Buddhism was like a glue for a multicultural society in premodern Eastern Central Asia. During each of the three successful conferences, two of the above-mentioned six transversal themes were discussed; the proceedings were published open access as "Buddhism in Central Asia I, II, III" (2020, 2021, 2023) by Brill. Some of the main findings include:
- A multidisciplinary approach combining the study of manuscripts and visual art from various sites and collections together is indispensable to analyse the systematic creation of Tantric sacred space in Eastern Central Asia (Meinert 2020);
- The Mogao Caves in Dunhuang were not only used as mortuary shrines, but also as sites for ritual practice (Meinert 2022; see also Sørensen, BuddhistRoad Paper 5.6 (2022));
- The hypothesis that Tibetan Dunhuang manuscripts from the 10th c. were likely not all produced in Dunhuang itself but in the region east of the Blue Lake (Meinert 2023; see also Sørensen, BuddhistRoad Paper 5.2 (2021));
- The legitimation of Uyghur rulers was placed in a Buddhist context for the first time (Kasai 2020);
- Dunhuang strongly contributed to the spread of Buddhism among the Uyghurs, but the latter adapted Buddhist practices according to their needs (Kasai 2022);
Additionally, the BuddhistRoad Guest Lecture series was initiated (38 lectures). Results were published open access as peer-reviewed BuddhistRoad Papers (
https://omp.ub.rub.de/index.php/BuddhistRoad/catalog(si apre in una nuova finestra)). At the time of the final report, 34 papers were published and downloaded over 14,000 times on the university website alone. External contributors added research not covered by team members, including:
- A chronology of the spread of Buddhism in Khotan (Loukota, BuddhistRoad Paper 1.7 (2023));
- A study of Brahmanical deities in Khotanese Buddhism (Lo Muzio, BuddhistRoad Paper 6.1 (2019));
- An analysis of Tantric Buddhism visible in Chinese Chan meditation texts in Dunhuang (Goodman, BuddhistRoad Paper 2.5 (2022));
- The transmission of Tibetan Buddhist epistemology among Tangut manuscripts (Ma, BuddhistRoad Paper 1.5 (2022));
Furthermore, "The Buddhist Road: Major Themes in Central Asian Buddhism I and II", co-authored by all team members, and "History of Central Asian Buddhism: Dynamics in Buddhist Networks" authored by the PI as her synopsis of the project, are forthcoming (Brill). The project also engaged in external collaboration with the Dzogchen Project hosted at CERES and published a special section in the Journal of the International Association of the Buddhist Studies 44 (2021).