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Pusyamitra Sunga (also Pushyamitra Shunga) was the founder of the Indian Sunga dynasty (185-78 BCE). He reigned from 185 BCE to 151 BCE. | |||
Originally a general and commander-in-chief on the armies of the Mauryan empire, he assassinated the last Mauryan emperor Brhadrata in 185 BCE, and subsequently founded the Sunga dynasty. | |||
Pusyamitra Sunga was a Hindu monarch, deeply established in the tradition of orthodox Brahminism. He allegedly became very active in persecuting the Buddhist faith, which the Mauryan empire had been promoting since Ashoka around 250 BCE. He seems to have destroyed Buddhist monasteries and exterminated monks, offering to pay 100 gold coins for the head of each one (Indian Historical Quarterly Vol. XXII, p.81 ff cited in Hars.407, also Divyavadana, p.429-434). He is said to have destroyed 84,000 buddhist stupas which had been built by the Mauryan king Ashoka (R. Thaper). A large number of Buddhist monasteries (viharas) were converted to Hindu temples, in such places as Nalanda, Bodhgaya, Sarnath or Mathura. | |||
The new Sunga ruler was attacked around 180 BCE by the Greek rulers of the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom, as they invaded large parts of northwestern and northern India as far as Pataliputra, with the effect of confining the Sungas to the eastern parts of India. | |||
The Greco-Bactrians established in India the Indo-Greek Kingdom, which was to last until the end of the 1st century BCE, and under which Buddhism was able to flourish. One of the Indo-Greek kings, the "Saviour King" Menander, has been remembered as a great benefactor of the Buddhist faith. | |||
Pusyamitra Sunga was succeeded in 151 BCE by his son Agnimitra. | |||
Preceded by: | |||
Brhadrata | |||
(Mauryan dynasty) Sunga ruler Succeeded by: | |||
Agnimitra |
Revision as of 20:40, 12 March 2006
Pusyamitra Sunga (also Pushyamitra Shunga) was the founder of the Indian Sunga dynasty (185-78 BCE). He reigned from 185 BCE to 151 BCE.
Originally a general and commander-in-chief on the armies of the Mauryan empire, he assassinated the last Mauryan emperor Brhadrata in 185 BCE, and subsequently founded the Sunga dynasty.
Pusyamitra Sunga was a Hindu monarch, deeply established in the tradition of orthodox Brahminism. He allegedly became very active in persecuting the Buddhist faith, which the Mauryan empire had been promoting since Ashoka around 250 BCE. He seems to have destroyed Buddhist monasteries and exterminated monks, offering to pay 100 gold coins for the head of each one (Indian Historical Quarterly Vol. XXII, p.81 ff cited in Hars.407, also Divyavadana, p.429-434). He is said to have destroyed 84,000 buddhist stupas which had been built by the Mauryan king Ashoka (R. Thaper). A large number of Buddhist monasteries (viharas) were converted to Hindu temples, in such places as Nalanda, Bodhgaya, Sarnath or Mathura.
The new Sunga ruler was attacked around 180 BCE by the Greek rulers of the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom, as they invaded large parts of northwestern and northern India as far as Pataliputra, with the effect of confining the Sungas to the eastern parts of India.
The Greco-Bactrians established in India the Indo-Greek Kingdom, which was to last until the end of the 1st century BCE, and under which Buddhism was able to flourish. One of the Indo-Greek kings, the "Saviour King" Menander, has been remembered as a great benefactor of the Buddhist faith.
Pusyamitra Sunga was succeeded in 151 BCE by his son Agnimitra.
Preceded by: Brhadrata (Mauryan dynasty) Sunga ruler Succeeded by: Agnimitra
Subcategories
This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total.
Pages in category "Dzogchen"
The following 319 pages are in this category, out of 319 total.
A
B
- Barchey Künsel Cycle of Teachings
- Bardo Consciousness
- Bardo of Becoming
- Basic State
- Bhumis
- Birth by Transformation
- Blackness
- Bliss
- Bliss, Clarity and Nonthought
- Bliss-sustainer
- Blissful Realm
- Blood-drinker
- Blue Lake
- Bodhichitta
- Bodhichitta of Abandoning All Obscuration
- Bodhichitta of Aspiration
- Bodhichitta of Aspiration and Application
- Bodhichitta of Devoted Engagement
- Bodhichitta of Maturation
- Bodhichitta of Pure Superior Intention
- Bodhichitta Training
- Bodhicitta of undivided emptiness and compassion
- Bodhicitta vows
- Bodhidharma
- Bodhisattva Bhumi
- Bodhisattva Collections
- Bodhisattva Precepts
- Bodhisattva Vow
- Bodhisattva vows
- Bodhisattva Vows - continued
- Body of Light
- Body Representation
- Body, Speech, Mind, and Cognition
- Body, Speech, Mind, Qualities, and Activities
- Bon
- Bonpo
- Boon-granting
- Border Temples
- Boundless Life
- Brahma
- Brahma Ghosa
- Brahma Loka
- Brahma-like voice
- Brahma-raksasa
- Brahman
- Brahmarandra
- Brahmin Saraha
- Brilliant
- bstan pa’i btsas gsum
- Buddha Activity
- Buddha Amitayus
- Buddha Eye
- Buddha Guhya
- Buddha Vairochana
- Buddha's mind
- Buddha's speech
- Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha
- Buddha-body
- Buddha-family
- Buddhaghosha
- Buddhahood
- Buddhas of the Ten Directions
- Buddhism
- Buddhist Canon
- Bumthang
- Business
- Butön
- byin rlabs mchog gi sprul pa
C
- Calm
- Capable Preparatory Stage
- Capacity
- Carefree Vagrant
- Carya-tantra
- Causal
- Causal and Resultant Vehicles
- Causal Philosophical Teachings
- Causal Philosophical Vehicle
- Causal Refuge
- Causal Teachings
- Causal Vehicle of the Paramitas
- Cause
- Central Channel
- Cessation
- Chagmey Rinpoche
- Chak
- Chakdrukpa
- Chakra
- Chakranatha
- Chakravartin
- Chakshus
- Change and fall
- Changeless Light
- Changing suffering
- Changphukma
- Chetsun Nyingtik
- Clairvoyance
- Coemergent Ignorance
- Cognition
- Cognition of the Exhaustion of Defilements
- Cognizance
- Common Siddhis
- Conventional and Ultimate
- Conventional Bodhichitta
D
E
F
I
K
L
M
- Major and Minor Marks
- Manifest dharmata
- Mantrayana
- Materiality
- Meadow of Mönkha
- Means and Knowledge
- Mind Consciousness
- Mind Section
- Mind Section, Space Section and Instruction Section
- Mind, Space and Instruction Sections
- mkha' 'gro snying thig
- Mother of All Buddhas
- Mother Tantra
- Mount Kailash
- Mt. Kailash
- Mt. Meru
N
P
- Parinirvana
- Path of Accumulation
- Path of Cultivation
- Path of Means
- Path of Skillful Means
- Peling Terchö
- Pith Instructions
- Potala
- Prana
- Precious Buddha
- Primordial Awareness
- Primordial Buddha
- Primordial State
- Primordial Wisdom
- Primordially Present Nature
- Pristine Awareness
- Pristine Cognition
- Pristine Cognition continued
- Prostrate
Q
R
S
- Samayamudra
- Sambhogakaya
- Sangwa Nyingtik
- Self-Cognizance
- Self-entity
- Self-nature
- Seven Bodhi Factors
- Seven Branches
- Seven Branches of Enlightenment
- Seven Thought States of Delusion
- Seven Types of Attention
- Seven Types of Individual Liberation
- Shamatha and Vipashyana
- Shechen Gyaltsab Pema Namgyal
- Sherab Özer
- Siddha
- Six Collections
- Six Dharmas of Sugatagarbha
- Sixty-two Wisdom Deities
- Skandhas
- snying thig rtsa pod
- Space Section
- Space-Dharma
- Sthiramati
- Sudden Enlightenment
- Sugatagarbha
- Sugatas
- Superior Intention
- Supreme Realization
- Sutra Mahamudra
T
- Tangyur
- Ten Paramitas
- Ten Riches
- The Dzogchen Tantras
- The Paths
- The Three Jewels
- Thirty-seven Factors
- Three Aspects of Ignorance
- Three Kayas
- Three Lower Realms
- Three Roots
- Three Sections of Dzogchen
- Three Trilogies
- Trishok Gyalmo
- Truth of Cessation
- Twenty Defects of Bustle
- Twenty-two Types of Bodhichitta
- Two Chariots
- Two Veils
- Two Wisdoms
- Twofold Purity
- Twofold Welfare