Xuanzang
602 CE–664 CE · Liangzhou (Wuwei)
602–664 CE
Xuanzang (602–664 CE) made the best-documented pilgrimage in Buddhist history and is the stream's flagship journey. Born near Luoyang, he left China about 627–629 against imperial prohibition, crossed Central Asia and Gandhāra, and reached India, where he studied for years at Nālandā—above all the Yogācāra ('mind-only') philosophy—and traveled and debated across the subcontinent. Returning to Chang'an in 645 with hundreds of manuscripts, he directed one of the greatest translation projects ever undertaken and wrote the 'Great Tang Records on the Western Regions,' a primary source historians still rely on. His own account makes his route and dates exceptionally secure.
Did you know?
A Silk Road pilgrim six centuries before Marco Polo
Around 629 CE, in the early years of the Tang dynasty, the Chinese monk Xuanzang set out across the deserts and mountain passes of Central Asia toward India — and he is recorded as having left against an imperial travel ban. He followed Silk Road routes that the Venetian traveler Marco Polo would cross in the opposite direction, toward China, more than six hundred years later.
How we know
Xuanzang departed c. 629 CE (some sources 627 CE; Tang founded 618 CE); Marco Polo left Venice in 1271 CE — a gap of ~642 years.
The real pilgrim behind the Monkey King
The monk Xuanzang's 16-year overland journey to India (629–645) to gather and translate Buddhist scriptures became the historical seed of the Ming-era novel "Journey to the West" (earliest surviving edition c. 1592), whose pilgrim-monk Tang Sanzang is modeled on him. Its fictional companion, the Monkey King Sun Wukong, went on to become one of the most famous characters in all of Chinese literature.
How we know
Xuanzang c. 602–664 CE; pilgrimage to India 629–645 (16-year absence, per his collaborators' biographies; a 627 start appears in some East Asian versions); "Journey to the West" earliest surviving edition 1592 (Ming dynasty), monk-character Tang Sanzang based on Xuanzang, companion Sun Wukong.
Life journeyclick any stop, or use ←/→Trace on the map →
Liangzhou (Wuwei)
What they did here
DOCUMENTED: slipped past the frontier garrisons at the western gates and crossed the deserts of the northwest.
About Liangzhou (Wuwei)
Liangzhou, the area of modern Wuwei in Gansu province, China, was a strategic oasis garrison town on the Hexi Corridor of the Silk Road and an early conduit for Buddhism entering China. The translator Kumārajīva was held there for some seventeen years after his capture from Kucha before being taken on to Chang'an in 401; pilgrims such as Xuanzang also passed through the city on the route west.
In the same place & time
Sages whose lives overlapped with Xuanzang’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.
The world in their lifetime
Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Xuanzang’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.
Islamic world
Jewish world
Graeco-Roman world
Works
No works attributed in the corpus yet.