One of the oldest
surviving historical accounts of India was written by this Korean Buddhist monk
Hyecho arrived in India in 724 CE and
travelled extensively, closely observing the culture, customs and geographical
features of the country.
A section of Memoir of the Pilgrimage to the Five Kingdoms of India.
Among the
numerous treasures in its vast collection, the Bibliothèque nationale de France
in Paris holds a valuable 8th century manuscript. Handwritten on a scroll, the
manuscript has about 6,000 classical Chinese characters spread over 227 lines
and is one of the oldest surviving historical accounts of India.
The scroll, measuring 28.5 centimetres in width, ended up in the
possession of France’s national library thanks to French archaeologist and Sinologist
Paul Pelliot. Pelliot purchased it – along with thousands of other ancient
scrolls in Chinese, Sanskrit, Prakrit and other languages – from the caretaker
of the Mogao Caves in Dunhang, China, in 1908. A rare record of ancient India,
the scroll is a travelogue titled Wangocheonchukguk-Jeon or Memoir of the
Pilgrimage to the Five Kingdoms of India. It was written by Hyecho, a Korean
Buddhist monk and pilgrim who undertook an onerous journey to India in the 8th
century and travelled extensively across the country, which he believed was
divided into five kingdoms.
Hyecho, a native of the Korean kingdom of Silla (now in the
central and southern parts of the Korean peninsula), was born in 704 CE. He
went to study in Tang Dynasty China, where he developed a deep interest in
India, a country he called the land of the Buddha. At the age of 19, he set off
on his journey to India from the southern coast of China.
This was a time when pilgrims travelling from southern China to
India preferred trekking along the coast of the Indochina peninsula to the
modern-day Indonesia so they could first learn more about Buddhism from
Sumatran priests. Hyecho too chose this route, going to Srivijaya on the island
of Sumatra, then a major centre of Sanskrit and Buddhist learning.
Magadha Kingdom
He arrived
in eastern India in 724 CE. Among the first notes we see in the travelogue is a
brief description of Vaishali in modern-day Bihar. “The land is completely
flat,” Hyecho wrote. “They have no slaves. The crime of selling people is not
different from murder.” Like a true pilgrim, he travelled on foot in search of
sites associated with Buddhism.
“After a month’s journey, I arrived at the country of
Kushinagara,” he wrote. “This is where the Buddha entered nirvana. The city is
desolate, and no people live there. The stupa was built at the site, where the
Buddha entered nirvana. There is a Dhyana master, who keeps the place clean.”
The Korean pilgrim mentioned an annual ceremony that was held there on the
eighth day of the eighth month when monks, laymen and clergy would converge
near the stupa and banners were unfurled. Hyecho added that pilgrims had to
cross forests to get to the area near the stupa. “Those on pilgrimages are
often wounded by rhinoceros and tigers,” he wrote.
The monk found Varanasi to be “desolate” and noted that it did
not have a king. He noticed sadhus who had smeared ashes on their bodies and
worshipped Mahadeva. Not far, in Sarnath, he seemed impressed with the Ashoka
Pillar: “On top (of the pillar), there is (a statue of) a lion. The pillar is
extremely beautiful. (Its circumference measures that of) five people with
joined arms. The lines carved on it are delicate.”
Hyecho managed to visit the four major holy stupas in Sarnath,
Rajagriha, Kushinagara and Bodh Gaya. “All these are situated in the Magadha
kingdom,” he wrote, adding that both Mahayana and Hinayana were practised in
the country.
When he arrived at the Mahabodhi monastery, the monk said he was
very happy as his “long-cherished wish had been fulfilled”.
Military Strength
Hyecho said
he walked for a month from the “country of Varanasi” before arriving at
Kanyakhubja (Kannauj). The Korean seemed most impressed with the central Indian
kingdom, which he wrote had many inhabitants and a broad territory.
Hyecho made notes of the military prowess of the kingdoms he
visited. Writing about the army of the central Indian king, he wrote, “The king
possesses nine hundred elephants, while other great chiefs possess two to three
hundred each.” He added, “The king often leads troops into battle and
frequently fights with the other four regions of India. The central Indian king
is always victorious.” He also described the agreed rules of war and conflict
in India at that time, adding that a king with fewer soldiers and elephants
would prefer to plead for peace and pay an annual tribute than challenge a
stronger enemy on the battlefield.
In a paper published in the November 2009 edition of The
Journal of Asian Studies, American academic and scholar of Korean Buddhism
Robert Buswell Jr attributes Hyecho’s extensive writing on military matters to
his obligations to the Tang Dynasty authorities. “Because his account was
written at the Tang government’s behest, his memoir at times sounds more like a
reconnaissance report than a travelogue, showing an inordinate amount of
curiosity in the size of local cavalries and the height of ramparts,” Buswell
wrote.
Climate, Customs And Culture
A
significant part of the travelogue is focused on the geography, climate, food,
customs and the cultural practices of the places Hyecho visited.
“The dress, language, customs and laws of the five regions of
India are similar,” he wrote. “Only the language of the village folk in south
India is different.”
The India that he saw seemed to be a place where violence was
not the norm. “The national laws of the five regions of India prescribe no
cangue, beatings or prison,” he wrote. “Those who are guilty are fined in
accordance with the degree of offence committed. There is no capital
punishment.” Neither the royalty nor commoners found pleasure in hunting with
dogs or falcons. Staying on the theme of violence, he noted that bandits in
India spared the lives of those they robbed.
Tax system of the kingdoms find a mention in the travelogue:
“Apart from paying one picul of grain out of every five to the king annually,
the people have no other labour service or taxes.” Hyecho said the kings
possessed horses and sheep, but the common people only had cattle, which they
reared for milk and butter.
There are mentions too of the disparities in wealth in India at
that time: “Most people of the land are poor, few are rich,” Hyecho wrote,
while taking careful note of the living conditions. “Monasteries and royal
houses are all three-storied buildings. The ground floors are used as storage
rooms, while the upper floors are used for dwellings. The (houses of the) great
chiefs are the same. These houses are all even roofed, made of bricks and wood.
Other houses are straw huts, similar to the gabled Chinese house. They are also
one storied.” He observed that the royalty and rich wore two pieces of cotton
cloth, while the ordinary wore one piece, and the poor half a piece.
Interestingly enough, he noted that India imported gold and
silver at that time.
Although he wrote about the poverty of the average person, there
is no mention of hunger in the travelogue. Hyecho wrote that people ate food
cooked in earthenware pots and did not use iron cauldrons. “The foods include
rice, baked wheat flour, butter, milk and curds,” he wrote. “Soy is not
available, but salt is.”
Southern India
From central
India, Hyecho walked for three months until he reached what he called the
capital of South India. It was was hotter than central India, he said, and did
not have camels, mules or donkeys. Historians are divided whether the Korean
pilgrim was talking about Vatapi (Badami) in modern-day Karnataka or Vengi, the
capital of the Eastern Chalukyas in modern-day Andhra Pradesh.
He wrote in detail about Buddhism in the region. “In the
mountains there is a large monastery, which was constructed by the Yakshas
under order from the Boddhisatva Nagarjuna and not built by human beings,” he
said. “Moreover, the pillars were cut from rocks of the mountains and built in
three stories.” He added that the monastery had 3,000 monks when Nagarjuna was
alive but began to decay a few hundred years after the Mahayana Buddhist
philosopher passed away.
Although there seems to be a sense of happiness and wonder in
his writings, it was clear that Hyecho was homesick and missed Korea. He penned
a poem on his way to South India, where he described his longing for home:
“On a
moonlit night I looked towards the homeward path,
Floating clouds return by the wind.
I wish this letter to go with this opportunity,
The wind blows too fast; the clouds neither listen or return.
My country is in the northern horizon,
Other lands lie at the western extremity.
No wild geese in the hot south,
Who will take my words to the Homeland?”
Journey North
The Korean
pilgrim walked for two months from southern India and arrived in what most
historians believe is Nashik. “The products of this land are cotton cloth,
sliver, elephants, horses, sheep and cows,” Hyecho wrote. “Barley, wheat and
various kinds of beans are produced in large quantities, (but the production
of) rice and corn is much less. Food is mainly bread, wheat preparations,
curds, butter and ghee.”
Hyecho sang praises of the musical talent of western Indians.
“The people of this country are very good at singing,” he wrote. “(In this) the
other four regions of India cannot be compared with this country.”
He continued his pilgrimage, heading north from modern-day
Maharashtra to Gujarat and Sindh, which he called Sindhukula. “The country has
many camels from which the people obtain milk and butter for food,” he
observed. Hyecho added that half of Sindhukula’s territory had been lost to
Arab invaders.
Over three months on his journey north, he walked to Jalandhar
and onwards to Kashmir, where he observed the temperate climate: “The land is
extremely cold, which is different from the countries mentioned before. There
is frost in autumn and snow in winter. In summer there is plenty of rainfall.
The plants are always green and the leaves thick. In winter the grasses
wither.”
He mentioned that Kashmir was counted “as a part of north
India,” adding that the region had not been invaded by any foreign country. The
roads were “dangerous and bad,” he said. Like in other parts of India, the poor
were many and rich few. “The common people cover their ugly bodies with woollen
blankets,” he wrote.
Hyecho also travelled to the areas bordering Tibet and observed
that the country did not follow Buddhism. From Kashmir, he went to Afghanistan
and Persia and Arabia. He returned to Persia and from Arabia joined a Silk Road
Caravan that crossed over to Afghanistan and Central Asia, moving towards
Dunhuang via Kashgar. His 20,000-km journey took about four years.
A student of Indian esoteric monk Vajirabodhi, he taught monks
and students for decades in China and lived till the age of 84.
The manuscript that was sent to the library in Paris in 1908 was
fragmented, with the opening and concluding portions missing. It has since been
translated into several languages.
Hyecho’s sketches of India, although brief, give the reader a
wide look at what life was like in the 8th century in the Indian subcontinent.
His notes shed light on an obscure but important period in Indian history.
Note: For this article, the writer relied on a
translation of Hyecho’s travelogue from classical Chinese to English by
Han-Sung Yang, Yun-Hua Jan, Shotaro Iida and Laurence Preston.
Ajay Kamalakaran is a writer and independent journalist,
based in Mumbai. He is a Kalpalata Fellow for History & Heritage Writings
for 2021.
Courtesy Scroll.in
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