Questions about the dungeon of the Legend of Double Dragons of the Tang Dynasty (chapter has been changed)

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Maybe I didn't explain it clearly, and I was going to explain it in the second volume, but if I don't explain it, someone will abandon the pit,,,,

In the Tang Dynasty Double Dragon Crossing, Ning Daoqi supported Buddhism, and Taoist Buddhism supported Li Tang, but why did Taoism become the state religion in the end?

Taoism only Ning Daoqi is bubbling, but this does not mean that Taoism has no other forces, the Buddhism that has been engaged in the extermination movement several times has such a huge strength, how can Taoism, as a local force, be weak?

Although I don't know what Huang Yi's predecessors think, but that's what I think, Ning Daoqi, on behalf of Taoism, supported Buddhism, but he pitted Buddhism in the back, and there was the fourth movement to destroy Buddhism in history.

And to do this, Ning Daoqi doesn't mean how Taoism can do it? Can he mobilize the power of Taoism? Just by his own strength?

Historical facts are posted below.

At the end of the Sui Dynasty, war was chaotic, and history repeated. In 618, Li Yuan replaced the Sui Dynasty and established the Tang Dynasty, just like his brother-in-law Yang Jian's reproduction of Zhou Jiansui, but Li Yuan did not have his uncle's tradition of believing in Buddhism.

In 626, Taishi ordered Fu Yi to play the book seven times to destroy the Buddha, and his words were fierce, Li Yuan ignored the opposition of the vast majority of his courtiers, and issued an edict in May: "There are three temples in the capital and two temples." One for each of the other states under heaven. "Other temples and Taoist temples were demolished, and only the diligent Buddha and Taoist disciples were fed, and the others were restored to the vulgar. At that time, the Tang Dynasty only had more than 300 state capitals, and there were more than 5,000 temples, 500,000 monks and nuns, and nearly 100 Buddha caves and grottoes across the country, which meant that more than ninety percent of the temples were destroyed and 460,000 monks and nuns were deprived of their faith.

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