Theosophical Society,
Chronology of Buddhism
6th Century
B.C.E. to 15th Century C.E.
6th Century B.C.E.
• Life of Siddhartha Guatama, the
historical Buddha: conventional dates: 566-486 B.C.E. (According to more recent
research, revised dates are: 490-410 BCE).
5th Century B.C.E.
• First Buddhist Council at Rajagaha
(486) after the Parinirvana*, under the patronage of
King Ajatasattu.
• The Buddhist Canon as it exist today was
settled at this Council and preserved as an oral tradition.
4th Century B.C.E.
• Second Buddhist Council at Vesali (386)
about 100 year after the Parinirvana.
• First schism of the Sangha occurs in
which the Mahasanghika school parts ways with the Sthaviravadins and the Theravadins.
• Non-canonical Buddhist Council at Pataliputra
(367)
3rd Century B.C.E.
• Reign of Indian Emperor Asoka (272-231) who converts and
establishes the Buddha's Dharma on a national level for the first time.
• Third Buddhist Council at Pataliputra
(250) under the patronage of Emperor Asoka about 200 years after the Parinirvana.
• The modern Pali Tipitaka now
essentially complete.
• Asoka's son and missionary Mahinda established Buddhism in
2nd Century
• Beginnings of Mahayana Buddhism (20O).
• Composition of Prajnaparamita
literature.
• Historical record has it that two
Buddhist missionaries from
1st Century
• Entire scriptural canon of
• Milinda-pañha or Questions of King Milinda to Venerble Nagasena.
1st Century C.E.*
• King Kaniska (78-101) convened the
Fourth Buddhist Council at Jalandhar or in
• Buddhism established in Cambodia 100 C.E and in Vietnam 150 C.E.
• Composition of Lotus Sutra and other Mahayana Buddhist texts.
• Buddhism enters
2nd Century C.E.
• The Age of Indian Buddhist philosopher Nargarjuna
(150) founder of the
3rd Century C.E.
• Expansion of Buddhism to
The Yogacara (meditation) school was
founded by Maitreyanatha (3rd century).
• Buddhist influence in
4th Century C.E.
• Asanga (310-390) and his brother Vasubandhu (420-500) prominent teachers of the Yogacara
• Development of Vajrayana Buddhism in
• Translation of Buddhist texts into Chinese by Kumarajiva
(344-413) and Hui-yüan (334-416).
• Buddhism enters
5th Century
• Buddhist monastic university founded at
• Buddhaghosa composes the Visuddhimagga and major commentaries in
• Buddhism established in
• Chinese pilgrim Fa-Hsien visits
• Amitabha (Amida)
• Sri lankan Theravadin
nuns introduce full ordination lineage into
• Mahayana Buddhism was introduced into Java,
6th Century
• Bodhidharma founder of Ch'an (Zen) arrives in
• Sui Dynasty in Chinese History
(589-617) beginning of Golden Age of Chinese Buddhism.
• Development of T'ien-tai, Hua-yen,
• Buddhism enters
• Buddhism flourishing in
• Jataka Tales translated into Persian by
King Khusru (531-579).
7th Century
• Construction of Potala Palace, Jokang and Ramoche temples to
house Buddha images (641-650)
• Harsa-vardhana ruler of a large empire
in northern
• Chinese pilgrim Hsuan-Tsang (602-664)
visits
8th Century
• Academic schools (Jöjitsu, Kusha, Sanron, Hossö, Ritsu, and Kegon) proliferate in
• Great debate between Tibetan and Chinese Buddhist schools.
• Ch'an declared heretical in
• Nyingma School of Tibet Buddhism
established.
•
• Jataka Tales translated into Syrian and
Arabic under title: Kalilag and Damnag.
9th Century
• Khmer kings build Angkor Wat, the
world's largest religious monument.
•
• Great Buddhist persecution in
• Biography of Buddha translated into Greek by Saint John of
Damascus and distributed in Christianity as "Balaam" and "Josaphat".
10th Century
• First complete printing of Chinese Buddhist Canon (983), known as
the
• Buddhism in
• Islam replaces Buddhism in
11th Century
• Conversion of King Anawrahta of Pagan (
• Atisha (982-1054) arrives in
• Marpa (1012-1097) begins Kargyu School of Tibetan Buddhism.
• Milarepa (1040-1123) becomes greatest
poet and most popular saint in Tibetan Buddhism.
•The bhikkhu and bhikkhuni
(monk and nun) communities at
• Sakya School of Tibetan Buddhism
established.
• Revival of Theravada Buddhism in
12th Century
• Theravada Buddhism established in
• Hönen (1133-1212) founded the Pure Land
School of Japanese Buddhism.
• Eisai (1141-1215) founds the Rinzai Zen
School of Japanese Buddhism.
• In 1193 the Moslems attacked and conquered
• Buddhism in
13th Century
• Shinran (1173-1263 )
founds True Pure Land School of Japanese Buddhism.
• Dogen (1200-1253) founds Soto Zen
School of Japanese Buddhism.
• Nichiren (1222-1282) founds
• Mongols converted to Vajrayana
Buddhism.
• Theravada Buddhism spreads to
• Some Buddhist texts still being translated into Arabic, in
14th Century
• Bu-ston collects and edits Tibetan
Buddhist Canon.
• Rulers of the north (Chieng-mai) and
northeast (Sukhothai)
• Theravada Buddhism adopted in
• Tsong-kha-pa (1357-1419) Tibetan
Buddhist reformer and founder of Dge-lugs-pa (or Gelugpa, or 'Yellow Hat') order.
Esoteric Buddhism By A P Sinnet
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