There are several famous Tang Dynasty people who have been to Japan in history

Updated on history 2024-06-03
20 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Jianzhen (687-763) was a monk of the Tang Dynasty, also known as the Master of the Sea and the Great Monk of the Tang Dynasty. 6 times to the east of Japan success, wear to learn Buddhism, the establishment of Japanese writing, the establishment of Tang Zhaoti Temple, died in 763, the body was made into a golden body, for the Japanese national treasure.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Jianzhen successfully crossed to Japan 6 times, and one of them almost hung up.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Jianzhen (687-763) was a monk of the Tang Dynasty, also known as the Master of the Sea and the Great Monk of the Tang Dynasty. The ancestor of the Ritsu sect in Japan.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Everything is a floating cloud, this is on the winter vacation homework.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    The four who had the greatest influence on "Japan" at that time. The Qin Dynasty had Xu Fu crossing to the east to "Japan", the Han Dynasty had Liu Azhi crossing to the east to "Japan", the Sui Dynasty had Xuanzang crossing to the east "Japan", and the Tang Dynasty had Jianzhen crossing to the east to "Japan......".There are too many, and "China and Japan" have had frequent exchanges in the past.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Datang is a country with complete laws and a precious country, so you should go to it often. That is, to establish a 'French-style preparation' emperor system based on the "Tang Dynasty".

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The Japanese have a deep complex for the Tang Dynasty, they learned advanced culture from the Tang Dynasty, especially cultural people, and the most retained good impression of China is the Tang Dynasty, in 2004, a tombstone about the Tang envoy was found in Xi'an, which contained a Japanese named Jing Zhencheng, which caused a national sensation in Japan, and made a documentary specifically for it.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    There is no need to know it**Yu**, do you know the biggest characteristic of the Huaxia people? Is it also the development direction of the Huaxia people? It is a complete integration, if you purely want to know that the Japanese ** came, I can clearly say that it originated from the Yellow River and Yangtze River Basin, why because he is like the Chinese Asian yellow race, and the origin is in the Yellow River and Yangtze River Basin.

    As for when it passed, I really don't know, the earliest record is that the 4th son of King Qi Min was divided into Japan. Later, there were 5,000 boys and girls in Xufu, and so on, does it matter? So let the blood of Huaxia give you the greatest strength, he has melted him in this place.

    From Huaxia, Dongyi, Shennong to today. How many nationalities are missing in China. It's all fused together, and now it's merging with Uyghurs.

    In the next step, you will also make a contribution to the integration of the Yamato nation. There are also real Japanese sword coins.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    There are three types of Japanese people who say it.

    1. Aborigines: Mainly Ezo (probably in Hokkaido, the most recorded ethnic minority in ancient Japanese books), Okinawan aborigines and Jomon people.

    2. People who came from the Asian continent (not necessarily China, some say the Korean Peninsula, some say Mongolia): Yayoi people (the arrival of the Yayoi period, mainly active in western Japan).

    3. After the 8th century, seafaring technology gradually became more and more powerful, and there are records of exchanges with Japan in the history of the Tang Dynasty and thereafter, in addition to Chinese mainland, Taiwan, India, and Brazil, which young people dreamed of after the Meiji era.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    In fact, it is written in many books! No thanks.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    No, the Japanese Ministry.

    Bai is divided into Chinese mainland, but earlier than the Tang Dynasty, and even earlier than the Qin Dynasty, people crossed the sea into Japan. The more famous one in the records is Xu Fu of the Qin Dynasty who sought immortals. In addition, during the Guangwu period of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Japanese envoys came to China and were given the "Seal of the King of Enslavement" by Emperor Guangwu.

    In addition, there is also some Malay ancestry among the Japanese, which shows that their ancestors are not simply Han Chinese. Generally speaking, exchanges between the mainland and Japan began as early as the Qin period. Naturally, much earlier than Don.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Legend has it that yes, during the Tang Dynasty, Japan was a Dokdo island, uninhabited, and the Tang Dynasty sent hundreds of people to Japan.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Definitely not! The Japanese existed long before the Tang Dynasty, and the Tang Dynasty also sent a large number of Tang envoys to study.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    The original of Japan.

    The people of Bai are the Japanese people, and the Tang Dynasty is the time when the exchanges between China and Japan are the most prosperous Isn't there a proper noun in the Tang Dynasty.

    Thousands of years ago, before China was formed, some people continued to spread from the center of the continent to all directions, including immigrants to Japan, gradually driving the local Japanese people to the north of Hokkaido. That's why the Japanese call the local aborigines Ezo.

    There were two main migration routes from the mainland to Japan in the early days

    1. Pass through the Korean Peninsula.

    2. After the flow of seeking.

    Chen Shou's "Records of the Three Kingdoms" customarily believes that the Japanese are the descendants of Baiyue After the Tang Dynasty, especially the Ming Dynasty, maritime transportation was more convenient, and many Chinese immigrated to Japan for various reasons (engaging in business or taking refuge in Zhengzhi). For example, Zheng Chenggong was his maternal grandfather. About 30% of the Japanese are now of Chinese immigration ancestry during the Ming Dynasty.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    It's not the Tang Dynasty, it should be the Qin and Han dynasties.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Jianzhen (688 - June 25, 763), a monk of the Tang Dynasty, with the common surname Chunyu, was a native of Jiangyang, Guangling (now Yangzhou, Jiangsu), a descendant of the Nanshan Sect of the Vinaya, and the founder of the Nanshan Vinaya Sect of Japanese Buddhism, a famous medical scientist.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    The four who had the greatest influence on "Japan" at that time. The Qin Dynasty had Xu Fu crossing to the east to "Japan", the Han Dynasty had Liu Azhi crossing to the east to "Japan", the Sui Dynasty had Xuanzang crossing to the east "Japan", and the Tang Dynasty had Jianzhen crossing to the east to "Japan......".There are too many, and "China and Japan" have had frequent exchanges in the past.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    It is a monk of Jianzhen.

    He became a monk in Yangzhou at the age of 14. Because of his hard work, he became a learned monk after middle age. In 742 A.D. (the first year of Tang Tianbao), he was invited by Japanese monks to cross to the east six times, and finally arrived in Japan in 754 after going through countless hardships.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    Jianzhen, a high-ranking monk of the Tang Dynasty, traveled to Japan 6 times to preach and exchange Buddhist scriptures with Japanese monks, and died in Japan.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    The Tang Dynasty monk Jianzhen traveled east to Japan six times in order to spread the Tang Dynasty culture

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