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The Buddhist
Art of Dunhuang
Serving
as the westernmost fort of the early Tang
Dynasty, Dunhuang was not only a key trading
post situated on the "Silk Road"
but also the military headquarters for the
operations in the Western Regions. Foreign
merchants and monks from the West as well
as officials and soldiers from central China
brought their own cultures to Dunhuang and
made the trading center a cultural "melting
pot." The economic, military, political
and cultural activities which took place
at this cross-roads provided the basis for
the flourishing of one of China's earliest
Buddhist centers.
Most
Buddhist monks came to China from India
and Central Asia by way of the Silk Road.
As the westernmost Chinese station on the
route, Dunhuang became the ideal place for
these foreign monks to learn the Chinese
language and culture before entering central
China. Foreign monks and their Chinese disciples
formed the earliest Buddhist communities
at Dunhuang in the late 3rd and early 4th
centuries. Many Buddhist sutras were translated
at Dunhuang and then distributed into central
China. Monk Zhu Fahu, a famous translator
of Buddhist texts, organized his translation
team at Dunhuang and became known as "The
Bodhisattva of Dunhuang." Enormous
economic and human resources were used to
produce Buddhist sutras and to build places
of worship, including thousands of cave
temples. By the 5th century, Dunhuang had
become an important center of Buddhism on
the Silk Road.
Dunhuang Attractions
The
Art of Dunhuang Caves | The
Buddhist Art of Dunhuang | Echoing-sand
Mountain
Mogao Grottoes
| Crescent
Moon Lake
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