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Spread of World Religions

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Title: Spread of World Religions


1
Spread of World Religions
  • From the Axial Age to the end of the First
    Millennium

2
Forced Conversion
  • Islamic World
  • jihadstriving
  • internal struggle versus evil
  • external war against enemies of faith
  • initially against Muhammads enemies
  • after death against apostates
  • then Byzantium and Sasanid
  • enemies allowed to convert
  • or pay tax
  • or go to war

3
Islamic Expansion
4
Forced Conversion cont.
  • The Christian World Christendom
  • Charlemagne 700s
  • Saxons given choice of baptism or death
  • Alfred the Great
  • Celts convert for peace
  • Olaf of Norway
  • torture or conversion
  • Buddhism
  • Asoka
  • Kaniska of Peshawar
  • Anuruddha took Buddhism to Burma

5
Charlemagnes Empire
6
Charlemagne
7
Alfred the Great of Wessex
8
King Olaf of Norway
9
Spread by Trade
  • Silk Road for Buddhism (dominate)
  • Chinese monks built temples
  • endowed by merchants
  • Uighurs
  • steppe people serving as mercenary caravan guards
  • picked up Manichaeism
  • derivative of Zoroastrianism
  • sparked temple building
  • eventually replaced by Buddhism

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12
Spread by Trade cont.
  • Christianity
  • only moderately successful on Silk Road
  • few Christians engaged in long-range trade
  • Armenians kept to selves
  • Nestorians human Jesus vs. divine Jesus
  • some patches of temple building
  • Islam
  • expanded via sea routes
  • mosques in merchant communities
  • China
  • E. Africa
  • Saharan trade routes took Islam West

13
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15
Conversion of Kings
  • start at top and watch religion trickle down
  • Early Christianity
  • social outcasts
  • Religion of slaves and women
  • initially hostile to wealth
  • religion grew as women evangelized
  • husbands
  • children
  • minority religion until 4th century

16
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17
Conversion of Kings cont.
  • Constantine 312 AD converts to Christianity at
    battle of Milvian Bridge
  • converted to gain political backing for bid for
    Empire
  • mixed pagan unconquered sun with Christian
    ideas
  • Lord of Hosts not God of Love
  • Christianity no longer persecuted
  • Eventually Christianity official religion of
    Roman Empire
  • Loses traditional pacifism

18
Conversion of Constantine
19
Conversion of Kings cont.
  • King Ezana of Ethiopia converts to Christianity
    in the 340s
  • Believed to be son of Ethiopian war god
  • At end of his life converted and waged war under
    the banner of Lord of Hosts
  • built churches
  • King Trdat of Armenia converts in 314 AD
  • converted to gain alliance with Rome and
    Constantine

20
King Ezana
21
King Trdat
22
Diplomatic Conversions
  • Small kingdoms between Rome and Persia shifted
    religions with alliances
  • Christian
  • Zoroastrian
  • Muslim

23
Buddhism and Politics
  • China
  • Often used by new monarchs to legitimize rule
  • Buddhism never wholly dominant
  • traditional rituals
  • Confucianism
  • Chinese distrust of foreigners
  • periodically persecuted
  • 820s-840s AD thousands monasteries dissolved

24
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25
Buddhism and Politics cont.
  • Korea approximately 500 AD
  • Buddhism brought to Koguryo by refugees from
    China
  • quickly reconciled with traditional Korean
    religion
  • Slow to spread beyond
  • Japan approximately 600 AD
  • diplomacy with Korea
  • refugees from China
  • reconcile with Shintoism
  • government and religion same word
  • animism
  • Japanese Buddhism distinctive mix

26
Buddhism and Politics cont.
  • Tibet
  • slow monastic colonization
  • chose Theraveda over Mahayana Buddhism
  • didnt adopt until late 800s
  • India
  • Buddhism unsuccessful as state religion
  • Huns seen as proof of Buddhism failure
  • driven back to traditional gods
  • Codified with caste system into Hinduism

27
The Russians and Christianity
  • Converted on Constantinian model
  • Vladimir of Kiev
  • History of paganism
  • Needed to break power of priesthood to set up
    kingdom
  • Searched for religion
  • Discovers Muslims (no good)
  • Visits Hagia Sophia and is impressed
  • Convert to Orthodox Christianity and marries
    Byzantine princess (Anna Porphyrogenita)
  • Required services in Slavic language (beginning
    of Russian orthodoxy)

28
Vladimir of Kiev
29
Hagia Sophia
30
Kiev, capital of modern Ukraine
31
Islam and the Turks
  • Turks warlike central Asian people
  • Karakhanids first Turks to be Islamic
  • Brought new manpower and warriors to Islam
  • Seljuk Turks convert in 985 AD and descendants
    would come to rule empire

32
Turkish Warriors
33
Monasticism and Religion
  • Christian Monasticism
  • Upheld Roman tradition of learning
  • Different types of monks
  • Benedictine (founded by Benedict 542 AD)
  • Changed pagan shrines to St. shrines
  • Sought to instate paradise on earth
  • Isolation and contemplation
  • Various other orders

34
Benedictine Monks
35
Monasticism in other Religions
  • Monasticism more important in Buddhism than in
    Christianity
  • Withdrawal from world to find religion
  • Preserver of learning
  • Islamic Sufism
  • Muhammad was against asceticism
  • Christian monastic roots too deeply engraved
  • Mystics fasting and meditation

36
Buddhist Monks
37
Women in Religions
  • Guardians of religious tradition
  • Nuns prayer and scholarship

38
What makes a World Religion
  • FLEXIBILITY
  • ADAPTABILITY
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