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Buddha |
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Buddha (c. 563-483 BC)![]() The Phra Singh Buddha at Chiang Mai, northwest Thailand. The image and temple where it is housed were built in the late 15th century and typical of classic northern-Thai style. ![]() Ruins of a stupa, a shrine to the Buddha and his disciples, at the important archaeological site of Taxila. Stupas were domed temples that originated in India, and were often built to house a religious relic. Taxila is strategically situated on a branch of the Silk Road, which linked China to the West. The remains of three cities have been found here, built in successive ages. Religious leader, founder of Buddhism, born at Lumbini in Nepal, and raised in his father's palace at Kapilavastu. At the age of 29 he left his wife and son and a life of luxury, to resolve the problems of existence. After six years of austerity he realized that asceticism, like overindulgence, was futile, and chose the Middle Way of meditation. He became enlightened under a bo, or bodhi, tree near Bodhgaya in Bihar, India. He began teaching at Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, and founded the Sangha, or order of monks. He spent the rest of his life travelling around northern India, and died at Kusinagara. He is not a god. The Buddha's teaching is summarized as the Four Noble Truths: the fact of frustration or suffering; that suffering has a cause; that it can be ended; and that it can be ended by following the Noble Eightfold Path - right views, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration - eventually arriving at nirvana, the extinction of all craving for things of the senses and release from the cycle of rebirth.
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? Mentioned in | ? References in classic literature | |
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Both Buddha and Lao Tzu are poets, one listening to the rhythm of infinite sorrow, one to the rhythm of infinite joy. "Lady Grace," he said, turning to the statuette of Buddha in a corner of the room and taking from its neck a string of strange blue stones, "I will not ask you to wear these, for they have adorned the necks of idols for many centuries, but if you will keep them for my sake, they may remind you sometimes of the color of our skies. There was in the front a thick and broad hasp, wrought in the image of a sitting Buddha. |
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