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Definition and Origins

by Mark Cartwright
published on 21 November 2016
Hwarang Horseman (JLsilo)






HWARANG MEMBERS FOLLOWED AN EDUCATIONAL MIX OF RELIGIOUS & MARTIAL TEACHINGS ALONG WITH MUSIC, DANCING, ETHICS & A GOOD DOSE OF NATIONALISM.

The religious part of the education was, as in wider Korea, a mix of Buddhism, Taoism, and Confucianism with, probably, elements of shamanism which was long practised in the peninsula. The Samguk yusa adds that the boys also studied the Five Relationships, the Six Arts, the Three Scholarly Occupations, and the Six Ways of Government Service, which all contained rules of ethical behaviour and prepared the students for life in the civil service. The Five Relationships ( sesok ogye ) honour code, created by the Buddhist monk Wongwang in the early 7th century CE, best illustrates the strong association between the hwarang and the needs of the state for they were:
  • To serve the king with loyalty.
  • To serve one's parents with loyalty.
  • To always show loyalty to one's friends.
  • To never retreat in battle.
  • To never kill unnecessarily.
The precise organisation of the hwarang is not known beyond that the leader of a single group of a few hundred youths held the title of kukson or 'National Immortal.' He was selected from the true bone or chingol class of the Silla kingdom's rigid social hierarchy, the Bone Rank System. The kukson was assisted by several Buddhist scholar-monks who likely carried out the instruction. The patron of the group was the Maitreya Buddha (the coming Buddha), also know as 'the Friendly One,' indeed, members considered themselves reincarnations of Buddha. The hwarang was divided into subgroups which had Buddhist-associated names such as 'the Band of the Dragon Flower Tree' (referring to the tree where Maitreya first arrived on earth).
Details are lacking of the initiation ceremonies the boys carried out except that dancing and singing were important elements, as was an oath of loyalty to fellow members. Hwarang members and ideals were celebrated in hyangga, the indigenous folk song-poems of Korea. Indeed, many were written by members of the group. In this example, written by Tugo and titled Mo Chukchirang ka or 'Ode to Knight Chukchi' written c. 692-702 CE, the author praises his master:
All living beings sorrow and lament
Over the spring that is past;
Your face once fair and bright
Is about to wear deep furrows.
I must glimpse you
Even for an awesome moment.
My fervent mind cannot rest at night
In the mugwort-rank hollow.
(Lee, PH, 72)
Some of the most famous former members of the hwarang are the great general Kim Yushin, his son Wonsul, and Kwanchang, who gave his life bravely in a battle against the Baekje ( Paekche ) kingdom in 660 CE. Following a rise in Korean nationalism and the discovery of a manuscript titled The Chronicles of the Hwarang ( Hwarang segi ) in the 1980s CE there has been a renewed interest in the subject, with even a new television series scheduled for December 2016 in Korea based on the hwarang and carrying that title.
[bks]

The Dates of the Buddha › Antique Origins

Ancient Civilizations

by Cristian Violatti
published on 02 May 2013




Buddhism is one of the most influential traditions of the Eastern world, with about two and a half thousand years of development. It has touched and adorned virtually every single aspect of Asian society: its lore, mythology, morals, art and even metaphysics and religion, despite the fact the Buddha, its founder, does not seem to have had any kind of metaphysical or religious concerns.
There are still areas in which there is no agreement among scholars and these include disputes over translations of different key doctrinal terms, reliability of different sources, even the date in which the Buddha was born and died is uncertain. As research increases and becomes more specific in different areas, we come across the paradox of scholars knowing more and more about less and less.
The dates of the Buddha

The dates of the Buddha

THE CONTROVERSY ON DATES OF THE BUDDHA

Reading “The Cambridge History of India ”, vol. 1 (1922), we find the following statement:
There is now a general agreement among scholars that Buddha died within a few years of 480 BC
Statements like this are found in many books of world history, Indian history and history of religions. If this claim were correct, then it would be the earliest accurate date known in Indian history.
The reality is that there is not a unanimously accepted date for the historical Buddha's life amongst scholars. In 1988 CE a symposium named “The Dating of the Historical Buddha” took place in Gottingen, Germany. The dates proposed by a group of experts who attended goes from 486 BCE to 261 BCE for the decease of the Buddha.

THERE ARE TWO DIFFERENT CHRONOLOGIES USED TO DATE THE LIFE OF THE BUDDHA: THE SO-CALLED SHORT CHRONOLOGY & THE LONG CHRONOLOGY.

The sequence of events in these centuries is somehow obscure and complex, which is why dating the Buddha's life is not so simple. On top of this, there are two different chronologies used to date the life of the Buddha: the so-called short chronology (attested by Indian sources and their Chinese and Tibetan translations) and the long chronology (based on the testimony of the Sinhalese chronicles). This first one is sometimes referred to as the Indian chronology and the second one as the Ceylonese chronology.
Indian Emperor Ashoka the Great (304–232 BCE), who ruled India from 268 to 232 BCE, seems to have turned Buddhism into a state religion and encouraged Buddhist missionary activity. He also provided a favourable climate for the acceptance of Buddhist ideas, and generated among Buddhist monks certain expectations of patronage and influence on the machinery of political decision making. Prior to Ashoka Buddhism was a relatively minor tradition in India and some scholars have proposed that the impact of the Buddha in his own day was relatively limited. Archaeological evidence for Buddhism between the death of the Buddha and the time of Ashoka is scarce; after the time of Ashoka it is abundant.
The Theravada tradition claims that the death of the Buddha occurred in 544 or 543 BCE: this calculation is based on the long chronology (Ceylonese). When scholars came to know the exact dates for Emperor Ashoka, it turned out to be obvious that this chronology had some errors and the dating of the Buddha based on this chronology was no longer acceptable. Essentially, the dates for Emperor Ashoka in the long chronology are miscalculated by around 60-70 years. Therefore, the dates of the Buddha had to be recalculated and most Western Indian scholars moved the date of the Buddha's death to 487 or 486 BCE.This last date continued to hold consensus among scholars for many decades and the long chronology came to be known as the “Corrected long chronology” or “Corrected Ceylonese chronology”.
Early Buddhist texts from mainland India, as well as references in the earliest historiographic work of the Theravada tradition date the death of the Buddha a hundred years before the reign of Emperor Ashoka. This is based on the short chronology (Indian) and it suggests the Buddha died on 370-368 BCE. There is a lot that favours this later date, since it would mean only a hundred years between the death of the Buddha and the reign of Ashoka and would increase the value of the abundant Ashokan and post-Ashokan evidence in understanding early Buddhism.
The disagreement we find in non-scholar Buddhist tradition is even stronger: the decease of the Buddha ranges widely from 2420 BCE to 290 BCE and most of them have no support on evidence.
Another method to date the life of the Buddha is to consider the list of the so-called patriarchs. All early Buddhist accounts agree that there were only five patriarchs between the death of the Buddha and the reign of Emperor Ashoka. Dating the Buddha's life based on the succession of patriarchs seems to be a much more reliable method of calculation than basing it on any dates which are often inaccurate and contradictory. This view favours a date closer to a hundred years before the time of Ashoka's reign: a nearly 220 year gap (which is the amount of time suggested by the corrected long chronology) seems to be too much time for only five patriarchs.
To sum-up, the death of the Buddha according to different sources are as follows:
  • Long chronology (Ceylonese): 544-543 BCE
  • Corrected long chronology: 487-486 BCE
  • Short chronology (Indian chronology): 368 BCE
  • Buddhist tradition (non-scholar): ranges from 2420 to 290 BCE
  • Succession of the five patriarchs: Five succession of teachers before Ashoka

CONCLUSION

Based on all the information available, it does not seem to be possible to date the life of the Buddha in an exact and reliable way. What seems to be certain is that the Buddha died approximately at the age of eighty some time between 410 and 370 BCE. Any date between these two means that the Buddha passed away about 140-100 years before the reign of Emperor Ashoka.

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