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Where is Sakyamuni from?
The founder of Buddhism, Sakyamuni (Buddha), was a Sakyamuni in the ancient Kapylovi Kingdom of China.

Sakyamuni was the prince of the kingdom of Kapilovi (present-day Nepal) more than 3,000 years ago, whose real name was Siddhartha Gautama. A famous thinker and founder of Buddhism in ancient India, he was called Buddha and Buddha by later Buddha.

Sakyamuni grew up in a rich environment. He became a monk at the age of 29 after he got married and had children. Neither meditation nor asceticism can solve the problem; When I was about 35 years old, I got the enlightenment of Buddha. For the rest of his life, he traveled all over the Ganges River valley and preached to all walks of life.

His sublation of foreign thoughts corrected some deviations of the civilization of the times, and also safeguarded Khrushchev's class interests, making him respected as a saint of the Sakyamuni people.

Extended data:

Sakyamuni became a Buddha at 35. Since then, he has been preaching in the Ganges valley of India, and the number of believers has been increasing. So Sakyamuni sent some believers to spread Buddhism all over India, while others traveled around the world to spread Buddhism widely. He is 80 years old and nirvana. Since then, Buddhism not only prevailed in India for a while, but also spread widely in Southeast Asia, China, Japan and other places, becoming one of the three major religions in the world.

Buddhism advocates the "equality of all beings" in the soul, and no special Taoist guidance is needed. Everyone can achieve the realm of immortality through self-cultivation. Early Buddhists did not advocate sacrifice, idolatry and popular missionary language, which was an important reason for the rapid spread of Buddhism.

When Sakyamuni founded religion, he was most concerned about solving the suffering of life, not some unrealistic abstract theoretical problems. Therefore, the basic teachings of Buddhism revolve around solving the pain of real life. This is an important feature of Buddhist thought.

References:

Baidu encyclopedia-Sakyamuni