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

The Wandering Saint: Xuanzang's Silk Road Pilgrimage

7 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio The Wandering Saint: Xuanzang's Silk Road Pilgrimage

Descripción

In 629 AD, a young Chinese monk named Xuanzang slipped past imperial guards and vanished into the Gobi Desert. His goal? To reach India, the homeland of Buddhism, and bring back scriptures that could resolve a doctrinal crisis roiling the Tang court. Over sixteen years, Xuanzang crossed the Tarim Basin, the Pamir Mountains, and the Hindu Kush, braving bandits, avalanches, and a seventy-two-day trek across the Taklamakan—the 'place from which no one returns.' He studied at Nalanda, the great Buddhist university, and debated with kings and scholars across the subcontinent. His journey, recorded in the 'Great Tang Records on the Western Regions,' became a geographical and cultural treasure, mapping kingdoms from Kucha to Kanchipuram. In this episode, Lucas and Luna follow Xuanzang's footsteps, exploring how one monk's obsession not only transformed Chinese Buddhism but also left an indelible record of Silk Road life—from the White Horse Monastery in Luoyang to the Bamiyan Buddhas, from the legend of the Flaming Mountain to the politics of the Hephthalite and Turkic khaganates. Along the way, they ask: What drives a person to walk ten thousand miles for a truth they already believe? #Xuanzang #SilkRoad #TangDynasty #ChineseBuddhism #Nalanda #BuddhistPilgrimage #TaklamakanDesert #GreatTangRecords #Hephthalite #TurkicKhaganate #Bamiyan #Kucha #Kashmir #PamirMountains #FexingoHistory #History #BuddhismHistory #Pilgrim Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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137 episodios

episode The Barbarian Who Saved China: Fu Jian's Forgotten Empire artwork

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In 383 CE, a half-barbarian emperor named Fu Jian assembled the largest army Asia had ever seen — over 900,000 men — and marched on the Jin dynasty to unite all of China under his rule. His Former Qin empire, built by his father Fu Hong from the Di tribes of the northwest, had already conquered much of northern China and controlled the Silk Road's eastern terminus. At the Battle of Fei River, Fu Jian's massive force faced a Jin army of just 80,000, led by military prodigy Xie Xuan. But hubris, ethnic tensions, and a single catastrophic retreat turned victory into the most spectacular defeat in Chinese history. This episode explores the rise and fall of Fu Jian, his cosmopolitan court that included the Buddhist translator Kumarajiva, the balancing act of ruling a multi-ethnic empire, and how the battle reshaped the Silk Road for centuries. Fei River set back northern unification by two hundred years, fractured the Silk Road into warring states, and forced Chinese rulers to rethink how they managed diversity. We also examine the historical controversy: was Fu Jian a generous visionary or a reckless conqueror? #FormerQin #FuJian #BattleOfFeiRiver #Kumarajiva #DiTribe #JinDynasty #XieXuan #SilkRoad #SixteenKingdoms #ChangAn #Buddhism #ChineseHistory #EthnicDiversity #Hubris #EasternJin #MilitaryHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

5 de jul de 202610 min
episode The Forgotten Kingdom of Khotan: Buddhism on the Silk Road artwork

The Forgotten Kingdom of Khotan: Buddhism on the Silk Road

Long before the Silk Road became a conduit for trade, it carried something far more transformative: Buddhism. But how did a faith born in the Gangetic plains travel across the desolate Taklamakan Desert to China? The answer lies in the oasis kingdom of Khotan — a prosperous city-state in the Tarim Basin that became a crucible of Buddhist translation, art, and pilgrimage. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Khotan's origins as a colony of Indian missionaries, its adoption of Mahayana Buddhism, and its role as a bridge between Gandharan and Chinese traditions. They discuss the legendary founding by the Indian prince Kustana, the arrival of the Kashmiri monk Devadatta, and the pivotal moment when Khotanese monks like Zhu Shixing risked the desert to bring sutras to China. They also uncover the darker side of Khotan's piety: the city's brutal conquest by the Tibetan Empire in the 8th century and its eventual eclipse by Islam. Along the way, they touch on Khotan's distinctive art style, its use of the Kharosthi script, and the mysterious 'Book of Zambasta' that preserves a lost strain of Buddhist thought. This is the story of a kingdom that was not just a stop on the Silk Road, but a creator of the Silk Road itself. #Khotan #Buddhism #SilkRoad #TarimBasin #TaklamakanDesert #Mahayana #Kustana #ZhuShixing #Kharosthi #Gandhara #TibetanEmpire #BookOfZambasta #GandharanArt #Devadatta #OasisKingdom #History #FexingoHistory #CentralAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

5 de jul de 20267 min
episode The Wandering Saint: Xuanzang's Silk Road Pilgrimage artwork

The Wandering Saint: Xuanzang's Silk Road Pilgrimage

In 629 AD, a young Chinese monk named Xuanzang slipped past imperial guards and vanished into the Gobi Desert. His goal? To reach India, the homeland of Buddhism, and bring back scriptures that could resolve a doctrinal crisis roiling the Tang court. Over sixteen years, Xuanzang crossed the Tarim Basin, the Pamir Mountains, and the Hindu Kush, braving bandits, avalanches, and a seventy-two-day trek across the Taklamakan—the 'place from which no one returns.' He studied at Nalanda, the great Buddhist university, and debated with kings and scholars across the subcontinent. His journey, recorded in the 'Great Tang Records on the Western Regions,' became a geographical and cultural treasure, mapping kingdoms from Kucha to Kanchipuram. In this episode, Lucas and Luna follow Xuanzang's footsteps, exploring how one monk's obsession not only transformed Chinese Buddhism but also left an indelible record of Silk Road life—from the White Horse Monastery in Luoyang to the Bamiyan Buddhas, from the legend of the Flaming Mountain to the politics of the Hephthalite and Turkic khaganates. Along the way, they ask: What drives a person to walk ten thousand miles for a truth they already believe? #Xuanzang #SilkRoad #TangDynasty #ChineseBuddhism #Nalanda #BuddhistPilgrimage #TaklamakanDesert #GreatTangRecords #Hephthalite #TurkicKhaganate #Bamiyan #Kucha #Kashmir #PamirMountains #FexingoHistory #History #BuddhismHistory #Pilgrim Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
episode The Sogdian Merchant Who Founded a Dynasty artwork

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Every Silk Road story has a Sogdian behind it — or so the joke goes among historians. But one Sogdian family didn't just trade along the route: they built an empire. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace the improbable rise of the Sogdian merchant An Lushan, the Tang dynasty's most notorious rebel, and the web of Silk Road commerce that made his revolt possible. From the markets of Samarkand to the court of Xuanzong in Chang'an, we explore how the Sogdian diaspora — the same network that carried Buddhism, Manichaeism, and paper westward — also incubated a rebellion that nearly toppled China's most cosmopolitan dynasty. Along the way, we meet the Sogdian warlords, Turkish horsemen, and Persian magi whose loyalties shifted with the trade winds, and ask: was the An Lushan Rebellion a betrayal of the Silk Road, or its ultimate expression? #AnLushan #Sogdian #TangDynasty #SilkRoad #Rebellion #ChangAn #Samarkand #Sogdiana #Xuanzong #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory #TradeRoutes #Diaspora #Mercenaries #Manichaeism #Turkic #Eurasia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
episode The Aksum Obelisk: Rome's Rival on the Silk Road artwork

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3 de jul de 20267 min