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  1.  32
    The Role of Iranians in the Spread of Buddhism, Manichaeism and Mazdaismin China.Nahal Tajadod - 2003 - Diogenes 50 (4):61-68.
    Gandhara, an area that welcomed Buddhism and where the earliest monasteries are found from the late third century BC, was also a ‘land of immigration’.With the aim of converting the Greco-Iranian peoples to Buddhism, the dignitaries in charge of these provinces under Asoka had identified in Greek and Aramaic vocabulary equivalents of Hindu or Buddhist themes. But the Gandhara Buddhists seem not to have continued this attempt to translate their sacred texts into Greek, Aramaic and probably Middle Iranian. On the (...)
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  2.  58
    A Linguistic Voyage through Manichaeism and Chinese Zoroastrianism.Nahal Tajadod - 1995 - Diogenes 43 (171):63-72.
    The expansion of commerce between the Chinese and Persian states, and the re-establishment of caravan routes, helped make possible the arrival of the first Manichaean missionaries to China in the seventh century of our era. Thus, in 694, a Persian with the title of fuduodan appeared before the Chinese court carrying “the false religion contained in The Book of the Two Principles,” Erzongjing. In 719 another Manichaean dignitary, bearing the title of muzhu and versed in astronomy, was sent to the (...)
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  3.  10
    Le rôle des iraniens dans la diffusion du bouddhisme, du manichéisme et du mazdéisme en Chine.Nahal Tajadod - 2002 - Diogène 200 (4):73-82.
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