The “sangha”—the community of Buddha’s followers—has grown …

Years: 845 - 845
December

The “sangha”—the community of Buddha’s followers—has grown so large and rich by 845 that its tax-exempt status now makes it a severe drain on the Chinese imperial economy.

For this and other reasons, it becomes the target of a brief but effective nationwide persecution.

The majority of Buddhist temples suffer destruction and the loss of their contents, thousands of monks and nuns are laicized, and the state confiscates the vast landholdings of monasteries.

More than forty-six hundred monasteries and forty thousand temples and shrines are destroyed.

More than two hundred and sixty thousand Buddhist monks and nuns are forced to return to secular life.

The Chan sect, although suffering the same persecutions as other sects, recovers from the yearlong persecution better than do the others, partly because, in contrast to other monastic communities, Chan monks practice physical labor, which creates less dependency on state and lay support.

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