xuanzang in A Sentence

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    Xuanzang visited Balkh in 630 when it was

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    Xuanzang(7th century AD)

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    Xuanzang, the Chinese pilgrim to India, stayed at Kannauj for 3

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    The 7th century Buddhist traveler Xuanzang describes the region in his accounts.

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    Chinese traveler Xuanzang describes a kingdom named Kiu-che-lo and its capital Pi-lo-mi-lo.

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    When Xuanzang visited Balkh in 630 it was a flourishing center of Hinayana Buddhism.

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    Xuanzang visited Balkh in 630 when it was a flourishing centre of Hinayana Buddhism.

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    In the 7th century Buddhist traveller, Xuanzang describes the region in his accounts.

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    Xuanzang, however, preferred to serve his religion, so he respectfully declined the imperial offer.

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    Famous Chinese traveller Xuanzang had also mentioned this site in his travel accounts.

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    Xuanzang, the Chinese pilgrim to India, stayed at Kannauj for 3 months in 636 AD.

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    Xuanzang, in his travelogue, noted that he crossed a great river Karatoya before entering the Kamarupa.

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    The Chinese Buddhist monk Xuanzang visited this place in 632 CE and stayed there for two years.

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    In 646, under the Emperor's request, Xuanzang completed his book Great Tang Records on the Western Regions(大唐西域記),

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    Xuanzang remarked that Buddhism was widely practised by the Hunnish rulers of Balkh, who descended from Indian royal stock.

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    There is a legend about his return from China that says Xuanzang had given him a magical kettle.

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    Many of the listed by Xuanzang in his travelogue as products of Nalanda are the names of those who developed the philosophy of Mahayana.

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    Xuanzang(602- 664) was a Chinese Buddhist monk, scholar, traveller, and translator who described the interaction between China and India in the early Tang dynasty.

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    Many of the names listed by Xuanzang in his travelogue as products of Nalanda are the names of those who developed the philosophy of Mahayana.

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    Xuanzang(7th century AD) mentions that among the Kamarupa king Bhaskaravarma's gifts to Harshavardhana there were paintings and painted objects, some of which were on Assamese silk.

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    Xuanzang returned to China with 657 Buddhist texts(many of them Mahayanist) and 150 relics carried by 20 horses in 520 cases, and translated 74 of the texts himself.

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    Xuanzang(Chinese: 玄奘 602- 664), was a Chinese Buddhist monk, scholar, traveller, and translator who described the interaction between Chinese Buddhism and Indian Buddhism in the early Tang dynasty.

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    According to the Memoirs of Xuanzang, there were about a hundred Buddhist convents in the city or its vicinity at the time of his visit there in the 7th century.

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    Xuanzang was known for his extensive but careful translations of Indian Buddhist texts to Chinese, which have enabled subsequent recoveries of lost Indian Buddhist texts from the translated Chinese copies.

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    Xuanzang travelled around India between the years of 630 and 643 CE, and visited Nalanda first in 637 and then again in 642, spending a total of around two years at the monastery.

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    In 646, under the Emperor's request, Xuanzang completed his book Great Tang Records on the Western Regions(大唐西域記), which has become one of the primary sources for the study of medieval Central Asia and India.

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    Faxian mentions the city as a centre of Buddhism about 400 CE while his successor Xuanzang, who visited the city in 634 CE, mentions it as Motulo, recording that it contained twenty Buddhist monasteries and five Brahmanical temples.

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    Xuanzang(also known as Hiuen Tsang) came India India between the years of 630 and 643 CE, and visited Nalanda University first in 637 and then again in 642, spending his life journey around two years at the monastery.

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