Inspirational Quotations

Inspirational Quotes by Ashoka (Emperor of India, Patron of Buddhism)

Aśoka (c.304–c.232 BCE) was an emperor of India. Considered ancient India’s greatest monarch, he transformed himself from a callous conqueror into a wise, pacific ruler after his conversion to Buddhism. He shepherded the rise of Buddhism into a major world religion as did the Roman emperor Constantine, whose conversion spread Christianity through the Mediterranean world.

The grandson of the founder of the Maurya dynasty, Aśoka was a ruthless warrior who murdered his way to the throne. From 270 to 233 BCE, Aśoka’s kingdom spanned every part of the Indian subcontinent except for the southernmost region. His influence extended into Sri Lanka and beyond present-day Afghanistan.

After his successful but rampaging invasion of the eastern province of Kalinga (modern Odisha state) in which his army killed more than 100,000 men, Aśoka was revolted by the bloodshed of war. The sufferings that the war inflicted upon the defeated people moved him to such repentance that he abruptly embraced Buddhism and renounced armed conquest and devoted himself to peaceful pursuits.

Aśoka organized Buddhism as the state religion but give freedom to other religious sects. His spirited patronage of Buddhism during his long reign furthered the expansion of that religion. He supported his new faith by building more than 84,000 stūpas, donating millions of pieces of gold to the monastic order, and inscribing his edicts on rocks and pillars. The only glory he sought after, he declared, was for having led his people along the path of the Dharma.

Aśoka’s inscriptions, detailed, amongst other things, his commitment to Buddhism. Deciphered only in the nineteenth century, they are the source of much knowledge about ancient India and its chronology. The four-lion capital of the pillar found at Sarnath is the emblem of the Republic of India. Too, the Aśoka Chakra (“Wheel of Aśoka,”) depicted on many of the artifacts from his kingdom, was placed in the center of the flag of India.

Because of Aśoka’s patronage, Buddhism, until then just a small sect confined to specific regions of historical India, spread throughout India and later beyond its frontiers to Tibet, Southeast Asia, and China.

Although remembered as a great Buddhist king in many Buddhist countries, Aśoka was generally forgotten in India until the 19th century, when the British philologist James Prinsep finally interpreted Aśoka’s inscriptions.

More: Wikipedia READ: Works by Ashoka

All men are my children. As for my own children I desire that they may be provided with all the welfare and happiness of this world and of the next, so do I desire for all men as well.
Ashoka

Whoever honors his own sect and disparages another man’s, whether from blind loyalty or with the intention of showing his own sect in a favorable light, does his own sect the greatest possible harm. Concord is best, with each hearing and respecting the other’s teachings.
Ashoka

I have enforced the law against killing certain animals and many others, but the greatest progress of righteousness among men comes from the exhortation in favor of non-injury to life and abstention from killing living beings.
Ashoka
Topics: Lawyers, Law

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