new form of spiritual enlightenment.7. The monks chose the wrong side in a political dispute between the men who filled the power vacuum left by the fall of the Qing Dynasty. This lead to the monastery being burnt in 1928.For more, see Prof. Meir Shahar's book The Shaolin Monastery (2008).


Where did zoroastrianism spread?

The founding date and location of Zoroastrianism are hotly debated. The likely location is somewhere to the north of Iran, with Azerbaijan and Afghanistan both being commonly suggested. The religion is assumed to have spread quickly through the Iranic peoples of this region, however this left little archaeological evidence. After the Persian conquest of Babylon, Zoroastrianism spread into Mesopotamia. However, the Persians were never interested in supplanting other religions, and while their religion never came to dominate the remainder of the Near East, there came to be populations practicing Zoroastrianism west into Anatolia. These populations were used as excuses for Sassanian expansion, and oppressed by the Christian Byzantines after the Roman-Persian wars took on religious aspects. The Iranic peoples to the north of Persia, the Sogdians, had spread Zoroastrianism and a mixed Zoroastrianism-Buddhism along the Silk Road. This moved into China and apparently took root in the north, but suffered massively under the Tang dynasty's huge repression effort against foreign religions lead by Emperor Wuzong. It's undecided when exactly Zoroastrianism died out in China after this, some claim it lasted in some form until the Song dynasty. After the Muslim conversion of Central Asia, Zoroastrianism shrank from the region until many religious buildings in for instance Uzbekistan were left abandoned after around the 1300s-1400s. During the Achaemenid Persian empire Zoroastrianism made some movements in Pakistan towards India, however this quickly became a multi-religious region balancing Zoroastrianism, Buddhism, and Hinduism. This balance finally fell under the Greek successor states Greek Bactria and Greek India, which became massive promoters of Buddhism and created the mixed form Buddhist art that is now so familiar. After the Muslim conquest of Persia, many Persians migrated to Pakistan and India, to escape persecution. The Zoroastrians of Pakistan and India are known as Parsis, with newer migrants known as Iranis. A small Zoroastrian community remains in Iran, and there is a world-wide diaspora.