If you're seeing this message, it means we're having trouble loading external resources on our website.

If you're behind a web filter, please make sure that the domains *.kastatic.org and *.kasandbox.org are unblocked.

Main content

READ: Buddhism

Buddhist beliefs started from a young prince’s spiritual epiphany, then traveled with missionaries, merchants, and political power across Asia.
The article below uses “Three Close Reads”. If you want to learn more about this strategy, click here.

First read: preview and skimming for gist

Fill out the Skimming for Gist section of the Three Close Reads Worksheet as you complete your first close read. As a reminder, this should be a quick process!

Second read: key ideas and understanding content

For this reading, you should be looking for unfamiliar vocabulary words, the major claim and key supporting details, and analysis and evidence. By the end of the second close read, you should be able to answer the following questions:
  1. What, according to the article, is the core belief of Buddhism, and how was this a challenge to Vedic beliefs?
  2. What are the Four Noble Truths?
  3. Who could follow the Eightfold Path easily, and why? How did Mahayana Buddhism change this?
  4. How did Buddhism change when it entered China?

Third read: evaluating and corroborating

At the end of the third close read, respond to the following questions:
  1. Buddhism adapted to local ideas in China and other parts of the world. Yet we generally argue that it remained Buddhism in all of these different places. Why do you think we consider it a single belief system, even if it is adapting and changing to local conditions?
Now that you know what to look for, it’s time to read! Remember to return to these questions once you’ve finished reading.

Buddhism

A detailed, paneled line drawing shows many people surrounding a person seated on an elaborate throne. Before the crowd, a person is seated, looking up at the ruler, their hands in prayer position.
By Eman M. Elshaikh
Buddhism began with a young prince’s spiritual epiphany, then traveled with missionaries, merchants, and political power across Asia. As it moved, it changed along with the communities that adopted it.

What would you do?

Imagine you're a young Indian prince living in the sixth-century BCE. You have every material thing you could want in life. Soon, you will inherit your family's wealth and become a powerful warrior prince. But one day, you pop your head out of the palace and see that the world can be a pretty rough place for people who aren't rich princes. What do you do? Well, if you're Siddhartha Gautama (563–483 BCE), you renounce your titles and worldly possessions and begin wandering the countryside, begging for food and living the life of an ascetic—a person who lives a disciplined life by refusing to indulge in luxuries like ice cream, alcohol, and comfortable mattresses. As he adopted this lifestyle, Siddhartha began preaching a new belief system, and people started calling him "the Buddha." His teachings became the foundation of Buddhism.
A statue shows the Buddha seated in a cross-legged position with their eyes closed. The Buddha is seated on a throne or chair that is covered in ornate symbols.
A statue of the Buddha from Sarnath, Uttar Pradesh, India, 4th century CE. By Tevaprapas Makklay, CC BY-SA 3.0.
But this isn't the story of one guy. The story of Buddhism is as much about the spread of Buddhism as its origins and teachings. The Buddha's simple teachings quickly spread from India across Asia and beyond. As it traveled along trade networks, Buddhism touched the lives of millions of people. But Buddhism itself changed as it moved. In some places, like China, powerful leaders and movements adopted Buddhism, transforming it into one of the world's major belief systems.

Origins

In the sixth century BCE, India was changing. After centuries of conquest, the Aryan people1 had established new kingdoms, cities were growing again, and trade flourished in India's ports and along its roads. But this was also a time of religious change across the ancient world2. The Aryan conquests of India introduced a new belief system called Brahmanism. Brahmanism was based on the Vedic texts and was dominated by a priestly class of brahmins. Brahmanism brought the caste system to India, which divided all people into a strict social hierarchy.
Both Hinduism and Buddhism emerged from this earlier belief system. But while Hinduism formalized elements of Brahmanism, such as the caste system and the divinity of the Vedas, Buddhism rejected many elements of the old religion. Buddhist beliefs challenged the social structure that gave priests special access to spiritual life. Instead, Buddhism suggested that anyone could gain salvation and wisdom by letting go of desire. In this way, Buddhist teachings rejected the caste system and challenged the existing social order.

Calcus of enlightenment

This article began by asking what you would have done in Siddhartha's place. You probably had a different answer than he did. Maybe you enjoy ice cream and mattresses. And that's okay. Not every convert to Buddhism was forced to adopt an extreme ascetic lifestyle. Buddhism offered believers a "middle path," which was guided by the principles the Buddha had gained back when he was the young prince Siddhartha. According to Buddhist sources, Siddhartha had been meditating under a tree near the Ganges River when he had a spiritual epiphany (breakthrough). This epiphany revealed to him truths about the universe. He called these the "Four Noble Truths":
  1. life is suffering
  2. suffering comes from desire
  3. one must limit desire to limit suffering
  4. to limit suffering, one must follow the "Eightfold Path".
Four truths? Eight paths? This is starting to sound like math. Don't worry. Math is suffering. This is not math. Here's a primary source to prove it. The Pali Canon, an early text of Buddha's teachings, describes the Eightfold Path like this:
And what is that ancient path, that ancient road? It is just this Noble Eightfold Path: that is, [1] right view, [2] right intention, [3] right speech, [4] right action, [5] right livelihood, [6] right effort, [7] right mindfulness, [8] right concentration. I followed that path and by doing so I have directly known aging-and-death, its origin, its cessation, and the way leading to its cessation [end]. I have directly known birth…existence…clinging…craving…feeling…contact…the six sense bases…name-and-form…consciousness…volitional formations [desires], their origin, their cessation, and the way leading to their cessation. (Gautama, 69).
A golden sculpture of an 8-spoke wheel carved with symbols. On either side of the wheel is a sculpture of an animal facing the wheel.
Buddhism teaches that by controlling desire and limiting suffering, this path could lead a person to spiritual enlightenment. But the road to enlightenment was not easy. The Eightfold Path required a great deal of self-sacrifice and dedication. The women and men who followed this path often adopted a monastic way of life, leaving behind worldly affairs and devoting their lives to attaining spiritual enlightenment. This usually meant becoming monks or nuns and taking vows of celibacy and poverty, meditating, and abstaining from violence.

Buddhism and social change

Buddhist beliefs might have focused on individual enlightenment, but they had important social consequences. Buddhism challenged the structure of Indian society, where Brahmins had authority and status. It also challenged the caste system more broadly, because enlightenment was not limited to those of upper castes. Buddhism also welcomed women into monastic life, providing roles outside of the home. These differences made Buddhism appeal to many in the lower castes of Indian society.
Ruins of brick structures that made up an ancient monastery.
Ancient Buddhist monasteries in Sarnath, India near where the Buddha is said to have given his first sermon. By Yusuke Kawasaki, CC BY 2.0.
As mentioned above, the road to enlightenment was difficult, and—probably like you—most people were unable or unwilling to abandon their families and possessions for a life of spiritual devotion. Most people who chose lives as monks or nuns did so because they could afford it. Laborers and servants, for example, could not simply abandon their livelihoods and retreat into spiritual contemplation.
But Buddhism was flexible. As it spread, new versions emerged to meet the different needs of converts. For example, Mahayana Buddhism, which means "the great vehicle," allowed people to strive toward enlightenment even if they couldn't become monks. Mahayana Buddhism grew into the most widespread form of Buddhism in the world. Buddhism's rejection of the caste system and the flexibility of its "middle path" is what helped it spread across Asia.

From one Buddha to many Buddhisms

Though Buddhist beliefs originated in India, they spread quickly. Buddhism moved through trade networks, traveling on Silk Road caravans through Central Asia to China and aboard merchant ships to Southeast Asia. Buddhism also got some help from powerful leaders. Emperor Ashoka, who ruled the Mauryan Empire in India from 268 to 232 BCE, used his power and conquests to spread Buddhism through India and beyond. He sent missionaries from his empire into the surrounding regions, including Central Asia, Southeast Asia and Sri Lanka.
A big part of Buddhism's success outside India was its ability to accommodate local beliefs. As it spread, Buddhism changed, blending with elements of different belief systems, a process known as "syncretism." For example, Buddhist ideas blended with Confucian and Daoist beliefs in China, where concepts like ancestor veneration (honor) and filial piety (honoring elders3) became part of Buddhism. Another example is Greco-Buddhism. Descendants of Alexander the Great's empire still lived in Central Asia, and when they converted to Buddhism, they blended it with elements of Greek culture. In some places, the Buddha came to be regarded as a deity, and new Buddhas were added to the pantheon, though these were not part of the original belief system.
A sculpture of a Buddha standing, wearing draped, long robes.
Gautama Buddha in Greco-Buddhist style, 1st–2nd century CE, Gandhara (modern eastern Afghanistan). Public Domain.
After reaching China, Buddhism began to expand during the third century CE. An age of political upheaval followed the collapse of the Han Dynasty in 220 CE. This collapse of political authority meant many people sought meaning in new kinds of communities. For many, Buddhism offered a fresh start as the old order collapsed. Chinese rulers began using Buddhism to unite their people. From China, Buddhism spread to Korea and Japan. There too, Buddhism blended with local practices. Buddhist monks in Japan even became caretakers for Shinto shrines and participated in Shinto rituals.
Extremely ornate jar features carvings and sculptures all around the top of it. There is a row of seated Buddhas, as well as a temple.
Jiangnan funerary jar, ca. 250–300 CE, Jin dynasty (China), decorated with a row of Buddhas seated on lotus thrones. In the Metropolitan Museum of Art. By Vmenkov, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Why did Buddhism spread around the world? First, it offered a universalist message: that every individual could attain enlightenment by following its teachings. This message appealed to those, like women and peasants, who were marginalized in society. Second, Buddhism was missionary and had several powerful political supporters. Buddhists believed that their message could and should be spread to everyone and anyone. Emperor Ashoka was the first ruler to encourage Buddhist missionaries to travel abroad, and later Chinese rulers sought to spread Buddhism as a way to build their own power and influence. Finally, Buddhism was a flexible belief system, capable of adapting and changing to fit very different places and people.
A color-coded map shows the regions where various divisions of Buddhism existed in relation to one another and to China, India, and Japan.
Though it is one of the largest belief systems in the world, with about 500 million followers today, Buddhism is not singular. It has taken on many forms in many places. From northern India, where it originated, Buddhism traveled along trade networks to Central Asia, China, Korea, Japan, and beyond. And though it originated and spread in India, Buddhism gradually became less popular there. In countries like Sri Lanka, Thailand, Myanmar, and Cambodia, Buddhism is today the dominant belief system. Wherever it went, Buddhism changed how communities were organized. It challenged social hierarchy, created opportunities for women, and gave individuals of all classes a role in spiritual practice. But as Buddhism changed each new society it touched, so too did Buddhism change. Indeed, it was Buddhism's ability to adapt to new contexts that allowed it to spread so far.
Author bio
The author of this article is Eman M. Elshaikh. She is a writer, researcher, and teacher who has taught K-12 and undergraduates in the United States and in the Middle East. She teaches writing at the University of Chicago, where she also completed her master’s in social sciences and is currently pursuing her PhD. She was previously a World History Fellow at Khan Academy, where she worked closely with the College Board to develop curriculum for AP World History.

Want to join the conversation?