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Volume I · Ancient Greece · 624–262 BCE

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Ashvaghosha

BuddhistIndian

Born c. 80 CE

Died c. 150 CE

The first great Sanskrit poet, who told the Buddha's life as an epic and made philosophy sing.

Ashvaghosha was a brahmin convert to Buddhism at the court of the Kushan emperor Kanishka, and the earliest Sanskrit dramatist and epic poet whose work survives. His Buddhacarita, the Acts of the Buddha, recounts Siddhartha's journey from sheltered prince to awakened teacher in verse of great beauty, turning doctrine into story. He wrote not for scholars but to move the heart toward the dharma, arguing that suffering and impermanence are felt truths before they are reasoned ones. Through him, Buddhist thought entered the high literary culture of India.

Places

Ideas

The Four Noble TruthsEmptiness (Shunyata)

Words

“As the moon trembles in moving water, so the world the unawakened see trembles with their own desire.”

— Ashvaghosha

Works

The Buddhacarita

·Sanskrit

The first Sanskrit epic, retelling the Buddha's journey from sheltered prince to awakened teacher in verse of great beauty. Ashvaghosha turns doctrine into story, making impermanence and suffering felt before they are reasoned, and brings Buddhist thought into India's high literary culture.

Life & Moments

c. 120 CE

The Buddhacarita

Composed the first Sanskrit epic, retelling the life of the Buddha in verse of great beauty and bringing doctrine into high literature.

Read the Journey →

Thinkers

A story-first philosophy atlas. Explore history's greatest thinkers through place, time, movement, and ideas.

Explore

  • Thinkers
  • Atlas
  • Works

Browse

  • Concepts
  • Volumes

About

  • About Thinkers
  • Image Credits

Volume I · Ancient Greece · 624–262 BCE