The Ancient Greeks Who Converted to Buddhism

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  • Опубликовано: 17 июн 2024
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    Greece is very far away from the heartland of early Buddhism in India and parts of Afghanistan and Pakistan. But thanks to Alexander the Great, Hellenistic and Buddhist cultures came into contact in the 4th century BCE, creating a cultural synthesis known as Greco-Buddhism.
    00:00 A Greco-Bactrian Buddhist Inscription
    1:41 The Hellenistic "Far East"
    4:10 Pyrrho: A Buddhist for Greece?
    7:42 Ashoka and his Dharma Conquest
    10:23 King Menander: The Most Famous Greek Buddhist
    13:26 Greco-Buddhist Art of Gandhara
    15:23 Syncretism?
    16:44 Nebula! Indie creators being awesome
    Select imagery/video supplied by Getty Images and Reuters

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @ReligionForBreakfast
    @ReligionForBreakfast  Месяц назад +77

    Get Nebula using my link for 40% off an annual subscription: go.nebula.tv/religionforbreakfast
    Watch Archaeology Quest here!: nebula.tv/videos/realscience-pottery?ref=religionforbreakfast

    • @alinaqirizvi1441
      @alinaqirizvi1441 Месяц назад +5

      Buddhist greeks in afghanistan just sounds so random

    • @michaelpineiro533
      @michaelpineiro533 Месяц назад +2

      I have always enjoyed saying "atlatl".

    • @sayanchx
      @sayanchx Месяц назад +4

      One more aspect of Indo Greek culture that many may not know en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliodorus_pillar

    • @christsavesreadromans1096
      @christsavesreadromans1096 Месяц назад

      Jesus is *fully God* and He died for the sins of all mankind, so that _everyone who believes in Him and amends their life can be saved._ The Holy Roman Catholic Church is the Church which He founded, and it has primacy over the entire world. You should join.

    • @reginaldbauer5243
      @reginaldbauer5243 Месяц назад +2

      What books would you recommend that compare Zoroastrianism and Hinduism, the Avesta with the Rig Veda?

  • @thebronzehexagon
    @thebronzehexagon Месяц назад +1845

    Indo-Greek cultural syncretism is so underrated

    • @arkusworldwalker9818
      @arkusworldwalker9818 Месяц назад +15

      yes

    • @Jumpoable
      @Jumpoable Месяц назад

      Because western academia & the West does not want to admit that Greek & Roman thought, the font of their divine civilisation, was inspired heavily by ancient India. Same with all the Egyptian influence culture.

    • @nosuchthing8
      @nosuchthing8 Месяц назад +13

      I live that food

    • @Tom-sd9jb
      @Tom-sd9jb Месяц назад +27

      One Bhuna Gyros please.

    • @experience741
      @experience741 Месяц назад +3

      Indeed

  • @jhggcfdr3467
    @jhggcfdr3467 Месяц назад +489

    I’m glad you did this video! I recently got into and now practice Buddhism (Theravada school). - Pakistani Buddhist 🇵🇰☸️

    • @temptemp4174
      @temptemp4174 Месяц назад

      Why convert to the religion of your jahil ancestors? You do not understand the difficulties they faced just to become Muslims and you spit on their legacy.

    • @shreyasawant6355
      @shreyasawant6355 Месяц назад +51

      Brother,sadhu sadhu sadhu
      Theravada the path of elder arhants is the path to Nirvana , stay firm in faith , with the Power of buddha dhamma and sangha i transfer loving kindness to you and your family members, do merits and have faith in noble triple gems

    • @debarghyaroy9948
      @debarghyaroy9948 Месяц назад +40

      YOU EXIST??????!!!!❤❤❤❤

    • @jhggcfdr3467
      @jhggcfdr3467 Месяц назад +22

      @@debarghyaroy9948I converted sorry for the misleading comment.

    • @lyd4712
      @lyd4712 Месяц назад

      ​@@jhggcfdr3467converted? That even better!

  • @spartandud3
    @spartandud3 Месяц назад +718

    It should be noted that it wasn't just Alexander that brought Hellenism to the region. There were already Greek populations there that had been deported by the Persians.

    • @rustomkanishka
      @rustomkanishka Месяц назад +117

      Aye, they were called Yavanas.
      The name for Greece was copied from the Persians, who called all of Greece Yunan. Essentially the same word as Ionia.

    • @gododoof
      @gododoof Месяц назад +77

      This is important to understand, that Greeks from the rebellion in western Anatolia were resettled across the Persian Empire as punishment for treason.
      It's also hilarious to think that Alexander and his army would have stumbled on a random Greek settlement on what must have felt like the edge of the world to them.

    • @gulaschnikov5335
      @gulaschnikov5335 Месяц назад +15

      @@gododoof I think they had knowledge of that and the regime of Alexander has conquered the persians which was the main enemy for Alexander during this time. Imagine being in this position and knowing you have people speaking greek in the other end of the enemies empire which is already 2 foot in the door in your empire. It was ressentment and vengeance driving history once again.

    • @Ezullof
      @Ezullof Месяц назад +33

      People tend to underestimate how connected the greek world was with the iranic/persian world. Athens even had scythic policemen at some point.
      The celts were much more foreign to the Greeks.

    • @duketv9315
      @duketv9315 Месяц назад +5

      Greek influence increased under Xerxes I, after the descendants of Greek priests who had once lived near Didyma (western Asia Minor) were forcibly relocated in Bactria,[11] and later on with other exiled Greeks, most of them prisoners of war. Greeks communities and language were already common in the area by the time that Alexander the Great conquered Bactria in 328 BC.[12]

  • @nadeeshadissanayaka2015
    @nadeeshadissanayaka2015 Месяц назад +591

    Hi! I'm a Buddhist from sri lanka and we have heard the story of king Menander or Milinda as he is called in our stories and his debates with the Fully enlightend monk(Arahanth) called Nagasena. It is taught in our stories that after 500 sessions of these debates with Arahanth Nagasena king Menander abdicated and gave his crown to his eldest son and Ordained as a monk himself, and later attained spiritual Enlightnment (Arahanthship). and he passed away near a war camp many years later in Ghandhar (modern day Kandahar) and his grandson who was the king at the time (his son passed away due to an accident) burned his body in a ceremonial fire and disributed his relics and built 1000 stupas in every major town in his kingdom honoring him

    • @rebeccamartin2399
      @rebeccamartin2399 Месяц назад +23

      Good to see you in comments. Thanks

    • @emperoroak7331
      @emperoroak7331 Месяц назад +22

      @@christsavesreadromans1096what, bro seriously 😂, why are you here, you can preach everywhere but here ,we discuss about history and philosophy, you can go other religion sites

    • @Bipedalduck
      @Bipedalduck Месяц назад +24

      ​@@christsavesreadromans1096
      I'm not sure if this is a bot or just someone who can't read the room. We're here to widen our view of the world, not here to tunnel vision into the realm of Christianity.

    • @nadeeshadissanayaka2015
      @nadeeshadissanayaka2015 Месяц назад +5

      @@christsavesreadromans1096 Ramen

    • @ClassifiedUnit-135
      @ClassifiedUnit-135 Месяц назад

      ​@@christsavesreadromans1096 Parasitic cultist.

  • @danielm3711
    @danielm3711 Месяц назад +213

    Fun fact central Asia had a massive Greek population centuries before Alexandre got there. They were Ionians (Anatolian) and other Greek soldiers/people who were defeated and expelled to a location far from their home land.

    • @unknownmaster5078
      @unknownmaster5078 Месяц назад +14

      Yeah my ancestors lived with these Greeks before we fled to India

    • @IndianArma
      @IndianArma Месяц назад +3

      ​@unknownmaster5078 may I know more about your ancestors?

    • @unknownmaster5078
      @unknownmaster5078 Месяц назад +4

      @@IndianArma Kambojas

    • @TENGRI-101
      @TENGRI-101 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@unknownmaster5078
      99% southeast asians are nothing to do with india in term of race(tribe).

    • @Lakshyam9
      @Lakshyam9 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@TENGRI-101convenient philosophy busted by recent DNA sampling of archaeological sites

  • @paiwanhan
    @paiwanhan Месяц назад +479

    Original Buddhism was against the making of icons of the Buddha. Early Buddhist art used either a footprint or symbols like the dharma chakara to represent Buddha. The earliest depictions of Buddha came from Greek kingdoms within India.

    • @mboatrightED300
      @mboatrightED300 Месяц назад +98

      While it’s true that there are no surging stone images of the Buddha before then, the idea that they were “against” it is highly debated. Susana Huntington in particular has contested that there was a prohibition on depicting the Buddha. It’s worth reading up on, and a RFB episode on aniconism generally would be really interesting.

    • @AnotherCraig
      @AnotherCraig Месяц назад +15

      ​@@mboatrightED300 Yeah that would be a great vid. It's interesting that the idea (aniconism) has popped up multiple times.
      I guess it is an easy way to rareify the deity-- as well as control of the deity-- isn't it?
      A blanket ban makes it harder for individual worshipers to introduce personal alterations that might not gel with official dogma-- nipping in the bud certain ideas that might catch on against priestly wishes 🤔

    • @elverdaderojavier
      @elverdaderojavier Месяц назад +54

      @@AnotherCraig But Buddha is not a deity. That's why early Buddhism would be against statues, because you're not supposed to worship Buddha.

    • @andrewsuryali8540
      @andrewsuryali8540 Месяц назад +31

      ​@@elverdaderojavier Right, and this brings up an interesting question: Could it have been the Greeks who introduced the idea of Buddha as a deity?

    • @mboatrightED300
      @mboatrightED300 Месяц назад +30

      @@elverdaderojavier Buddhas are better than deities in Buddhism, and a better object of veneration. Even if they didn't veneration images, the Buddha's relics - teeth and bones left over after his cremation - were the center part of all early Buddhist stupas.stupa. and if there was a prohibition on images, it more likely had to do with the Buddha transcending human form, not the modernist idea that the Buddha was "just a teacher."

  • @MikhailBakunin
    @MikhailBakunin Месяц назад +256

    This is one of my FAVOURITE periods in all of human history. It's so important that more people learn about the ancient cultural connections between East and West, thank you so much for making this video.

    • @user-84-rg9-8n2
      @user-84-rg9-8n2 Месяц назад +11

      Unfortunately, most of the evidence has been destroyed or suppressed.

    • @vko7059
      @vko7059 Месяц назад +3

      ⁠@@user-84-rg9-8n2what? I thought this was pretty common knowledge. I was taught about Alexander the Great in middleschool. Where is it supressed?

    • @AdolfoMussolini-wx4yk
      @AdolfoMussolini-wx4yk Месяц назад

      @@vko7059 nowhere, he is just making stuff up

    • @shitxlminersuser71
      @shitxlminersuser71 Месяц назад

      ​@@vko7059 there was alot more to the story than merely Alexander and his expedition. Like greco-indo-bactrian king named Kanishk Kushan the surge of sense of enlightenment, budhhism and philosophy in his era and many more people like him during the era. But due to various reasons like one of it is spread of monotheistic faith in the region few centuries earlier which viewed Buddhism as a pantheist or atheist faith and more importantly their rival led to the anhillation of their sanctuaries and all the artifacts you could call as evidence. What you know as common knowledge is only the 1% of what there actually the history was .
      Obviously not as popular as Alexander

    • @dlingfasin6826
      @dlingfasin6826 27 дней назад +2

      its better when you realise that the east-west dichotomy is a modern invention and greece was and has always been a ''near east'' culture and nation when it comes to identity.

  • @markhatfield5621
    @markhatfield5621 Месяц назад +1700

    There is a little known work of fiction where Jesus was simply trying to teach Buddhism but was misunderstood.

    • @mardigrasking5456
      @mardigrasking5456 Месяц назад +99

      I saw that movie!!

    • @Ninja-Alinja
      @Ninja-Alinja Месяц назад +171

      Man from Earth? Obviously they take it way further, but Buddhism is also thrown in.

    • @santiagomarin1116
      @santiagomarin1116 Месяц назад +56

      is it perhaps Manichaeism?

    • @christopherepperson3328
      @christopherepperson3328 Месяц назад +63

      It’s hilarious in my opinion because a virgin birth is a polemic against the fathers of the Nephilim.
      Melchizedek, the human, led an army of angels in 11q13 Dead Sea Scrolls, as if he was the deity himself.
      It’s pretty clear Jesus was Jewish.

    • @ammi5311
      @ammi5311 Месяц назад +24

      Syncretism 是指 本地垂蹟 嗎?

  • @IapetusStag
    @IapetusStag Месяц назад +474

    One of the weirdest crossovers I have ever seen - that statue of the Buddha together with a nude statue of Heracles (Hercules). It feels absolutely like a Marvel-American Pie crossover of sorts. XD

    • @NITHUMON
      @NITHUMON Месяц назад +4

      Haha😂

    • @NITHUMON
      @NITHUMON Месяц назад +3

      Or like nolan and tarantino

    • @rustomkanishka
      @rustomkanishka Месяц назад +36

      Look, the Buddha being real was kinda getting tired of his usual imaginary friends from the Hindu pantheon.
      He got some new buddies from the Greek pantheon.
      Also, I'm kinda in love with Gandhara school. Buddha often looks like he's wearing a tunic made of water. Also, the Greek tunic + pyjamas that Buddha is wearing kinda still worn today. It's called a Pathani in Afghanistan.

    • @johnsherfey3675
      @johnsherfey3675 Месяц назад +13

      It gets crazier the later you go! At Tapa Shotor there's a whole greeco-indian pantheon there surrounding the buddha. Hercules, Tyche, etc surrounded him. I really love the detail they added into the sculptures too.

    • @Manos602
      @Manos602 Месяц назад +18

      Not as strange as you think, Buddhism has a tradition of converting other deities to be their protector, usually it's Hinduism but in China it's normal for some deities or saints/holy figures to be both Buddhist and taoist figures, and in many cases the deities are the devil himself or the great beast that got enlightened by Budda/Buddhist monk and become the protector, naga in southeast asia is prime example, even it came from india but SEA's great snake=naga is main protector of the temples and has many legend dated back to age before Buddhism.

  • @a.j.rivera4619
    @a.j.rivera4619 Месяц назад +169

    Thank you so much for making a video on this topic! I'm a practicing Buddhist, training to become a monk, and when I first found out about Grecco-Buddhism, I found myself enthralled by it. The most fascinating thing was that the very first images of the Buddha were carved by these artists. Amazing and inspiring stuff for a Buddhist from the 'West' seeing the original "Western" Buddhists. Goes to show the Universality of these ancient traditions. 🙏

    • @sammavitae114
      @sammavitae114 Месяц назад +8

      After watching this I am left wondering about the relationship of the therapeutae near Alexandria and the theravadins of India.

    • @user-84-rg9-8n2
      @user-84-rg9-8n2 Месяц назад +2

      So the biggest, lasting Greek influence in Asia was not Turkey and Syria, but Korea and Japan.

    • @EspeonMistress00
      @EspeonMistress00 Месяц назад

      Whast? Buddhism is Indian​@@user-84-rg9-8n2

    • @Saturnius
      @Saturnius Месяц назад

      @@user-84-rg9-8n2 They're probably behind India, Bhutan, Nepal and China, but yes. You can see the remnants of this influence in East Asia to this day while in Turkey and Syria you won't find a single trace of it.

    • @user-jt3dw6vv4x
      @user-jt3dw6vv4x Месяц назад +3

      @@user-84-rg9-8n2 What has any of this got to do with Korea and Japan? Gandhara was in ancient India (modern western Pakistan and eastern Afghanistan).

  • @Monstacheeks
    @Monstacheeks Месяц назад +13

    Buddhism is Good for Every Walks of life.

  • @gimakolla3708
    @gimakolla3708 Месяц назад +34

    I am a Sri lankan Sinhalese Buddhist who practice Theravada buddhism. We often come up with the debate of Yonaka king Mirendo(Milinda) vs Arahanth Nagasena. The famous Milinda prashna...Almost it contains all types of philosophical-radical questions that could be asked by an intelligent person on buddhism. Love your videos and you have done the research at your best rather than telling stories...

    • @Lifegoeson166
      @Lifegoeson166 Месяц назад +4

      I recently converted to Buddhism and I have studied that "singhalese" people consider Buddhism as their blood and they respect /protect it a lot❤ you deserve respect ❤ also please protect Buddhism in your country

    • @PiscestheDirty
      @PiscestheDirty Месяц назад

      "It contains all types of philosophical - radical questions."
      Establishments censored and sorta removed it from main stream.
      Now they believe Buddha have sorta super power.

  • @rodionromanovich449
    @rodionromanovich449 Месяц назад +83

    The Seleucid Empire & all of the cultural & religious fusion it brought about is one of my favorite subjects in history.

    • @Dave102693
      @Dave102693 22 дня назад +1

      That empire help push the Full Roman Empire to collapse into the Eastern Roman Empire.

    • @rodionromanovich449
      @rodionromanovich449 10 дней назад

      @@Dave102693 Are you sure you're not thinking of the Sasanian Empire? The Seleucids were gone by then. One could also say Rome's own ineptitude brought about their downfall, that and the constant civil wars.

  • @tsurugi5
    @tsurugi5 Месяц назад +21

    greco buddhism, the indo-greeks, and kushan empire is probably my favorite topics in history. The art especially is amazing. Probably one of the most beautiful budhas sculpted.

  • @gstlb
    @gstlb Месяц назад +41

    I’ve always felt there’s a strong Buddhist sensibility in the Gospel of Thomas.

    • @dr.donkey9254
      @dr.donkey9254 Месяц назад +7

      People now a days don’t realize how far reaching the Buddhist religion was.

  • @ericloo6576
    @ericloo6576 Месяц назад +32

    The Buddha sculptures in Afghanistan, Pakistan and India have very Greek looking faces.

    • @starrynight43451
      @starrynight43451 26 дней назад +13

      It is such a shame Buddhist heritage in Pakistan and Afghanistan are now lost forever.

    • @Dave102693
      @Dave102693 22 дня назад +3

      @@starrynight43451those regions were converted to Islam via similar tactics the Roman Catholic Church used to convert Polish and Baltic regions’ people into Christians.

    • @bletwort2920
      @bletwort2920 22 дня назад +4

      ​@@Dave102693What is now Afghanistan and Pakistan seen endless wars as the Persians, Arabs and Turks and Mongols tried to capture India's fertile lands.

    • @Toaraja953
      @Toaraja953 9 дней назад

      ​@@Dave102693Pakistan is an alternative of the destroyed Muslim India

  • @TesserId
    @TesserId Месяц назад +120

    Totally new concept to me, and totally fascinating. Had to watch right away. Glad I'm subscribed.

  • @gwang3103
    @gwang3103 Месяц назад +110

    One wonders how the early Greeks would have responded to the idea that absolutely anyone can be a Buddha and that a Buddha is a teacher of gods and men alike. In Greek mythology humans can NEVER reach the divine through their own effort, and anyone who fancied himself the equal of the gods would quickly face their wrath. But in Buddhism we're all already in a sense divine -- we all possess the Buddha Nature -- it being merely a question of bringing this Buddha Nature to full fruition. The Olympian gods would have regarded all this as an affront to their exalted status. Well, maybe some of the Greeks who were attracted to Buddhism thought: "To Hell with the Olympian gods." :P

    • @paulvoas3328
      @paulvoas3328 Месяц назад +4

      Or were those gods the same ? Aliens

    • @gideonros2705
      @gideonros2705 Месяц назад +36

      You forget that Greeks also had different mystery schools or cults. The ideas about Gods as you describe were more worldy and lay in understanding. Remember that Socrates communicated with his daimon, an inborn spirit, and was accused of corrupting the young with impiety. So there has always been a split between esoteric and exoteric. In other words it was understood by early Greeks that spiritual knowledge was to be sought and developed through Theoria (the word philosophy was a later development).

    • @SlitheringDemon
      @SlitheringDemon Месяц назад +2

      If you see these gods through the books of Buddhism, they are likely beings in the heavenly realm bound by sense pleasures. So a lower level of gods who still haven't attained the meditative absorptions, and the Jhanas and probably never will.

    • @gwang3103
      @gwang3103 Месяц назад +1

      @@gideonros2705 I'm not really sure how much similarity there is between Buddhism and the mystery schools. From what I read, some of those schools/cults threatened those who revealed their secrets with the death penalty. I can't imagine the Buddha ever doing that sort of thing; his teachings were open to anyone who wished to learn. Plato likewise thought that only certain children could and should be given the sort of education that would make them 'Guardians' when they grew up, and these children had to be specially hand-picked. Not everyone could be a 'Guardian'. By contrast, anyone can be a Buddha.

    • @RedRocket4000
      @RedRocket4000 Месяц назад +4

      Very early Greeks not respond well by Alexanders time Greek thinking in Philosophy welcomed all sort of ideas including this Buddhist idea. This video shows they liked Buddhist ideas. They at times edged close to atheism even with some philosophies in other case. What we think of classical Greece most often is then not very devoted at all. Greeks if they had the world view your thinking of the Philosophers in many cases would have been killed for not following the religious line.
      Plus Buddhism recognizes Greek Like Gods that humans can't become and from what I have read sort of pities them as those Gods would find it very hard to reach enlightenment.
      I have never seen anything in Buddhism desiring the type of Divine that Greek Gods have. Instead Buddhism seeking what is not of the world and above it.

  • @suvajeetdatta1220
    @suvajeetdatta1220 Месяц назад +29

    I got the chance to visit the statue shown in 1:35 in the museum in Kolkata and i must say, up close you can just say by looking that Gandhara art is unique in the way indian and european styles are combined, something we won't see for millennia after that

  • @mage1over137
    @mage1over137 Месяц назад +25

    Honestly I've been very curious about this topic for years, I'm so happy you made a video.

  • @janpiorko3809
    @janpiorko3809 Месяц назад +114

    Indo greek kingdom, let's go!

    • @rustomkanishka
      @rustomkanishka Месяц назад +9

      Kushans were cooler
      (I'm biased with good reason)

    • @HariChera
      @HariChera Месяц назад +9

      ​@@rustomkanishka Okay Kanishka!

    • @princezuko6804
      @princezuko6804 Месяц назад +6

      ​@@rustomkanishkayour name gives us the clue😂

    • @georgeg331
      @georgeg331 27 дней назад

      Στρατηγός reporting for duty :)

    • @Toaraja953
      @Toaraja953 9 дней назад

      ​@@rustomkanishkaKhusan is Hindu

  • @sarahwatts7152
    @sarahwatts7152 Месяц назад +21

    This makes so much sense, given how close the two civilizations were to each other

    • @uamsnof
      @uamsnof Месяц назад +1

      Close?

    • @luvsuneja
      @luvsuneja 20 дней назад

      In antiquity, I would agree

  • @carmacksanderson3937
    @carmacksanderson3937 Месяц назад +35

    King Menander sounds like an absolutely fascinating historical figure! Right in the harmonious mix of these ancient cultures. I truly have learned something new and wondrous today

    • @rustomkanishka
      @rustomkanishka Месяц назад +11

      The name meander was turned to Milinda or just Milind in many Indian languages and is very much a popular name for boys today.
      Funnily enough one of my closest friends is named that but just for fun sometimes we call him Basellius Menander or Menander Rex and he screws with me by calling me by my namesake's title, Basellius Baselion, literally king of kings.

    • @devs.4254
      @devs.4254 Месяц назад +3

      In that book, Nagasena addresses what we in the west call "the ship of Theseus" the thought experiment where, if you replace all the parts of a ship over time... is it still the same ship? In Mahayana Buddhism it's called "Nagasena's Chariot." Another interesting connection between cultures

    • @space-junkie
      @space-junkie Месяц назад

      To this day, the Hindu male name Milind (derived from Menander) is popular in India. He must have been a pretty popular ruler plus influential in Indian history to be remembered 2500 years later. Compare that with how many Hindu men are named George or Akbar, despite those foreign rulers having been around far more recently (within the last 500 years).

    • @bletwort2920
      @bletwort2920 22 дня назад

      Milind is a very common name all over India. Siddharth, Ashok and Kanishk are also popular.

  • @user-ko1xu4ow4w
    @user-ko1xu4ow4w Месяц назад +136

    I had initially planned to retire at 62, work part-time, and save money, but the impact of high prices on various goods and services has significantly disrupted my retirement plan. I'm worried about whether those who experienced the 2008 financial crisis had it easier than I currently am. The volatility of the stock market is a concern as my income has decreased, and I fear that I won't be able to contribute as much as before, potentially jeopardizing my retirement savings.

    • @LoseMike-og9in
      @LoseMike-og9in Месяц назад

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      @KateShawn-jv6wh Месяц назад

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  • @robblack5248
    @robblack5248 Месяц назад +12

    Your offerings keep getting better and better. Thank-you!

  • @serisaurusrex
    @serisaurusrex Месяц назад +36

    This reminded me of a theory I once saw about how the Therapeutae was possibly influenced by Buddhist traditions. Really makes me feel like everything is more interconnected than we think sometimes.

    • @anattasunnata3498
      @anattasunnata3498 Месяц назад +2

      Therapeutae = Theravada?

    • @serisaurusrex
      @serisaurusrex Месяц назад +1

      @@anattasunnata3498 That was part of the theory I saw, that therapeutae was possibly a Greek attempt at pronouncing theravada.

    • @Gamaouat
      @Gamaouat Месяц назад +1

      @@serisaurusrex Thats Latin, Θεραπευταί is Greek

    • @MustAfaalik
      @MustAfaalik Месяц назад

      Apparently, Jesus would have come into contact with the Therapeutae in Egypt & possibly influenced. Perhaps the second coming was about reincarnation & his last birth before becoming full enlightened as Metteyya prophesied by the Buddha?🙏

    • @urbandiscount
      @urbandiscount 28 дней назад

      @@serisaurusrex doubly intriguing that is was a jewish monastic sect

  • @dewd9327
    @dewd9327 Месяц назад +127

    Greeks having an influence on Buddhism in the east and Christianity in the west will never not boggle my mind

    • @atul6585
      @atul6585 Месяц назад +34

      They both impacted and got enriched. Stoicism was heavily influenced by Buddhism.

    • @mtarkes
      @mtarkes Месяц назад +44

      In actuality, it was the Greeks who got heavily Indianised and were the main proponents of many Indian ideas to the west.

    • @TheMahayanist
      @TheMahayanist Месяц назад +13

      They're both directly related. Gnostic ideas (proto Christian) came from Buddhism through Hellenism.

    • @uncleelias
      @uncleelias Месяц назад +20

      I grew up Christian and knew of Hinduism. When I learned about Buddhism, I found a lot of the teachings of Jesus so similar to the Buddha. I felt certain that Christianity had to have been influenced by Buddhism because much of it was so different from the local belief systems.

    • @VanaeCavae
      @VanaeCavae Месяц назад +9

      @@uncleelias Considering how the old testament God is portrayed differently from the God in the new testament , it could be reasoned that proto Christianity has Buddhist influences based on your statement.

  • @IIIC3YLOCO
    @IIIC3YLOCO Месяц назад +20

    Having a philosopher in battle is beyond valuable for the perspectives to be given could be immense. Philosophy is not only about existence. You can philosophize about almost anything including war.

    • @2Hot2
      @2Hot2 Месяц назад +3

      Witness the Bhagavad Gita.

    • @subhuman3408
      @subhuman3408 Месяц назад +1

      If you are reflective thinking being, then you are doing philosophy by default

    • @TactlessGuy
      @TactlessGuy 27 дней назад

      That sounds good on paper, but how effective is it actually in practice? Without actual experience in war, philosophizing about war strategies is just armchair thinking. It's the equivalent of Redditors arguing essays about topics they have no credibility in.

    • @IIIC3YLOCO
      @IIIC3YLOCO 26 дней назад

      @@TactlessGuy All I need to say is Sun tsu. Have a good day

    • @TactlessGuy
      @TactlessGuy 26 дней назад

      @@IIIC3YLOCO ​ Thanks for proving my point. Sun Tzu was a successful military general long before he ever wrote the Art of War.

  • @michaelpenkalski3287
    @michaelpenkalski3287 Месяц назад +4

    I'm an Anthropology major who focused on Archaeology and this is brand new information to me! Really interesting stuff! Thanks for sharing!

  • @dabberowl
    @dabberowl Месяц назад +4

    This is my favorite channel on RUclips and has been for some time now. Thank you for your uploads and knowledge

  • @daenerys30
    @daenerys30 Месяц назад +7

    I love seeing how two cultures can influence one another

  • @Arbiterjim
    @Arbiterjim Месяц назад +80

    The more I learn of history the more confidence I feel about my slow life's trajectory toward Buddhism. You see the wisdom of the Buddha emerge all over the world as tiny little acknowledgements of even singular monks wandering the world.
    Even in Christianity, you see the same wisdom expressed by Jesus. The most brilliant people who ever lived find it over and over again. Of course I'm not arrogant enough to believe that Buddhism is the only way through life or the only valid faith - every faith or philosophy, so long as it doesn't call for the extinction of others, had it's place in the world. And I think that understanding is directly expressed by Buddhism.
    I don't know, there's just something beautiful about both the simplicity and complexity of the Buddha's message that I think can enrich the life of anyone

    • @alanhill2508
      @alanhill2508 Месяц назад +25

      One of the most Buddhist verses from any scripture I've ever read is found in Ecclesiastes, Ch1, v.8: "All things are wearisome; more than one can express; the eye is not satisfied with seeing, or the ear filled with hearing."

    • @vortexlegend101
      @vortexlegend101 Месяц назад +27

      The Buddha is one of my favourite religious figures, the best thing about him is that he can change his mind.
      He originally said that only men could be Buddhist monks, but later on somebody convinced him that women should be allowed too.
      The Buddha was presented with a logical argument and he realised that he was wrong, so he changed his teaching
      To me that is a lot wiser than anyone claiming to speak on behalf of infallible gods

    • @user-84-rg9-8n2
      @user-84-rg9-8n2 Месяц назад +6

      @@vortexlegend101 Well, Siddharth's worldview of the "real world" was turned on it head when he left the luxuries of palace life for the first time.

    • @czechmeoutbabe1997
      @czechmeoutbabe1997 Месяц назад

      This is incredibly accurate to my experience too. Also, the more I learn about practical Christianity, like prayer, worship and good deeds, the more I feel like it’s just like meditation and good in Buddhism. It feels like the Holy Spirit can be felt in just the same way that practitioners feel at one with the universe or dissolve the self. These are different terms, to be sure, but language describing an experience that doesn’t need to be at odds.

    • @jenningscunningham642
      @jenningscunningham642 Месяц назад +3

      I find Buddhism and Sikhism both fascinating. They are both influencing my thinking these days.

  • @l.a.gothro3999
    @l.a.gothro3999 Месяц назад +3

    I've read many of the place and proper names of that time, but haven't heard them spoken very often. Thank you for helping me out on that, and with the topics you select for videos as well!

  • @ekamsat429
    @ekamsat429 Месяц назад +10

    Thomas McEvilley's monumental text, 'The Shape of Ancient Thought: Comparative Studies in Greek and Indian Philosophies' is a great reference to this terrific topic on how the so-called "Western thought" was shaped significantly by Yogic (Hindu) and Buddhist philosophies. The text also has a fascinating collection of photos on syncretic art and sculpture.

  • @str__
    @str__ Месяц назад +2

    I've just finished reviewing this topic in my buddhist art history class, this stuff was so surprising when I learned about it. The mixing of such iconically greek motifs applied to so distinctively buddhist works in a myriad of sculptures is nothing short of awesome.

  • @mjr_schneider
    @mjr_schneider Месяц назад +137

    This is one of my favourite historical crossovers. I had read that some historians believe Nagarjuna actually learned his skeptical ideas from the Greeks, which is why he claimed to have been taught his ideas by snakes (naga) to hide the fact that they came from foreigners. Of course, the Greeks also likely learned these ideas from Indians, but no one knows for sure.

    • @invokingvajras
      @invokingvajras Месяц назад

      There is a tradition that claims the Mahayana Sutras were hidden in the realm of the nagas and later exposed to Nagarjuna when the world was ready for them. The realm of the nagas is of course patala: the underworld. This could suggest that Mahayana Buddhism went into hiding at an early point in its history, which may be further evidenced from a Buddhist point of view since the Lotus Sutra itself says the Dharma will be protected by the numerous bodhisattvas who dwell in space beneath the earth.

    • @alexwebb7020
      @alexwebb7020 Месяц назад +10

      Do you recall which historians? I would think it would be very odd for Nagarjuna to develop Madhyamaka on the basis of Greek ideas that would happen to accord with the negation of the catuskoti so clearly and consistently present through the suttas, to the point of Nagarjuna arguing, to paraphrase Jan Westerhoff, that his opponents are *insufficiently* Buddhist. Greek influence on Sarvastivadins, though, I could maybe see.

    • @commentnahipadhaikar2339
      @commentnahipadhaikar2339 Месяц назад +19

      Nagarjuna was from South of the India, modern Telangana state,
      Where there was not even a sea route from Romans.
      Greek influence mainly could be seen in Northwestern part.
      Besides Nagarjuna was not unique in that field, there had been many scholars and philosophers, even before Buddha.
      India was hotspot of many ideas and philosophies of different traditions, many of Buddhist ideas were influenced by Vedic, Tantrik, Jains, and Ajivikas.
      Ignoring them will be just idiocy.

    • @douglasbates236
      @douglasbates236 Месяц назад +3

      @@alexwebb7020 Thomas McEvilly and Matthew Neale are examples. It is known that Greek texts were imported into India. The hypothesis is that Nagarjuna was inspired by Pyrrhonist texts because so many Pyrrhonist arguments that had previously not appeared in Indian philosophy were introduced into Indian philosophy all at once by Nagarjuna.

    • @Kalki0025
      @Kalki0025 Месяц назад +1

      @@douglasbates236 The Charvaka movement Formed in 800 bce

  • @joalexsg9741
    @joalexsg9741 Месяц назад +3

    I had already read about this topic but this video gives us a much more appealing format plus more updated info on this interesting subject for anyone who likes Indo-European studies - or ancient history, for that matter.
    Thank you so much, I've given the due thumbs-up and subscribed to your channel.😊

  • @BadVideoWatcher1
    @BadVideoWatcher1 Месяц назад +5

    Best RUclips recommendation I've gotten in a long while

  • @chukstristan3605
    @chukstristan3605 Месяц назад +1

    Abigail Thorn mentioned! What a treat it would be if two of my favorite RUclipsrs collab in the future. A boy can only dream.
    Great video! I've always been fascinated by Greco-Bactrian history.

  • @joche5717
    @joche5717 Месяц назад +10

    As a philosophy student, this was mindblowingly interesting. Thank you for your awesome work!

  • @_.belladonna_
    @_.belladonna_ Месяц назад +42

    I saw an ancient buddhist statue/carving when visiting my home town in north Pakistan.

    • @laksh_ayy
      @laksh_ayy Месяц назад

      what town would that be?

    • @_.belladonna_
      @_.belladonna_ Месяц назад +5

      @@laksh_ayy there were 2 mansehra- where ashoka left his rock and haripur where there are buddhist carvings.

    • @laksh_ayy
      @laksh_ayy Месяц назад +6

      @@_.belladonna_ Just looked it up, its in hazara, near Kashmir. I will surely learn more about Ashokan edicts there. That looks a really lovely place, but sadly I won't be able to visit. Thanks though.

    • @_.belladonna_
      @_.belladonna_ Месяц назад +4

      @@laksh_ayy yep, hazara is a region in kpk it just borders kashmir and gilgit.

    • @laksh_ayy
      @laksh_ayy Месяц назад +2

      @@_.belladonna_ sorry for being nosy, but do you have any background in History? And you mentioned these two places as your hometown, do you not live in Pakistan anymore?

  • @yewtoob2007
    @yewtoob2007 Месяц назад +116

    I had always assumed that the gymnosophists were the tradition we now call Jain but that kind of asceticism was probably not exclusive to Jain, especially when you consider how the fluid and complex Indian religious history. And I had also assumed that the sages the Buddha debated with were Jain or some similar preceding tradition. Have you done a Jain video?

    • @ReligionForBreakfast
      @ReligionForBreakfast  Месяц назад +71

      Not yet, but I’m working on one currently.

    • @supershadow125
      @supershadow125 Месяц назад +10

      ​@@ReligionForBreakfasti can't wait for that one. Jainism is very interesting. In some of my stories, the ideas the Jains put forth are part of the overall themes and lore

    • @TheMrcassina
      @TheMrcassina Месяц назад +4

      ​@@ReligionForBreakfast fantastic video as usual

    • @sagarrao9821
      @sagarrao9821 Месяц назад +16

      I also have assumed the gymnosophists were Jain because of the nakedness thing, but it could be that not all of them were Jain but the name gymnosophist got used to refer to all of them. As for those whom the Buddha debated, some were certainly Jain, but not all were. Usually the relevant sources specify actually what community the interlocutor was from. Jains appear often, but so do Cārvākas, Brahmins of various religious persuasions, etc. But Jainism was evidently very popular in central and eastern India at the Buddha's time.

    • @TheMrcassina
      @TheMrcassina Месяц назад

      @@christsavesreadromans1096 have you taken your medication this morning?

  • @fabioshui
    @fabioshui Месяц назад +6

    This was absolutely amazing, mate!

  • @outerlast
    @outerlast Месяц назад +23

    oh yes, spear is popularly known as the great weapon for ancient warfare. it's easy to construct and replace when broken, it's pretty effective for long range and formation battles, and it's easy to learn for soldiers

    • @loganhonors4154
      @loganhonors4154 Месяц назад +3

      It is without a doubt the greatest weapon of all time. The lance and pike were used well into the age of gunpowder

    • @ebrim5013
      @ebrim5013 Месяц назад +3

      Pointy stick is a classic.

    • @canchero724
      @canchero724 Месяц назад +1

      Even Neanderthals would agree. The pointy stick changed everything for the hairless bipeds!

    • @thekraken1173
      @thekraken1173 Месяц назад

      @@loganhonors4154 Rifle Bayonets are technically Pikes

  • @christianboekhout3475
    @christianboekhout3475 Месяц назад +11

    Thank you Ian Hecox for your video essay on Bactrian Greek Buddhist syncretism. Smosh never fails!

  • @abednadir5997
    @abednadir5997 Месяц назад +9

    Greek Buddhists...now thats something that was beyond my imagination

    • @Toaraja953
      @Toaraja953 9 дней назад

      Greco buddhism even older than Theravada

  • @GaryGaryGaga
    @GaryGaryGaga Месяц назад +1

    Such an amazing insight at Greek-India relationship at that period through Buddhism. Nice work man! Love it.

  • @monsieurdorgat6864
    @monsieurdorgat6864 Месяц назад

    Really interesting clarification of syncretization! It's way more wholesome when you frame it that way.

  • @anonymouslyopinionated656
    @anonymouslyopinionated656 Месяц назад +7

    Ashoka already became Buddhist before the legendary post-war origin story used as propaganda. This is fairly well accepted at this point. And he still did a lot of violence post-this. I know this is a religion video, but the history needs to be accurate.

  • @CicadasFly
    @CicadasFly Месяц назад +5

    I love you Buddhism videos! Keep up the good work man!

  • @deangomm3423
    @deangomm3423 19 дней назад +2

    One thing I find interesting is that before Greek influence, Buddhist art did not contain images of people, only empty thrones and bhodi leaves

  • @jessesoto6150
    @jessesoto6150 Месяц назад +2

    This is very rich in detail-thank you for putting it together! I’m a practicing Chan Buddhist under the Mahayana tradition for over 13 years now. The word “Dharma” (when capitalized) refers to the Buddhas teachings themselves. When (in lowercase “dharma”) it’s referring to the semantic meaning of phenomena (used in ancient India).

  • @heavenly2k
    @heavenly2k Месяц назад +11

    This is the type of IRL lore I live for. Thank you for consistently making content that is not only informative but also just straight up cool to learn about.

  • @ArkhBaegor
    @ArkhBaegor Месяц назад +9

    Wow, absolutely fascinating subject!

  • @Stormy38044
    @Stormy38044 27 дней назад

    This is fascinating, and all very new to me! Thank you for covering this topic!

  • @2Hot2
    @2Hot2 Месяц назад +12

    This is fascinating. I always thought Greek philosophy was sorely lacking in non-dualism (except in some pre-Socratic fragments) and compassion, so Buddhism was just what the doctor ordered.

  • @GodlessCommie
    @GodlessCommie Месяц назад +14

    I was actually telling my partner all about Buddhism and its interaction with greek religion before this came out.

  • @IgnitedIAS
    @IgnitedIAS Месяц назад +16

    Slight correction: The original Manta was in Pali not Sanskrit. Thanks 🙂

    • @josephhesse2634
      @josephhesse2634 Месяц назад +1

      In thailand be call that language “Pali sanskrit” and it’s the root language for thai
      Are you telling me we messed up the name of our root language for centuries?? 😶

    • @Curiosity1220
      @Curiosity1220 Месяц назад +1

      @@josephhesse2634 You can’t call thai mandarin same language.

    • @josephhesse2634
      @josephhesse2634 Месяц назад

      @@Curiosity1220 why are you talking about mandarin?

    • @Curiosity1220
      @Curiosity1220 Месяц назад +1

      @@josephhesse2634 because you said Pali Sanskrit as if they are same.

    • @josephhesse2634
      @josephhesse2634 Месяц назад

      @@Curiosity1220 you saying pali sanskrit is mandarin?

  • @Transterra55
    @Transterra55 Месяц назад +1

    An absolutely fascinating video… Thanks for the upload.

  • @Arahansannihilation
    @Arahansannihilation Месяц назад +2

    Loved this no nonsense take on the Greco Buddhism. 🙂

  • @BlackReaper0
    @BlackReaper0 Месяц назад +10

    This topic is awesome, and goes way deeper than I thought it would.

  • @izzykhach
    @izzykhach Месяц назад +11

    The hellenistic Jewish philosopher Philo or Alexandria mentions an ascetic group living in the desert called the Therapeutae. There are scholars who speculate that the word Therapeutae may be a Hellenistic corruption of the word Theravada.

    • @Usera2324dfre
      @Usera2324dfre Месяц назад +2

      it was the opposite
      the word comes from the greek word θεραπευω θεοσ+υπηρετω god +serve in greek
      that expanded through greeks in the east.
      you can realise easy that is a greek word
      and not Indian etc.

  • @quinkana1
    @quinkana1 Месяц назад +2

    I love how you're talking about this! This period of history is very interesting, and the Greeks that have influenced the Indians and vice versa will always one of my favourite historical tidbits!

  • @MythicTales993
    @MythicTales993 Месяц назад

    This video is truly awesome! Thank you for sharing this joy with everyone

  • @Ck-zk3we
    @Ck-zk3we Месяц назад +7

    one of the most fascinating things in ancient history is the Greek India connection.
    yet I heard nothing about it until youtube.

    • @rakhimukerji7937
      @rakhimukerji7937 14 дней назад

      Did you not read about Alexander and Chandragupta?

  • @f34rbeast32
    @f34rbeast32 Месяц назад +13

    Gandhara(Indian) and Bactria(Iranian) are extremely fascinating regions and people.
    Genuinely sucks that they’re mostly gone, but at least we know the history part 😅

    • @supremercommonder
      @supremercommonder Месяц назад +2

      Gandhara has a lot of sites that are protected Pakistan is big on it heritage gandhara sites are apart of unesko

    • @f34rbeast32
      @f34rbeast32 Месяц назад +1

      @@supremercommonder applauds to Pakistan for that, sadly some buildings there were destroyed by some extreme it’s due to its “Idolatry”.
      Sad how beautiful history can be destroyed by ugly zealotry.

    • @_.belladonna_
      @_.belladonna_ Месяц назад

      @@f34rbeast32 most of them aren't destroyed they're housed in peshawar in a museum or museums abroad (mostly from European countries such as england) buy them and host them.

    • @shubhank5409
      @shubhank5409 Месяц назад

      You budhhist from Pakistan..?​@@_.belladonna_

  • @JohnSmith-nz1vj
    @JohnSmith-nz1vj Месяц назад

    This stuff is so fascinating. Thank you for your cool videos

  • @tomparatube6506
    @tomparatube6506 Месяц назад

    Excellent, this is the topic which I've always wondered about. Thanks!

  • @HassanUmer
    @HassanUmer Месяц назад +12

    You can find Greco Buddhist stuff all over north west Pakistan. I've had the good fortune of being there too, to see Greek and Indic art/culture/religion intersecting in such seemless ways really make you think differently about the modern world and all it's rigid ideas of race and nation states.

  • @mariane3146
    @mariane3146 Месяц назад +5

    Great content as always!! Just when i think i know sooo much about history or religion, this channel always finds a way to humble me

  • @Benec303
    @Benec303 Месяц назад

    Thank you a great educational program in historical subjects, I highly recommend it. It's good to watch

  • @finter4644
    @finter4644 Месяц назад

    This was absolutely fascinating! Never considered the potential for overlap between these two traditions, thankyou!

  • @gwen6622
    @gwen6622 Месяц назад +21

    on some level, when you first learn about this kind of thing, this kind of phenomenon in history, you are kinda shocked that people would just convert to another religion all because they lived nearby to that religion. converts who genuinely were swayed to the other's belief only account for so many. but then the more you think about it, the more you realize that cultural contact also means marriages. when you see things about "greeks who converted to buddhism", im sure that happened to a degree, but i think a huge driving force of that must have been the children of greeks and buddhists, who synthesized both of their cultural heritages. its easy to forget that lines are almost never rigid. even if these started as two distinct groups of people, given enough time, of course a sizeable mixed-ethnicity population would emerge. and there's something really kinda beautiful about that, you know? cultural exchange often happens by force, with one culture dominating another and outlawing their former practices and making the people follow the conqueror's practices. but i think cultures honestly resist that pressure just as strongly, and preserve whatever they can out of sheer spite and human willpower, and we see that constantly. i think cultural adoption happens so so so so so much more via genuine friendship and marriage and kids who are born to both cultures and grow up without thinking of them as as separate as their ancestors did. you can only force so many people to convert via violence. people are much more willing to adopt a new religion or synthesize two if one is the religion of their father and the other of their mother
    also it does help that both greek and sanskrit are indo-european lol. these are more like two cousins than two strangers. buddhism isnt the same as hinduism of course, and hinduism is a closer analog and probably direct relative of the greek pantheon and mythology, but nevertheless they do still share a lot of ideas about things.

    • @EnkiduShamesh
      @EnkiduShamesh Месяц назад +14

      While I agree that is part of it, I think that the ancient Greek approach to religion, which is known to have been very syncretic and open compared to the Abrahamic religions, which are closed and very concerned with things such as heresy and apostasy, played a factor as well. Practitioners of open religions are much more, uh, open to other perspectives.

    • @invokingvajras
      @invokingvajras Месяц назад +7

      Hinduism as we understand it today didn’t exist at this time. Buddhism, and Jainism, generally accepted the pantheon given in the Vedas, which is the earliest literature that mentions most of these deities. Buddhism went further and interacted with local spirits like Hariti and the myriad yakshas, etc.
      Heresy certainly exists in Buddhism as evidenced by the Buddha’s interactions with other religious leaders, but the attitude is more accommodating than destructive. An example of this is how Buddhists try to convert gods of other cultures rather than do away with them.

    • @dsbdsb6637
      @dsbdsb6637 Месяц назад +1

      @@invokingvajras ​ @Chk. books - Buddhists & it's religious others, The Snake and the Mongoose The Emergence of Identity in Early Indian Religion
      Search works of scholars like - Julia shaw, Osmund Bopearachchi etc.
      Read paper - The spaces of religion: a view from South Asia★
      Then ask this question - Can we apply modern categories in the past ?
      Best wishes.

  • @GajanaNigade
    @GajanaNigade Месяц назад +3

    I love this period. It just undermines the absolutist claims of later religious movements in neighbouring regions.

  • @Tagarasamana
    @Tagarasamana 27 дней назад +1

    Phyro's phylosophies that similar with Madhyamikkha you can find it in early buddhist text (Pali or sanskrit), especially on Nikaya Sutta Pittaka. You can check anatalakkhana sutta (Majjhimanikaya/Maddhyamaagama), the concept of Shunyata or void of anything base on anatta concept on Buddhism.

  • @shakiMiki
    @shakiMiki Месяц назад +1

    What a wonderful & illuminating video.

  • @sagarrao9821
    @sagarrao9821 Месяц назад +29

    Great video! I wonder which Buddhist traditions were principally circulating in the Indo-Greek Kingdoms. I know the Sarvāstivādins were later very popular in that region, as were certain Mahāyāna Sūtra circulations - Seishi Karashima discovered some textual evidence from the Prākṛt core of some of the Pure Land Sūtras that the versions we had today came from Gāndharī recensions, and of course there's even surviving fragments of a Gāndharī language manuscript of the 8000 Line Perfection of Wisdom Sūtra. So perhaps some antecedents of those traditions were vibrant there even during the Indo-Greek period? It would be interesting if the Indo-Greek archeological evidence supplies any clues as to _which_ Buddhists were active in converting Greeks.

    • @rustomkanishka
      @rustomkanishka Месяц назад +5

      I can't speak about religion, but the Indo Greeks definitely were the first to depict the Buddha in sculpture. Without them, we wouldn't have such a rich tradition.
      The gandhara school is arguably one of the most beautiful schools of art in the subcontinent.
      They do depict the Buddha wearing a Greek style tunic and pyjamas, and one can see similarities in the modern Afghan dress called the Pathani.

    • @sagarrao9821
      @sagarrao9821 Месяц назад +4

      @@rustomkanishka I'm not sure if it's actually true that they were the first, because there are Buddhist examples of artistic iconography in the Mathuran tradition of ancient Indian art that are from a similar time period as Indo-Greek art, right? I know the Greek icon theory is pretty popular but I am not sure the evidence really is that strong given that there's a near contemporaneous tradition centered further east.
      But in any case, visual iconography in Indian art in general doesn't actually appear until relatively late in the archeological record. So I've wondered whether maybe the idea of making icons for specific religious figures in general didn't become popular until foreign influence made it more popular. AFAIK no Indian writers in any religion mention artistic depictions of deities until Pāṇini and Patañjali, and the oldest depictions of Indian deities are like...the Tikla rock paintings probably? So basically until a few centuries BCE, there isn't Even evidence of Hindus and Jains iconographically depicting their deities. Makes me think the turn towards religious personal iconography might have happened for Indian art as a general movement altogether, rather than individually in each religion.

    • @stevenk1840
      @stevenk1840 Месяц назад +1

      One of them is Dharmaguptaka. Their vinaya is the same as Theravada's plus some rules about stupa(allegedly for the greek who dont know about stupa). It is said that Dharmaguptaka spreads wide, that it is pioneer in new area, others follow.
      In Tang China, a Chinese monk criticize many version of Vinaya used by Sangha in Tang empire, then Dharmaguptaka vinaya chosen to be the vinaya that is used in Tang empire by emperor edict
      I think there are many other schools according to what I read

  • @brianonscript
    @brianonscript Месяц назад +3

    I featured the 'square' style of the Greco-Bactrian alphabet on a video I made about the recently deciphered Kushan script, as this was the predominant variant for inscriptions which was what I was focusing on. So it was fascinating to see the cursive style of the Greco-Bactrian alphabet, which I had only seen on manuscripts, on a stone surface at the beginning of this video.
    As I mentioned in that video, there were already Greek communities in Central Asia before Alexander the Great as populations had been deported there during the Achaemenid Persian Empire. Alexander was reportedly surprised to discover these Greek communities so far east during his conquests.

  • @midoriya-shonen
    @midoriya-shonen Месяц назад +1

    We love underdiscussed cultural movements in history! Thans RFB!

  • @Misandry101
    @Misandry101 Месяц назад +1

    Okay this is going on my religion playlist great job

  • @willmosse3684
    @willmosse3684 Месяц назад +4

    Fascinating video - thank you 🙏🏻. I bet the Bactria-Greeks who adopted Buddhism would have known what the carving on that rock meant. As a practitioner of a much more recent form of East-West Buddhist syncretism - Secular Buddhism (fusing “Western” post-rationalist enlightenment secular thought with Buddhism), I do not speak Pali or Sanskrit, but I know what those phrases mean. The concepts of Buddha, Dhamma/Dharma and Sangha are some of the first things one is taught when being introduced to Buddhist thought. And the taking of refuge in these “three jewels” is a central expression of Buddhist outlook. Anyone who had spent any time involved with Buddhist ideas, on reading that inscription, would have known exactly what it meant. Whereas, as someone who attended a Church of England primary (elementary) school in the UK where we would sing hymns and the like that included the word “Hallelujah”, and though I know it is a general expression of praise, I have no idea to this day what it actually means. Anyway - it was great to see this excellent presentation on some of my cultural forebears. Thank you again!

  • @sayakchakraborty4206
    @sayakchakraborty4206 Месяц назад +8

    Pyrrho's reformed ideology is also similar to the Ajivika school and early Digambara Jainism.

  • @tissamama
    @tissamama 29 дней назад +2

    As a Sri Lankan brought up in a family heaped in traditional religious practices, it's great to hear their roots through Western investigation. I 9:42

  • @graphite2786
    @graphite2786 Месяц назад

    What a great video, so much to think about.

  • @eriktheconan
    @eriktheconan Месяц назад +7

    The gymnosophists are assumed to be monks from the Jain religion by some historians. It does have some overlapping concepts with Buddhism though, and by no means does it undermine the arguments made in this video. Great video!

    • @groundzero5708
      @groundzero5708 5 дней назад

      😂😂😂😂😂 lol Jain's are not that ripped and strong

  • @justinbell1596
    @justinbell1596 Месяц назад +4

    At the Freer Gallery on the National Mall in Washington DC, there was a tablet called “All People’s Praising Buddha” on display for years. It was created during the Hellenistic Period after the conquests of Alexander, featuring 15-20 of carved lines, each line depicting a people from a different culture “praising Buddha” with with each individual displaying their hands gesturing their practice of Buddhism.
    The tablet started from East to west, the top lines depicting clothing and culture from the farthest known regions to the east. Their dress was more similar to what would appear to come from Korea/Japan, as opposed to the more Qin depiction of Chinese adherents to Buddha featured a few lines down. Line by line, it displayed unique dress and culture. Towards the mid bottom, it displayed clearly Greek, Thracian, Roman (with Togas!), then clearly people from Gaul, and Celtic Iberian!
    I’d known that Buddhism spread and flourished during the Hellenistic period, but not to the extent of it spreading to Rome, Gaul, and Iberia! It was an incredible work to survive, eyes opening, however, sadly, it hasn’t been on display for awhile…

  • @StoneHerne
    @StoneHerne Месяц назад

    🤩 Woao, this is wobderful! Thank you for this video, Andrew! 🤩

  • @Isxiros100
    @Isxiros100 Месяц назад

    Timons quote is reminiscent of Descartes reasoning against relying on the senses...and his most basic deduction of "I think therefore I am"

  • @AuntyProton
    @AuntyProton Месяц назад +3

    Gandhara! Thank you so much, I've been a fan of this time and area for years!

  • @afilthyweeb8684
    @afilthyweeb8684 Месяц назад +31

    In D&D, I play essentially an artorian knight with heavy greek, buddhist, and wuxia themes so it's pretty great to see that buddhist greeks were actually a real thing

  • @genghisgalahad8465
    @genghisgalahad8465 Месяц назад

    My first hint is the Hellenistic/Hellenic Buddhist iconography! And yet this episode is astounding in content, presentation, and topic!

  • @Lee-Van-Cle
    @Lee-Van-Cle Месяц назад

    Excellent vedio, very informative!

  • @Jessebg1
    @Jessebg1 Месяц назад +9

    Awesome video

  • @oakbellUK
    @oakbellUK Месяц назад +3

    You say 6:31 "the concept of shunyata or emptiness meaning that all phenomena are devoid or empty of intrinsic existence" However, according to Zen master Thich Nhat Hanh, this is a rather Western translation.
    'Sunyata' means 'not having a separate existence' or 'empty of a separate self'. For example. a plant cannot exist without air, water, soil, minerals etc. As such, although we see what looks like a plant with a separate existence, this is not so - the plant is not separate from the air/water etc.
    This explanation is very practical, not the esoteric idea that the translation 'emptiness' would imply.

  • @dougsinthailand7176
    @dougsinthailand7176 Месяц назад

    Thank you! I just love this little unknown corner of history!!

  • @Foodstall32
    @Foodstall32 Месяц назад +1

    This is awesome ,❤the conversation between king Menander and Nagasena is also awesome but I do believe some people don’t understand some parts of their conversation

  • @tuggercarlson
    @tuggercarlson Месяц назад +28

    RFB will solve all of Religious Studies, we’re just witnessing it.

  • @hcct
    @hcct Месяц назад +3

    The Berenike Buddha found in Egypt is another interesting piece in this puzzle, though certainly more Roman Era than Greek.

  • @jerrypeters1157
    @jerrypeters1157 Месяц назад +1

    So interesting. Thank you!