Online Encyclopedia

KANISHKA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 653 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KANISHKA  ,

king of
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Kabul, Kashmir, and north-western India in the 2nd century A.D., was a Tatar of the Kushan tribe, one of the five into which the Yue-chi Tatars were divided . His dominions extended as far down into India as Madura, and probably as far to the north-west as Bokhara . Private inscriptions found in the
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Punjab and
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Sind, in the Yusufzai
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district and at Madura, and referred by
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European scholars to his reign, are dated in the years
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Eve to twenty-eight of an unknown era . It is the references by Chinese historians to the Yue-chi tribes before their incursion into India, together with conclusions
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drawn from the
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history of
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art and literature in his reign, that render the date given the most probable . Kanishka's predecessors on the
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throne were Pagans; but shortly after his accession he professed himself, probably from
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political reasons, a Buddhist . He spent vast sums in the construction of Buddhist monuments; and under his auspices the
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fourth Buddhist council, the council of Jalandhara (Jullunder) was convened under the
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presidency of Vasumitra . At this council three
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treatises, commentaries on the
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Canon, one on each of the three baskets into which it is divided, were composed . King Kanishka had these treatises, when completed and revised by Asvaghosha, written out on copper plates, and enclosed the latter in stone boxes, which he placed in a memorial
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mound . For some centuries afterwards these
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works survived in India; but they exist now only in Chinese
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translations or adaptations . We are not told in what language they were written . It was probably
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Sanskrit (not
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Pali, the language of the Canon)—just as in
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Europe we have works of exegetical commentary composed, in Latin, on the basis of the Testament and Septuagint in Greek . This change of the language used as a
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medium of
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literary inter-course was partly the cause, partly the effect, of a
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complete revulsion in the intellectual
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life of India .

The reign of Kanishka was certainly the turning-point in this remarkable change . It has been suggested with

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great plausibility, that the wide extent of his domains facilitated the incursion into India of Western modes of thought; and thus led in the first place to the corruption and gradual decline of
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Buddhism, and secondly to the gradual rise of
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Hinduism . Only the publication of the books written at the time will enable us to say whether this hypothesis—for at
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present. it is nothing more—is really a sufficient explanation of the very important results of his reign . In any case it was a
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migration of nomad hordes in Central
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Asia that led, in Europe, to the downfall of the
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Roman
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civilization; and then, through the conversion of the invaders, to
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medieval conditions of life and thought . It was the very same migration of nomad hordes that led, in India, to the downfall of the Buddhist civilization; and subsequently, after the conversion of the Saka and Tatar invaders, to medieval Hinduism . As India was nearer to the starting-point of the migration, its results were felt there some-what sooner .

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