Silk Road Empires: Trade Routes That Built Civilization — Fexingo History

The Nalanda Debate: Buddhist Logic Meets Silk Road Thought

6 min · 12 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The Nalanda Debate: Buddhist Logic Meets Silk Road Thought

Descripción

In episode 151 of Silk Road Empires, hosts Lucas and Luna explore the intellectual crossroads of the Silk Road through the great monastic university of Nalanda in eastern India. At its peak in the 5th to 7th centuries, Nalanda attracted monks and scholars from across Eurasia — from China, Tibet, Central Asia, and Southeast Asia — who came to debate Buddhist philosophy, logic, and epistemology. Lucas explains how the university's rigorous curriculum in pramana (logic and epistemology) shaped thinkers like Dignaga and Dharmakirti, whose works traveled the Silk Road to influence Tibetan and Chinese Buddhism. The conversation also touches on the Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang's seven-year stay at Nalanda in the 7th century, where he studied under the abbot Silabhadra and engaged in public debates that became legendary. Lucas and Luna discuss how Nalanda's tradition of structured debate — with formal rules, witnesses, and consequences — functioned as a kind of intellectual marketplace parallel to the trade of goods on the Silk Road. They reflect on the university's eventual decline in the 12th century, following the invasions of the Ghurid general Bakhtiyar Khilji, and the loss of this unique tradition of cross-cultural philosophical exchange. This episode offers a fresh lens on the Silk Road as not just a network of commerce, but a highway for ideas, arguments, and enlightenment. #Nalanda #BuddhistLogic #SilkRoad #Dignaga #Dharmakirti #Xuanzang #Silabhadra #Pramana #BuddhistEpistemology #IndianPhilosophy #GurjaraPratihara #PalaEmpire #Ghurid #Mahayana #TibetanBuddhism #History #FexingoHistory #IntellectualHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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151 episodios

Portada del episodio The Nalanda Debate: Buddhist Logic Meets Silk Road Thought

The Nalanda Debate: Buddhist Logic Meets Silk Road Thought

In episode 151 of Silk Road Empires, hosts Lucas and Luna explore the intellectual crossroads of the Silk Road through the great monastic university of Nalanda in eastern India. At its peak in the 5th to 7th centuries, Nalanda attracted monks and scholars from across Eurasia — from China, Tibet, Central Asia, and Southeast Asia — who came to debate Buddhist philosophy, logic, and epistemology. Lucas explains how the university's rigorous curriculum in pramana (logic and epistemology) shaped thinkers like Dignaga and Dharmakirti, whose works traveled the Silk Road to influence Tibetan and Chinese Buddhism. The conversation also touches on the Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang's seven-year stay at Nalanda in the 7th century, where he studied under the abbot Silabhadra and engaged in public debates that became legendary. Lucas and Luna discuss how Nalanda's tradition of structured debate — with formal rules, witnesses, and consequences — functioned as a kind of intellectual marketplace parallel to the trade of goods on the Silk Road. They reflect on the university's eventual decline in the 12th century, following the invasions of the Ghurid general Bakhtiyar Khilji, and the loss of this unique tradition of cross-cultural philosophical exchange. This episode offers a fresh lens on the Silk Road as not just a network of commerce, but a highway for ideas, arguments, and enlightenment. #Nalanda #BuddhistLogic #SilkRoad #Dignaga #Dharmakirti #Xuanzang #Silabhadra #Pramana #BuddhistEpistemology #IndianPhilosophy #GurjaraPratihara #PalaEmpire #Ghurid #Mahayana #TibetanBuddhism #History #FexingoHistory #IntellectualHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

12 de jul de 20266 min
Portada del episodio The Sogdian Princess Who Brought Zoroastrianism to Tang China

The Sogdian Princess Who Brought Zoroastrianism to Tang China

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the story of Princess Mahli, a Sogdian noblewoman who married into the Tang imperial family and brought Zoroastrian priests, rituals, and fire to Chang'an. They trace her journey from Samarkand to the Tang capital, the establishment of the first Zoroastrian temple in China, and the complex cultural negotiations between the Sogdian diaspora and the Tang court. The episode delves into the role of Sogdian women as cultural conduits, the political symbolism of religious patronage, and the eventual suppression of Zoroastrianism during the Huichang persecution. Drawing on recent archaeological discoveries of Zoroastrian ossuaries in Xi'an, they examine how one woman's faith shaped the religious landscape of medieval China. #SogdianPrincess #Zoroastrianism #TangChina #SilkRoad #Chang'an #Samarkand #PrincessMahli #HuichangPersecution #SogdianDiaspora #CulturalExchange #History #FexingoHistory #Xi'an #Ossuaries #ReligiousSyncretism #Sogdiana #TangDynasty #WomenInHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

12 de jul de 20266 min
Portada del episodio The Sogdian General Who Shaped Tang China: An Lushan's Rise and Fall

The Sogdian General Who Shaped Tang China: An Lushan's Rise and Fall

This episode zooms in on An Lushan, the Sogdian-Turkic general whose rebellion nearly toppled the Tang dynasty. We trace his early career as a favored commander under Emperor Xuanzong, his dual Sogdian and Turkic heritage, and how he exploited Tang frontier politics to build a personal army. The conversation covers the Battle of Talas in 751 and its aftermath, the role of Sogdian merchants in funding his revolt, and the siege of Chang'an in 756. We also examine the controversial figure of Yang Guifei and the lasting impact on Silk Road trade patterns. New details emerge about An Lushan's network across Sogdiana and the Tarim Basin, and how his rebellion reshaped Chinese and Central Asian history. #AnLushan #TangDynasty #Sogdian #SilkRoad #History #FexingoHistory #CentralAsia #ChineseHistory #YangGuifei #BattleofTalas #Chang'an #Sogdiana #TarimBasin #Rebellion #Eurasia #MedievalHistory #Warfare #CulturalExchange Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
Portada del episodio The Sogdian City That Challenged the Caliphate

The Sogdian City That Challenged the Caliphate

In 722 CE, the walled city of Panjikent in Sogdiana stood against the tide of the Umayyad Caliphate's advance into Central Asia. This episode follows the final siege of the city, the fate of its ruler Devashtich, and the extraordinary discovery of the Panjikent murals—paintings that depict Sogdian life, Zoroastrian rituals, and scenes from the epic of Rostam. We explore how a single city became a nexus of resistance, trade, and cultural fusion, and what its ruins reveal about the Sogdian civilization that once dominated the Silk Road. Featuring the last stand at Mount Mugh, the role of the Arab general al-Harashi, and the decapitation of Devashtich, this is a story of empire, art, and the cost of defiance. #Panjikent #Sogdiana #Devashtich #MountMugh #UmayyadCaliphate #alHarashi #SilkRoad #CentralAsia #Zoroastrianism #Rostam #SogdianArt #FexingoHistory #History #EighthCentury #Tajikistan #AncientCities #Archaeology #Resistance Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Long before tea became China's national drink, the Tang court was obsessed with grape wine — imported and monopolized by Sogdian merchants from Samarkand. This episode uncovers the story of the Sogdian wine trade along the Silk Road, from the vineyards of the Zeravshan Valley to the emperor's table in Chang'an. We follow the rise of the sabao, the Zoroastrian trade chiefs who organized caravans of amphorae, and explore how wine became a political tool, a religious offering, and a luxury that reshaped diplomacy. Lucas and Luna toast with a cup of tariq (grape wine) and examine a 7th-century silver ewer from a Sogdian tomb — etched with Dionysian scenes yet buried with a Zoroastrian merchant. They also visit the famous 'Wine Spring' at the Jade Gate Pass, where soldiers traded stories for a sip. It's a story of taste, power, and the merchants who made the world's oldest drink flow across Eurasia. #SilkRoad #Sogdian #TangDynasty #WineTrade #Samarkand #ChangAn #Zoroastrianism #Sabao #GrapeWine #Ferghana #TarimBasin #Dunhuang #JadeGatePass #Zeravshan #Tariq #Archaeology #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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