Despite the rapid spread of Buddhism -- especially the esoteric
system of Tantra, one of its most popular yet most misunderstood
forms -- the historical origins of Buddhist thought and practice
remain obscure. This groundbreaking work describes the genesis of
the Tantric movement in early medieval India, where it developed as
a response to, and in some ways an example of, the feudalization of
Indian society. Drawing on primary documents -- many translated for
the first time -- from Sanskrit, Prakrit, Tibetan, Bengali, and
Chinese, Ronald Davidson shows how changes in medieval Indian
society, including economic and patronage crises, a decline in
women's participation, and the formation of large monastic orders,
led to the rise of the esoteric tradition in India that became the
model for Buddhist cultures in China, Tibet, and Japan.
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