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Bharhut

Bharhut is a village located in the Satna district of Madhya Pradesh, central India. It is known for its famous relics from a Buddhist stupa. What makes Bharhut panels unique is that each panel is explicitly labelled in Brahmi characters mentioning what the panel depicts. The major donor for the Bharhut stupa was King Dhanabhuti.[2][1]

Bharhut

Top: Original layout of the Bharhut stupa. Bottom: East Gateway and Railings, Red Sandstone, Bharhut Stupa, 125–75 BCE.[1] Indian Museum, Kolkata.
Religion
AffiliationBuddhism
DistrictSatna
RegionVindhya Range
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusStupa ruins present
Year consecrated300–200 BCE
StatusArtifacts Removed
Location
LocationIndia
StateMadhya Pradesh
Shown within India
Bharhut (Madhya Pradesh)
Geographic coordinates24°26′49″N 80°50′46″E / 24.446891°N 80.846041°E / 24.446891; 80.846041

The Bharhut sculptures represent some of the earliest examples of Indian and Buddhist art, later than the monumental art of Ashoka (c. 260 BCE), and slightly later than the early Shunga-period reliefs on railings at Sanchi Stupa No.2 (starting circa 115 BCE).[1] Though more provincial in quality than the sculpture at Sanchi, Amaravati Stupa and some other sites, a large amount of sculpture has survived, generally in good condition. Recent authors date the reliefs of the railings of Bharhut circa 125–100 BCE, and clearly after Sanchi Stupa No.2, compared to which Bharhut has a much more developed iconography.[1][3] The torana gateway was made slightly later than the railings, and is dated to 100–75 BCE.[1] Historian Ajit Kumar gives a later date to Bharhut, the 1st century CE, based on stylistic comparisons with datable works of art from the Art of Mathura, particularly sculptures inscribed in the name of ruler Sodasa.[4] Many of the Bharhut remains are now located in the Indian Museum in Kolkata, with others in museums in India and abroad. Little remains at the site today.

Buddhism continued to survive in Bharhut until 12th century. A Small Buddhist temple was enlarged around 1100 AD and a new statue of Buddha was installed.[5] A large Sanskrit inscription from the same period was found at the site, however it appears to have been lost.[6] This is different from the inscription Lal Pahad inscription of AD 1158 mentioning the Kalachiri kings.[7]

Some recent reevaluations have tended to uncouple Bharhut from the Shunga period, and rather attribute the stupa to the 1st century CE, based on artistic similarities with better dated Mathura art and a questioning of the antiquity of the Bharhut inscriptions (particularly the Dhanabhuti inscriptions) suggested by traditional paleography.[8][9]

Bharhut stupa edit

Structure edit

 
The Bharhut stupa, depicted on one of the friezes. Freer Gallery of Art

The Bharhut stupa may have been first built by the Maurya king Ashoka in the 3rd century BCE, but many works of art, particularly the gateway and railings, were apparently added during the Shunga period, with many reliefs from the 2nd century BCE, or later.[10] Alternatively, the sculptures made have been added during the reign of the Sughanas, a northern Buddhist kingdom.[4]

The central stupa was surrounded by a stone railing and four Torana gates, in an arrangement similar to that of Sanchi. A large part of the railing has been recovered, but only one of the four torana gates remains.

An epigraph on a pillar of the gateway of the stupa mentions its erection "during the rule of the Sugas by Vatsiputra Dhanabhuti".[11][4] The expression used is "Suganam Raje", may mean "during the rule of the Shungas", although not without ambiguity as it could also be "during the rule of the Sughanas", a northern Buddhist kingdom.[12][4] There is no other instance of the name "Shunga" in the epigraphical record of India.[13] The inscription reads:

 
The Dhanabhuti inscription

1. Suganam raje raño Gāgīputasa Visadevasa
2. pautena, Gotiputasa Āgarajusa putena
3. Vāchhīputena Dhanabhūtina kāritam toranām
4. silākammamto cha upamno.

During the reign of the Sugas (Sughanas, or Shungas) the gateway was caused to be made and the stone-work presented by Dhanabhūti, the son of Vāchhī, son of Agaraju, the son of a Goti and grandson of king Visadeva, the son of Gāgī.

— Gateway pillar inscription of Dhanabhūti.[14][15]

If the attribution is to be taken as "Shungas", since King Dhanabhuti was making a major dedication to a Buddhist monument, and on the contrary the Shungas are known to have been Hindu monarchs, it seems that Dhanabhuti himself was not a member of the Shunga dynasty.[16] Neither is he known from Shunga regnal lists.[16][17] His mention of "in the reign of the Shungas" also suggests that he was not himself a Shunga ruler, only that he may have been a tributary of the Shungas, or a ruler in a neighbouring territory, such as Kosala or Panchala.[17][16]

Builders edit

 
The gateways (left) were made by northern (probably Gandharan) masons using Kharosthi marks, while the railings (right) were made by masons using marks in the local Brahmi script.[18][19]

Mason's marks in Kharosthi have been found on several elements of the Bharhut remains, indicating that some of the builders at least came from the north, particularly from Gandhara where the Kharoshti script was in use.[18][20][21] Cunningham explained that the Kharosthi letters were found on the balustrades between the architraves of the gateway, but none on the railings which all had Indian markings, summarizing that the gateways, which are artistically more refined, must have been made by artists from the North, whereas the railings were made by local artists.[19]

Kharosthi letters on the Eastern Gateway of Bharhut
 
 
Kharoshthi (formerly called "Arian-Pali")[22] mason's marks on the gateway.[1] Five of the Kharosthi mason's marks (on a total of eight for the whole gateway) were discovered at the base of the small pillars of the gateway:[19]
𐨤 pa, 𐨀 a, 𐨦 ba, 𐨯 sa

According to some authors, Hellenistic sculptors had some connection with Bharhut and Sanchi as well.[23] The structure as a whole as well as various elements point to Hellenistic and other foreign influence, such as the fluted bell, addorsed capital of the Persepolitan order, and the abundant use of the Hellenistic flame palmette or honeysuckle motif.[20] Besides the origin of its contributors however, the gateway retains a very strong Indian character in its form.[20]

It would seem the railings were the first elements to be built, circa 125–100 BCE.[24] The great gateway was built later, circa 100–75 BCE.[24] On artistic grounds, the decorations of the railings are considered later stylistically than those of Sanchi Stupa No.2, suggesting a date of circa 100 BCE for the reliefs of the railings, and a date of 75 BCE for the gateway.[24]

Excavation edit

 
Bharhut pillar capital with rosette, beads-and-reels and flame palmette designs.

In 1873, Alexander Cunningham visited Bharhut. The next year, he excavated the site.[25] Joseph David Beglar, Cunningham's assistant, continued the excavation and recorded the work through numerous photographs.

A pillar capital in Bharhut, dated to the 2nd century BCE during the Shunga Empire period, is an example of Bharhut architecture thought to incorporate Persian and Greek styles,[26][27] with recumbent animal (in the style of the Pillars of Ashoka), and a central anta capital with many Hellenistic elements (rosettes, beads-and-reels), as well as a central palmette design, in a style similar to that of the Pataliputra capital.[28][29][30]

The complex in Bharhut included a medieval temple (plate II), which contained a colossal figure of the Buddha, along with fragments of sculptures showing the Buddha with images of Brahma, Indra etc.[31] Beglar also photographed a 10th-century Buddhist Sanskrit inscription,[32] about which nothing is now known.

The ruined stupa—nothing but foundations of the main structure (see Gallery)—is still in Bharhut; however, the gateways and railings have been dismantled and reassembled at the Indian Museum, Kolkata.[11] They contain numerous birth stories of the Buddha's previous lives, or Jataka tales. Many of them are in the shape of large, round medallions. Two of the panels are at the Freer Gallery of Art/Arthur M. Sackler Gallery in Washington.[33] Some years ago a pre-Devanagari inscription, from the time of King Balaldev, was found on Bharhut mountain.[citation needed]

As representative of early Indian art edit

 
Relief from Bharhut.

In conformity with the early aniconic phase of Buddhist art, the Buddha is only represented through symbols, such as the Dharma wheel, the Bodhi tree, an empty seat, footprints, or the triratana symbol.[34]

The style represents the earliest phase of Indian art, and all characters are depicted wearing the Indian dhoti, except for one foreigner thought to be an Indo-Greek soldier, with Buddhist symbolism.[35] The Bharhut carvings are slightly later than the Sanchi Stupa No.2 reliefs and the earlier Ajanta frescos.

An unusual feature of the Bharhut panels is the inclusion of text in the narrative panels, often identifying the individuals.[36]

Inscriptions edit

The inscriptions found at Bharhut are of considerable significance in tracing the history of early Indian Buddhism and Buddhist art. 136 inscriptions mention the donors. These include individuals from Vidisha, Purika (a town somewhere in the Vindhya mountains), Pataliputra (Bihar), Karhad (Maharashtra), Bhojakata (Vidarbha, eastern Maharashtra), Kosambi (Uttar Pradesh), and Nasik (Maharashtra). 82 inscriptions serve as labels for panels depicting the Jatakas, the life of the Buddha, former Manushi Buddhas, other stories and Yakshas and Yakshinis.[36]

Structure and details edit

The Bharhut Stupa
Gateway
 
Bharhut eastern gateway.
The Bharhut eastern gateway is the only remaining of four original gateways. It was made in 100-75 BCE (most probably 75 BCE based on artistic analysis), and is therefore posterior to the railings.[1]
 
One of the pillar capitals, with lions, flame palmette in their back, rosettes and beads-and-reels (reconstitution).

The craftsmen are thought to have been from northwestern India (probably Gandhara) as they inscribed mason's marks in Kharosthi, the script of Gandhara, throughout the gateway structure (7 such Kharoshthi mason's marks have been recorded on the gateway).[18][19][1] Gandhara was a core territory of the Indo-Greek kingdom at the time, and these craftsmen probably brought Hellenistic techniques and styles to the manufacture of the gateway.[37] On the contrary mason's marks in the local Brahmi script have not been found on the gateway, but exclusively on the railings (27 Brahmi mason's mark found), indicating that local craftsmen probably created the railings.[18][21][19]

The structure as a whole as well as various elements point to Hellenistic and other foreign influence, such as the fluted bell, addorsed capital of the Persepolitan order, and the abundant use of the Hellenistic flame palmette or honeysuckle motif.[20] Besides the origin of its contributors however, the gateway retains a very strong Indian character.

 
Architraves (front)
 
Architraves (back)
 
Reconstitution of the architraves, with position of five of the Kharosthi mason's marks.

The architraves display scenes of animals who show their devotion to the Buddha (symbolized by the empty throne in the middle). The top architrave (front only) has two lions, one griffin (left), and one lion with a human head (sphinx or manticore). The bottom architraves shows four elephants and two human devotees around the symbolic Buddha.
Between the architraves, are balustrade columns, some of them decorated with Indian figures. Five of the Kharosthi mason's marks (on a total of eight for the whole gateway) were discovered at the base of these columns.[19]
There were similar balustrade columns between the top and the middle architraves, but they have been lost.

Railings
  The railings are dated to 125-100 BCE, and most probably 100 BCE based on artistic analysis.[1] The designs are very developed, and considered as posterior to those of Sanchi Stupa No.2.[1]

All the mason's marks are in the local Brahmi script, of which 28 were found, indicating that local craftsmen probably created the railings.[19]

The railings are almost entirely covered in reliefs, and display a variety of scenes, from the previous lives of the Buddha called Jatakas, to events of the life of the historical Buddha, to devotional scenes. These are also many individual medallions, thought to represent devotees or donors.

Scenes of devotion
  Diamond throne and Mahabodhi Temple around the Boddhi tree. According to the inscribed Bharhut relief related to the Diamond throne, the original Mahabodhi Temple of Asoka was an open pavilion supported on pillars.
 
The Diamond throne shown rather exactly in the relief, was rediscovered in the 19th century.

In the middle is seen the Diamond Throne or Vajrasana, decorated in front with four flat pilasters. Behind the Throne appears the trunk of the Bodhi Tree, which rises up high above the building, and on each side of the Tree there is a combined symbol of the Triratna and the Dharmachakra, standing on the top of a short pillar. On each side of the Vajrasana room there is a side room of the same style. The top of the Throne is ornamented with flowers, but there is no figure of Buddha.[38]

The relief bears the inscription: "Bhagavato Sakamuni Bodhi" ("The Bodhi (Tree) of the divine Shakyamuni"), thereby confirming the meaning of the relief.[38]

  Tikutiko Chakamo. The inscription above this relief mentions the "Tikutiko Chakamo", or "Three-pointed wheel" (of the law). The scene depicts seven elephants and one great three-headed Serpent (or Naga) together with two lions showing their devotion to this quite particular Wheel of the Law.
Life of the Buddha
  Maya's Dream: The virgin conception of the Buddha.

This carving of the Dream of Maya relates when the Buddha's mother had a dream that a white elephant entering her body. This is the moment of the Buddha's conception. The sleeping queen is surrounded by three attendants, one of whom flicks a chauri. A water-pot is placed near the head of the bed; at its foot is an incense-burner. The theme of the virgin conception of the Buddha was repeated for many centuries, and was also an important theme in the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara.
The story was also known in the Western world as Archelaus of Carrhae (in 278 CE) and Saint Jerome (in 340 CE) both mention the Buddha by name and narrate the tradition of his virgin birth.[39] It has been suggested that this virgin birth legend of Buddhism influenced Christianity.[40]

  Worshipping Siddhartha's Hair
 
The same scene at Sanchi.

In the lower part of the panel is a company of deities in the Trayastrimsa heaven, where Indra held sway, rejoicing over and worshiping the hair of the Bodhisattva. The story told in the Buddhist scriptures is that, before embracing a religious life, Gautama divested himself of his princely garments and cut off his long hair with his sword, casting both hair and turban into the air, whence they were borne by the devas to the Trayastrimsa heaven and worshiped there.[41]

 
 
Descent of the Buddha from the Trayastrimsa Heaven, Sanchi.

Descent of the Buddha from the Trayastrimsa Heaven at Sankissa. The descent of the Buddha from the Trayastrimsa Heaven, where Maya, his mother, had been reborn and whither he himself ascended to preach the Law to her. This miracle is supposed to have taken place at Sankissa (Sankasya). In the center of the relief is the miraculous ladder by which the Buddha descended, attended by Brahma and Indra. At the foot of the ladder the tree and throne, symbols of the presence of the Buddha, with devotees on either side, indicating that the Buddha has returned again to earth.

 
 
The Jetavahana Monastery today.
 
An even earlier depiction of the Jetavana Garden story at Sravasti, Bodh Gaya Mahabodhi Temple.

The Jetavana Monastery. The following inscription, which is placed immediately below the sculpture, gives the name of the monastery, as well as that of the builder Anatha-pindika: "Jetavana Anadhapediko deti Kotisanthatena Keta" ("Anathapindika presents Jetavana, (having become) its purchaser for a layer of kotis."), kotis being gold coins.

A householder named Anathapindika had purchased the garden of Jeta for a layer of kotis, for 18 kotis of gold, and began to build. In the midst he built Buddha's pavilion. Several monastic buildings were erected by Anathapindika at Jetavana, until Gautama Buddha came from Rajagriha to Sravasti, where he was met by the wealthy man Setthi. The Blessed One, followed by a great company of monks, entered the Monastery of Jetavana. Then Anathapindika asked him, "Lord, how am I to proceed in the matter of this monastery? Since you ask me, householder, bestow this monastery upon the Buddhist clergy, present and to come.' And the great man replied, "It is well. This monastery of Jetavana I give to the clergy, present and to come, in all parts of the world, with the Buddha at their head."[42]

The sculptor has apparently aimed at giving a view of the great Buddhist Vihara of Jetavana, whilst illustrating the story of its establishment by Anathapindika. In the foreground there is a bullock cart, with the bullocks unyoked sitting beside it, and with the yoke tilted up in the air to show that the cart has been unloaded. In front are two men, each holding a very small object between his thumb and forefinger. These are Anathapindika himself, and his treasurer, counting out the gold pieces brought in the cart. Above them are two other figures seated, and busily engaged in covering the surface of the garden with the gold coins, which are here represented as square pieces touching one another, as the price of its purchase. To the left are six other figures, probably Prince Jeta and his friends; and in the very middle of the composition there is Anathapindika himself carrying a vessel, just like a tea kettle, in both hands, for the purpose of pouring water over Buddha's hands as a pledge of the completion of his gift.[42]

Anathapindika, who became known for his foremost generosity and character upon death entered the Tushita heaven, and became a Bodhisattva.

Previous lives of the Buddha (Jatakas)
 
 
The Mahakapi Jataka is the centerpiece of this railing section.

Mahakapi Jataka In this jataka tale, the Buddha, in a previous incarnation as a monkey king, self-sacrifyinly offers his own body as a bridge by which his fellow monkeys can escape from a human king who is attacking them. A short section of the river, across which the monkeys are escaping, is indicated by fish designs. Directly below that, the impressed humans are holding out a blanket to catch him when he falls from his position. At the very bottom (continuous narrative), the now recovered Buddha-to-be preaches to the king. (Mahakapi Jataka. Bharhut, c. 100 BCE. Indian Museum, Calcutta.)
The Mahakapi Jataka is also visible at Sanchi in this relief.

  Nigrodha Miga Jātaka. The Nigrodha Miga Jātaka (Banyan Deer Birth-story, #12 in the E.B. Cowell Jātaka stories, Volume 1) is the story of how in a past birth, born as a golden deer, Bodhisattā rescues a pregnant doe from death by slaughter. The medallion represents 3 scenes: (1) The four deer running away and one of them looking back at the far left and the man with bow at the far right represent the first scene: that of the hunt. (2) The doe lying down at the bottom left looking at the antlered deer represents the second scene: that of the pregnant doe being subjected to the slaughter today but Banyan deer tells her to go and takes her place. Cook/Butcher behind the Banyan deer watches this [and then he goes to tell the King, who comes with his entourage]. (3) The antlered deer sitting in the middle and preaching to the king [who is listening respectfully with folded hands] and his entourage is the third scene: that one should associate with good people.[43]
  Kurunga Miga Jataka. This story is about three friends who lived in a forest: an antelope, a woodpecker and a tortoise. One day, the antelope was caught in the noose of a hunter, and the tortoise endeavoured to bite through the noose to free the antelope, while the woodpecker, was making cries of ill-omen, so that the hunter would remain in his hut. The antelope escaped, but the tortoise, exhausted by her efforts, was caught by the hunter. The antelope then enticed the hunter to follow her in the forest, so that the tortoise was able to flee. The antelope was the Bodhisatta, that is the Buddha in a former life, Sāriputta, a disciple of the Buddha, was the woodpecker, Moggallana, also a disciple, was the tortoise in his former life. Devadatta however, a traditional enemy of the Buddha, was the hunter.

This story is meant to demonstrate the wickedness of Devadatta, as well as the friendship and collaboration between the Buddha and his disciples, even in previous lives.

  Muga Pakaya Jataka/ Mugapakkha Jataka/ Temiya Jataka. This is the story of "The dumb Prince". Chanda Devi, the wife of the king of Varanasi, had no son. Sakka, the king of the devas, decided to help her. He persuaded the Bodhisattva (the future Buddha), who was then in the realm of the Tavatimsa, to descend into her womb so that she could bear a child. The Bodhisattva thus entered the womb of the Queen, and when he was born was called Temiya.

Temiya then realized that his father was a king, but having himself been king of Varanasi in a previous life, a rule which ended with 20.000 years in hell, he did not want to inherit the throne. He thus decided to play dumb and inactive to avoid the inheritance. Being worthless, his father arranged for his death, and ordered the charioteer Sunanda to perform the crime. When Sunanda was digging the grave in preparation, Temiya explained to him his stratagem. Impressed, Sunanda then wanted to be an ascetic and follow Temiya.

Temiya then gave a sermon to the King and the Queen. They were impressed and also expressed the wish to become ascetics. Soon, all the citizens of the kingdom, as well as two neighboring kingdoms, become followers of Temiya.[44]

The relief shows Temiya as a baby in the king's lap (top left). Temiya is then seen standing behind charioteer Sunanda in the cemetery, who is digging the grave (bottom right). Temiya, as an ascetic, then gives a discourse to the people (top right).

Individuals
 
 
Other Greek-looking foreigners, in Greek dress and playing carnyxes and aolus flute, are known from the Stupa at Sanchi.

The Bharhut Yavana. The Greeks (specifically the Indo-Greeks) were evidently known at this date to people in the middle of India and called "Yavanas"; here, a Greek warrior has been coopted into the role of dvarapala (Guardian of a temple gate). The evidence includes his hairstyle (short curly hair with Greek royal headband), tunic, and boots. In his right hand he holds a grape plant, emblematic of his origin. The sheath of his broadsword is decorated with a nandipada, symbol of Buddhism.[45][35]

There is an inscription above the relief, classified as Inscription 55 in the Pillars of Railing of the SW Quadrant at Bharhut,[46] is in the Brahmi script and reads from left to right:

"Bhadanta Mahilasa thabho dânam"
"Pillar-gift of the lay brother Mahila."

 
 
Lakshmi on a coin of Indo-Scythian king Azilises.

Buddha's mother Mahamaya.also known as Māhāmāyā and Māyādevī, was the queen of Shakya and the birth mother of Gautama Buddha, the sage on whose teachings Buddhism was founded. She was the wife of Śuddhodana, the king of the Shakya kingdom. She was sister of Mahāpajāpatī Gotamī, the first Buddhist nun ordained by the Buddha. But she also used to be an important deity in Buddhism, where she was also a goddess of abundance and fortune, and was represented on the oldest surviving stupas and cave temples.[47]
In this typical iconography, called Māhāmāyā and Māyādevī, she is shown standing on a lotus and being lustrated by two elephants pouring water on her.
Lakshmi already appeared on Indo-Greek coinage as early as 180 BCE (as a female dancer holding a lotus flower), and later on Indo-Scythian coins in the 1st century BCE.

Bharhut at the time of discovery.

Survival in 11-12th century edit

 
Buddha sculpture at Bharhut 11-12th cent

A Buddha sculpture datable to 11-12th century was also found, in addition to a Sanskrit inscription, belonging to a vihara structure.[48] This demonstrates that Buddhism at the site survived well until 11-12th century, although nothing datable to the intervening period has been found.[48]

In addition to the magnificent stone railing of the old Stupa, there are the remains of a medieval Buddhist Vihara, with a colossal statue, and several smaller Buddhist figures which cannot be dated much earlier than 1000 A.D. It seems probable, therefore, that the exercise of the Buddhist religion may have been carried on for nearly 15 centuries with little or perhaps no interruption. Everywhere the advent of the Muhammadans gave the final blow to Buddhism, and their bigotry and intolerance swept away the few lingering remains which the Brahmans had spared.

— Alexander Cunningham, The Stûpa of Bharhut.[48]

Although the best known remains are from the 1st centuries BCE/CE, Bharhut, just as Sanchi, continued to be used as a Buddhist monastic center for more than a millennium.[49] But the monuments of Bharhut were ultimately destroyed and most of the remains were used by local villagers as building material.[49]

Recently found Buddhist remains in region near Bharhut and Sanchi edit

Several minor Stupas and Buddhist statues have been discovered in the region near Sanchi and Bharhut dating up to 12th century CE. They demonstrate that Buddhism was widespread in this region and not just confined to Sanchi and Bharhut, and survived until 12th century, like the Sanchi complex itself, although greatly declining after 9-10th century.[citation needed] These include:

  • Banshipur village, Damoh [50]
  • Madighat in Rewa district[51]
  • Buddha Danda, Singrauli [52]
  • Bilahri, Katni [53]
  • Kuwarpur, Sagar Dist/Bansa Damoh Dist[54]
  • Damoh Museum Buddha
  • Deur Kothar, Rewa
  • Devgarh, Lalitpur [55]
  • Khajuraho (MUseum)[56]
  • Mahoba,[57] 11-12th cent. sculptures

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Le, Huu Phuoc (2010). Buddhist Architecture. Grafikol. p. 161. ISBN 9780984404308.
  2. ^ Quintanilla, Sonya Rhie (2007). History of Early Stone Sculpture at Mathura: Ca. 150 BCE - 100 CE. BRILL. p. 11. ISBN 9789004155374.
  3. ^ Didactic Narration: Jataka Iconography in Dunhuang with a Catalogue of Jataka Representations in China, Alexander Peter Bell, LIT Verlag Münster, 2000 p.18
  4. ^ a b c d Kumar, Ajit (2014). "Bharhut Sculptures and their untenable Sunga Association". Heritage: Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies in Archaeology. 2: 230.
  5. ^ Report Of A Tour In The Central Provinces Vol-ix, Alexander Cunningham, 1879 p.2–4
  6. ^ Buddhist Sanskrit inscription slab from about the 10th century A.D., (?)Bharhut, The British Library, 26 March 2009
  7. ^ Report Of A Tour In The Central Provinces In 1873–74 And 1874–75 Volume Ix, Cunningham, Alexander, 1879, p. 38
  8. ^ Kumar, Ajit (2014). "Bharhut Sculptures and their untenable Sunga Association". Heritage: Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies in Archaeology. 2: 223–241.
  9. ^ Muzio, Ciro Lo (2018). Problems of chronology in Gandharan art. On the relationship between Gandhāran toilet-trays and the early Buddhist art of northern India. Oxford: Archaeopress Archaeology. pp. 123-134.
  10. ^ Marshall, John (1918). "An Historical and Artistic Description of Sanchi (pp. 7–29)". A Guide to Sanchi. Calcutta: Superintendent, Government Printing. p. 11. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  11. ^ a b . INC-ICOM Galleries. Indian National Committee of the International Council of Museums. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  12. ^ Between the Empires: Society in India 300 BCE to 400 CE by Patrick Olivelle [1]
  13. ^ Salomon, Richard (1998). Indian Epigraphy: A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit, Prakrit, and the other Indo-Aryan Languages. Oxford University Press. p. 141. ISBN 978-0-19-535666-3.
  14. ^ Luders, H. (1963). CORPUS INSCRIPTIONS INDICARUM VOL II PART II. India Archaeological Society. p. 11.
  15. ^ The Stupa of Bharhut, Alexander Cunningham, p.128
  16. ^ a b c Quintanilla, Sonya Rhie (2007). History of Early Stone Sculpture at Mathura: Ca. 150 BCE - 100 CE. BRILL. pp. 8–9. ISBN 9789004155374.
  17. ^ a b Quintanilla, Sonya Rhie (2007). History of Early Stone Sculpture at Mathura: Ca. 150 BCE - 100 CE. BRILL. p. 13. ISBN 9789004155374.
  18. ^ a b c d The Diffusion of Classical Art in Antiquity, John Boardman, Princeton University Press, p.115
  19. ^ a b c d e f g "These little balusters are of considerable interest, as their sculptured statues are much superior in artistic design and execution to those of the railing pillars. They are further remarkable in having Arian letters engraved on their bases or capitals, a peculiarity which points unmistakably to the employment of Western artists, and which fully accounts for the superiority of their execution. The letters found are p, s, a, and b, of which the first three occur twice. Now, if the same sculptors had been employed on the railings, we might confidently expect to find the same alphabetical letters used as private marks. But the fact is just the reverse, for the whole of the 27 marks found on any portions of the railing are Indian letters. The only conclusion that I can come to from these facts is that the foreign artists who were employed on the sculptures of the gateways were certainly not engaged on any part of the railing. I conclude, therefore, that the Raja of Shungas, the donor of the gateways, must have sent his own party of workmen to make them, while the smaller gifts of pillars and rails were executed by the local artists." in The stūpa of Bharhut: a Buddhist monument ornamented with numerous sculptures illustrative of Buddhist legend and history in the third century B. C, by Alexander Cunningham p. 8 (Public Domain)
  20. ^ a b c d The Buddha Image: Its Origin and Development, Yuvraj Krishan, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, 1996, pp. 17–18 Note 3
  21. ^ a b Buddhist Architecture by Huu Phuoc Le p.161
  22. ^ "When these alphabets were first deciphered, scholars gave them different names such as 'Indian-Pali' for Brahmi and 'Arian-Pali' for Kharosthi, but these terms are no longer in use." in Upāsaka, Sī Esa; Mahāvihāra, Nava Nālandā (2002). History of palæography of Mauryan Brāhmī script. Nava Nālanda Mahāvihāra. p. 6. ISBN 9788188242047.
  23. ^ "There is evidence of Hellensitic sculptors being in touch with Sanchi and Bharhut" in The Buddha Image: Its Origin and Development, Yuvraj Krishan, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, 1996, p.9
  24. ^ a b c Buddhist Architecture Huu Phuoc Le, Grafikol, 2010 p.149ff
  25. ^ Cunningham, Sir Alexander (1879). The Stûpa of Bharhut: a Buddhist monument ornamented with numerous sculptures illustrative of Buddhist legend and history in the third century B.C. London: W. H. Allen.
  26. ^ Early Buddhist Narrative Art by Patricia Eichenbaum Karetzky p.16
  27. ^ Early Byzantine Churches in Macedonia & Southern Serbia by R.F. Hoddinott p.17
  28. ^ The East: Buddhists, Hindus and the Sons of Heaven, Architecture in context II, Routledge, 2015, by Christopher Tadgell p.24
  29. ^ India Archaeological Report, Cunningham, p185-196
  30. ^ Age of the Nandas and Mauryas by Kallidaikurichi Aiyah Nilakanta Sastri p.376 sq
  31. ^ "General view of remains of Buddhist temple of later date than the Stupa, Bharhut". Online Gallery. British Library. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  32. ^ "Photograph of a slab with a Buddhist sanskrit inscription". Online Gallery. British Library. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  33. ^ Freer/Sackler
  34. ^ . The Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery. Smithsonian Institution. 2008. Archived from the original on 17 September 2022. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  35. ^ a b "The Diffusion of Classical Art in Antiquity, John Boardman, 1993, p.112
  36. ^ a b Luders, H.; Waldschmidt, E.; Mehendale, M. A., eds. (1963). "Bharhut Inscriptions". Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum. Vol. II. Ootacamund: Archaeological Survey of India.
  37. ^ "There is evidence of Hellenesitic sculptors being in touch with Sanchi and Bharhut" in The Buddha Image: Its Origin and Development, Yuvraj Krishan, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, 1996, p.9
  38. ^ a b Mahâbodhi, Cunningham p.4ff Public Domain text
  39. ^ Intercourse Between India and the Western World: From the Earliest Times to the Fall of Rome, H. G. Rawlinson Uppal Publishing House, 1992, p.142
  40. ^ The Shape of Ancient Thought, Mc Evilley, Allworth Press, 2001, p.391
  41. ^ A Guide to Sanchi, John Marshall p.50ff Public Domain text
  42. ^ a b Mahâbodhi, Cunningham p.84ff Public Domain text
  43. ^ "The Jataka, Volume I: Book I.--Ekanipāta: No. 12. Nigrodhamiga-Jātaka".
  44. ^ The Illustrated Jataka & Other Stories of the Buddha by C.B. Varma The Story of the Dumb Prince 2017-10-29 at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ Faces of Power: Alexander's Image and Hellenistic Politics by Andrew Stewart p.180
  46. ^ The Stupa of Bharhut, Cunningham, p.136 [2]
  47. ^ "The Goddess Lakshmi in Buddhist Art: The goddess of abundance and fortune, Sri Lakshmi, reflected the accumulated wealth and financial independence of the Buddhist monasteries. Her image became one of the popular visual themes carved on their monuments" in Images of Indian Goddesses: Myths, Meanings, and Models, Madhu Bazaz Wangu, Abhinav Publications, 2003, p. 57 [3]
  48. ^ a b c Alexander Cunningham, Great Britain India Office (1879). The Stûpa of Bharhut: A Buddhist Monument Ornamented with Numerous ... W.H. Allen and Co. p. 4.
  49. ^ a b Johnston, William M. (2013). Encyclopedia of Monasticism. Routledge. p. 643. ISBN 978-1-136-78716-4.
  50. ^ Buddhist stupas of Gupta period unearthed, Indian Express, June 17, 1999
  51. ^ The Statesman, New Delhi, 17/06/99
  52. ^ Madhya Pradesh: Swastika-shaped 6th century Stupas found, TOI April 1, 2019
  53. ^ Buddha Stolen from Bilhari in Central India, November 30, 2012
  54. ^ Y.K. Malaiya, “Research Notes,” Anekanta, Vol. 24, No. 5, November 1971, pp. 213-214
  55. ^ Ancient Buddha Vihar, Devgarh
  56. ^ An inscribed Buddha image at Khajuraho, Devangana Desai, Journal of the Asiatic Society of Mumbai, Volume 79, p. 63
  57. ^ Six Sculptures from Mahoba. BY. K. N. DIKSHIT, New Delhi, 1921

External links edit

  • Railing at Indian Museum

bharhut, village, located, satna, district, madhya, pradesh, central, india, known, famous, relics, from, buddhist, stupa, what, makes, panels, unique, that, each, panel, explicitly, labelled, brahmi, characters, mentioning, what, panel, depicts, major, donor,. Bharhut is a village located in the Satna district of Madhya Pradesh central India It is known for its famous relics from a Buddhist stupa What makes Bharhut panels unique is that each panel is explicitly labelled in Brahmi characters mentioning what the panel depicts The major donor for the Bharhut stupa was King Dhanabhuti 2 1 BharhutTop Original layout of the Bharhut stupa Bottom East Gateway and Railings Red Sandstone Bharhut Stupa 125 75 BCE 1 Indian Museum Kolkata ReligionAffiliationBuddhismDistrictSatnaRegionVindhya RangeEcclesiastical or organizational statusStupa ruins presentYear consecrated300 200 BCEStatusArtifacts RemovedLocationLocationIndiaStateMadhya PradeshShown within IndiaShow map of IndiaBharhut Madhya Pradesh Show map of Madhya PradeshGeographic coordinates24 26 49 N 80 50 46 E 24 446891 N 80 846041 E 24 446891 80 846041The Bharhut sculptures represent some of the earliest examples of Indian and Buddhist art later than the monumental art of Ashoka c 260 BCE and slightly later than the early Shunga period reliefs on railings at Sanchi Stupa No 2 starting circa 115 BCE 1 Though more provincial in quality than the sculpture at Sanchi Amaravati Stupa and some other sites a large amount of sculpture has survived generally in good condition Recent authors date the reliefs of the railings of Bharhut circa 125 100 BCE and clearly after Sanchi Stupa No 2 compared to which Bharhut has a much more developed iconography 1 3 The torana gateway was made slightly later than the railings and is dated to 100 75 BCE 1 Historian Ajit Kumar gives a later date to Bharhut the 1st century CE based on stylistic comparisons with datable works of art from the Art of Mathura particularly sculptures inscribed in the name of ruler Sodasa 4 Many of the Bharhut remains are now located in the Indian Museum in Kolkata with others in museums in India and abroad Little remains at the site today Buddhism continued to survive in Bharhut until 12th century A Small Buddhist temple was enlarged around 1100 AD and a new statue of Buddha was installed 5 A large Sanskrit inscription from the same period was found at the site however it appears to have been lost 6 This is different from the inscription Lal Pahad inscription of AD 1158 mentioning the Kalachiri kings 7 Some recent reevaluations have tended to uncouple Bharhut from the Shunga period and rather attribute the stupa to the 1st century CE based on artistic similarities with better dated Mathura art and a questioning of the antiquity of the Bharhut inscriptions particularly the Dhanabhuti inscriptions suggested by traditional paleography 8 9 Contents 1 Bharhut stupa 1 1 Structure 1 2 Builders 1 3 Excavation 2 As representative of early Indian art 3 Inscriptions 4 Structure and details 5 Survival in 11 12th century 6 Recently found Buddhist remains in region near Bharhut and Sanchi 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksBharhut stupa editStructure edit nbsp The Bharhut stupa depicted on one of the friezes Freer Gallery of ArtThe Bharhut stupa may have been first built by the Maurya king Ashoka in the 3rd century BCE but many works of art particularly the gateway and railings were apparently added during the Shunga period with many reliefs from the 2nd century BCE or later 10 Alternatively the sculptures made have been added during the reign of the Sughanas a northern Buddhist kingdom 4 The central stupa was surrounded by a stone railing and four Torana gates in an arrangement similar to that of Sanchi A large part of the railing has been recovered but only one of the four torana gates remains An epigraph on a pillar of the gateway of the stupa mentions its erection during the rule of the Sugas by Vatsiputra Dhanabhuti 11 4 The expression used is Suganam Raje may mean during the rule of the Shungas although not without ambiguity as it could also be during the rule of the Sughanas a northern Buddhist kingdom 12 4 There is no other instance of the name Shunga in the epigraphical record of India 13 The inscription reads nbsp The Dhanabhuti inscription1 Suganam raje rano Gagiputasa Visadevasa 2 pautena Gotiputasa Agarajusa putena 3 Vachhiputena Dhanabhutina karitam toranam 4 silakammamto cha upamno During the reign of the Sugas Sughanas or Shungas the gateway was caused to be made and the stone work presented by Dhanabhuti the son of Vachhi son of Agaraju the son of a Goti and grandson of king Visadeva the son of Gagi Gateway pillar inscription of Dhanabhuti 14 15 If the attribution is to be taken as Shungas since King Dhanabhuti was making a major dedication to a Buddhist monument and on the contrary the Shungas are known to have been Hindu monarchs it seems that Dhanabhuti himself was not a member of the Shunga dynasty 16 Neither is he known from Shunga regnal lists 16 17 His mention of in the reign of the Shungas also suggests that he was not himself a Shunga ruler only that he may have been a tributary of the Shungas or a ruler in a neighbouring territory such as Kosala or Panchala 17 16 Builders edit nbsp The gateways left were made by northern probably Gandharan masons using Kharosthi marks while the railings right were made by masons using marks in the local Brahmi script 18 19 Mason s marks in Kharosthi have been found on several elements of the Bharhut remains indicating that some of the builders at least came from the north particularly from Gandhara where the Kharoshti script was in use 18 20 21 Cunningham explained that the Kharosthi letters were found on the balustrades between the architraves of the gateway but none on the railings which all had Indian markings summarizing that the gateways which are artistically more refined must have been made by artists from the North whereas the railings were made by local artists 19 Kharosthi letters on the Eastern Gateway of Bharhut nbsp nbsp Kharoshthi formerly called Arian Pali 22 mason s marks on the gateway 1 Five of the Kharosthi mason s marks on a total of eight for the whole gateway were discovered at the base of the small pillars of the gateway 19 𐨤 pa 𐨀 a 𐨦 ba 𐨯 sa According to some authors Hellenistic sculptors had some connection with Bharhut and Sanchi as well 23 The structure as a whole as well as various elements point to Hellenistic and other foreign influence such as the fluted bell addorsed capital of the Persepolitan order and the abundant use of the Hellenistic flame palmette or honeysuckle motif 20 Besides the origin of its contributors however the gateway retains a very strong Indian character in its form 20 It would seem the railings were the first elements to be built circa 125 100 BCE 24 The great gateway was built later circa 100 75 BCE 24 On artistic grounds the decorations of the railings are considered later stylistically than those of Sanchi Stupa No 2 suggesting a date of circa 100 BCE for the reliefs of the railings and a date of 75 BCE for the gateway 24 Excavation edit nbsp Bharhut pillar capital with rosette beads and reels and flame palmette designs In 1873 Alexander Cunningham visited Bharhut The next year he excavated the site 25 Joseph David Beglar Cunningham s assistant continued the excavation and recorded the work through numerous photographs A pillar capital in Bharhut dated to the 2nd century BCE during the Shunga Empire period is an example of Bharhut architecture thought to incorporate Persian and Greek styles 26 27 with recumbent animal in the style of the Pillars of Ashoka and a central anta capital with many Hellenistic elements rosettes beads and reels as well as a central palmette design in a style similar to that of the Pataliputra capital 28 29 30 The complex in Bharhut included a medieval temple plate II which contained a colossal figure of the Buddha along with fragments of sculptures showing the Buddha with images of Brahma Indra etc 31 Beglar also photographed a 10th century Buddhist Sanskrit inscription 32 about which nothing is now known The ruined stupa nothing but foundations of the main structure see Gallery is still in Bharhut however the gateways and railings have been dismantled and reassembled at the Indian Museum Kolkata 11 They contain numerous birth stories of the Buddha s previous lives or Jataka tales Many of them are in the shape of large round medallions Two of the panels are at the Freer Gallery of Art Arthur M Sackler Gallery in Washington 33 Some years ago a pre Devanagari inscription from the time of King Balaldev was found on Bharhut mountain citation needed As representative of early Indian art edit nbsp Relief from Bharhut In conformity with the early aniconic phase of Buddhist art the Buddha is only represented through symbols such as the Dharma wheel the Bodhi tree an empty seat footprints or the triratana symbol 34 The style represents the earliest phase of Indian art and all characters are depicted wearing the Indian dhoti except for one foreigner thought to be an Indo Greek soldier with Buddhist symbolism 35 The Bharhut carvings are slightly later than the Sanchi Stupa No 2 reliefs and the earlier Ajanta frescos An unusual feature of the Bharhut panels is the inclusion of text in the narrative panels often identifying the individuals 36 Inscriptions editThe inscriptions found at Bharhut are of considerable significance in tracing the history of early Indian Buddhism and Buddhist art 136 inscriptions mention the donors These include individuals from Vidisha Purika a town somewhere in the Vindhya mountains Pataliputra Bihar Karhad Maharashtra Bhojakata Vidarbha eastern Maharashtra Kosambi Uttar Pradesh and Nasik Maharashtra 82 inscriptions serve as labels for panels depicting the Jatakas the life of the Buddha former Manushi Buddhas other stories and Yakshas and Yakshinis 36 Structure and details editThe Bharhut StupaGateway nbsp Bharhut eastern gateway The Bharhut eastern gateway is the only remaining of four original gateways It was made in 100 75 BCE most probably 75 BCE based on artistic analysis and is therefore posterior to the railings 1 nbsp One of the pillar capitals with lions flame palmette in their back rosettes and beads and reels reconstitution The craftsmen are thought to have been from northwestern India probably Gandhara as they inscribed mason s marks in Kharosthi the script of Gandhara throughout the gateway structure 7 such Kharoshthi mason s marks have been recorded on the gateway 18 19 1 Gandhara was a core territory of the Indo Greek kingdom at the time and these craftsmen probably brought Hellenistic techniques and styles to the manufacture of the gateway 37 On the contrary mason s marks in the local Brahmi script have not been found on the gateway but exclusively on the railings 27 Brahmi mason s mark found indicating that local craftsmen probably created the railings 18 21 19 The structure as a whole as well as various elements point to Hellenistic and other foreign influence such as the fluted bell addorsed capital of the Persepolitan order and the abundant use of the Hellenistic flame palmette or honeysuckle motif 20 Besides the origin of its contributors however the gateway retains a very strong Indian character nbsp Architraves front nbsp Architraves back nbsp Reconstitution of the architraves with position of five of the Kharosthi mason s marks The architraves display scenes of animals who show their devotion to the Buddha symbolized by the empty throne in the middle The top architrave front only has two lions one griffin left and one lion with a human head sphinx or manticore The bottom architraves shows four elephants and two human devotees around the symbolic Buddha Between the architraves are balustrade columns some of them decorated with Indian figures Five of the Kharosthi mason s marks on a total of eight for the whole gateway were discovered at the base of these columns 19 There were similar balustrade columns between the top and the middle architraves but they have been lost Railings nbsp The railings are dated to 125 100 BCE and most probably 100 BCE based on artistic analysis 1 The designs are very developed and considered as posterior to those of Sanchi Stupa No 2 1 All the mason s marks are in the local Brahmi script of which 28 were found indicating that local craftsmen probably created the railings 19 The railings are almost entirely covered in reliefs and display a variety of scenes from the previous lives of the Buddha called Jatakas to events of the life of the historical Buddha to devotional scenes These are also many individual medallions thought to represent devotees or donors Scenes of devotion nbsp Diamond throne and Mahabodhi Temple around the Boddhi tree According to the inscribed Bharhut relief related to the Diamond throne the original Mahabodhi Temple of Asoka was an open pavilion supported on pillars nbsp The Diamond throne shown rather exactly in the relief was rediscovered in the 19th century In the middle is seen the Diamond Throne or Vajrasana decorated in front with four flat pilasters Behind the Throne appears the trunk of the Bodhi Tree which rises up high above the building and on each side of the Tree there is a combined symbol of the Triratna and the Dharmachakra standing on the top of a short pillar On each side of the Vajrasana room there is a side room of the same style The top of the Throne is ornamented with flowers but there is no figure of Buddha 38 The relief bears the inscription Bhagavato Sakamuni Bodhi The Bodhi Tree of the divine Shakyamuni thereby confirming the meaning of the relief 38 nbsp Tikutiko Chakamo The inscription above this relief mentions the Tikutiko Chakamo or Three pointed wheel of the law The scene depicts seven elephants and one great three headed Serpent or Naga together with two lions showing their devotion to this quite particular Wheel of the Law nbsp Worship of the Bodhi tree nbsp nbsp Worship of the Dharmachakra nbsp Worship of the Bodhi tree with Yakshini nbsp A Royal Couple Visits the Buddha nbsp Adoration of the Dharmachakra Life of the Buddha nbsp Maya s Dream The virgin conception of the Buddha This carving of the Dream of Maya relates when the Buddha s mother had a dream that a white elephant entering her body This is the moment of the Buddha s conception The sleeping queen is surrounded by three attendants one of whom flicks a chauri A water pot is placed near the head of the bed at its foot is an incense burner The theme of the virgin conception of the Buddha was repeated for many centuries and was also an important theme in the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara The story was also known in the Western world as Archelaus of Carrhae in 278 CE and Saint Jerome in 340 CE both mention the Buddha by name and narrate the tradition of his virgin birth 39 It has been suggested that this virgin birth legend of Buddhism influenced Christianity 40 nbsp Maya s dream Sanchi 1st century BCE nbsp Maya s dream Gandhara 2 3rd century CE nbsp Dream of Mayadevi Mardan nbsp Maya s Dream Gandhara 2nd 3rd century CE nbsp Worshipping Siddhartha s Hair nbsp The same scene at Sanchi In the lower part of the panel is a company of deities in the Trayastrimsa heaven where Indra held sway rejoicing over and worshiping the hair of the Bodhisattva The story told in the Buddhist scriptures is that before embracing a religious life Gautama divested himself of his princely garments and cut off his long hair with his sword casting both hair and turban into the air whence they were borne by the devas to the Trayastrimsa heaven and worshiped there 41 nbsp nbsp Descent of the Buddha from the Trayastrimsa Heaven Sanchi Descent of the Buddha from the Trayastrimsa Heaven at Sankissa The descent of the Buddha from the Trayastrimsa Heaven where Maya his mother had been reborn and whither he himself ascended to preach the Law to her This miracle is supposed to have taken place at Sankissa Sankasya In the center of the relief is the miraculous ladder by which the Buddha descended attended by Brahma and Indra At the foot of the ladder the tree and throne symbols of the presence of the Buddha with devotees on either side indicating that the Buddha has returned again to earth nbsp nbsp The Jetavahana Monastery today nbsp An even earlier depiction of the Jetavana Garden story at Sravasti Bodh Gaya Mahabodhi Temple The Jetavana Monastery The following inscription which is placed immediately below the sculpture gives the name of the monastery as well as that of the builder Anatha pindika Jetavana Anadhapediko deti Kotisanthatena Keta Anathapindika presents Jetavana having become its purchaser for a layer of kotis kotis being gold coins A householder named Anathapindika had purchased the garden of Jeta for a layer of kotis for 18 kotis of gold and began to build In the midst he built Buddha s pavilion Several monastic buildings were erected by Anathapindika at Jetavana until Gautama Buddha came from Rajagriha to Sravasti where he was met by the wealthy man Setthi The Blessed One followed by a great company of monks entered the Monastery of Jetavana Then Anathapindika asked him Lord how am I to proceed in the matter of this monastery Since you ask me householder bestow this monastery upon the Buddhist clergy present and to come And the great man replied It is well This monastery of Jetavana I give to the clergy present and to come in all parts of the world with the Buddha at their head 42 The sculptor has apparently aimed at giving a view of the great Buddhist Vihara of Jetavana whilst illustrating the story of its establishment by Anathapindika In the foreground there is a bullock cart with the bullocks unyoked sitting beside it and with the yoke tilted up in the air to show that the cart has been unloaded In front are two men each holding a very small object between his thumb and forefinger These are Anathapindika himself and his treasurer counting out the gold pieces brought in the cart Above them are two other figures seated and busily engaged in covering the surface of the garden with the gold coins which are here represented as square pieces touching one another as the price of its purchase To the left are six other figures probably Prince Jeta and his friends and in the very middle of the composition there is Anathapindika himself carrying a vessel just like a tea kettle in both hands for the purpose of pouring water over Buddha s hands as a pledge of the completion of his gift 42 Anathapindika who became known for his foremost generosity and character upon death entered the Tushita heaven and became a Bodhisattva Previous lives of the Buddha Jatakas nbsp nbsp The Mahakapi Jataka is the centerpiece of this railing section Mahakapi Jataka In this jataka tale the Buddha in a previous incarnation as a monkey king self sacrifyinly offers his own body as a bridge by which his fellow monkeys can escape from a human king who is attacking them A short section of the river across which the monkeys are escaping is indicated by fish designs Directly below that the impressed humans are holding out a blanket to catch him when he falls from his position At the very bottom continuous narrative the now recovered Buddha to be preaches to the king Mahakapi Jataka Bharhut c 100 BCE Indian Museum Calcutta The Mahakapi Jataka is also visible at Sanchi in this relief nbsp Nigrodha Miga Jataka The Nigrodha Miga Jataka Banyan Deer Birth story 12 in the E B Cowell Jataka stories Volume 1 is the story of how in a past birth born as a golden deer Bodhisatta rescues a pregnant doe from death by slaughter The medallion represents 3 scenes 1 The four deer running away and one of them looking back at the far left and the man with bow at the far right represent the first scene that of the hunt 2 The doe lying down at the bottom left looking at the antlered deer represents the second scene that of the pregnant doe being subjected to the slaughter today but Banyan deer tells her to go and takes her place Cook Butcher behind the Banyan deer watches this and then he goes to tell the King who comes with his entourage 3 The antlered deer sitting in the middle and preaching to the king who is listening respectfully with folded hands and his entourage is the third scene that one should associate with good people 43 nbsp Kurunga Miga Jataka This story is about three friends who lived in a forest an antelope a woodpecker and a tortoise One day the antelope was caught in the noose of a hunter and the tortoise endeavoured to bite through the noose to free the antelope while the woodpecker was making cries of ill omen so that the hunter would remain in his hut The antelope escaped but the tortoise exhausted by her efforts was caught by the hunter The antelope then enticed the hunter to follow her in the forest so that the tortoise was able to flee The antelope was the Bodhisatta that is the Buddha in a former life Sariputta a disciple of the Buddha was the woodpecker Moggallana also a disciple was the tortoise in his former life Devadatta however a traditional enemy of the Buddha was the hunter This story is meant to demonstrate the wickedness of Devadatta as well as the friendship and collaboration between the Buddha and his disciples even in previous lives nbsp Muga Pakaya Jataka Mugapakkha Jataka Temiya Jataka This is the story of The dumb Prince Chanda Devi the wife of the king of Varanasi had no son Sakka the king of the devas decided to help her He persuaded the Bodhisattva the future Buddha who was then in the realm of the Tavatimsa to descend into her womb so that she could bear a child The Bodhisattva thus entered the womb of the Queen and when he was born was called Temiya Temiya then realized that his father was a king but having himself been king of Varanasi in a previous life a rule which ended with 20 000 years in hell he did not want to inherit the throne He thus decided to play dumb and inactive to avoid the inheritance Being worthless his father arranged for his death and ordered the charioteer Sunanda to perform the crime When Sunanda was digging the grave in preparation Temiya explained to him his stratagem Impressed Sunanda then wanted to be an ascetic and follow Temiya Temiya then gave a sermon to the King and the Queen They were impressed and also expressed the wish to become ascetics Soon all the citizens of the kingdom as well as two neighboring kingdoms become followers of Temiya 44 The relief shows Temiya as a baby in the king s lap top left Temiya is then seen standing behind charioteer Sunanda in the cemetery who is digging the grave bottom right Temiya as an ascetic then gives a discourse to the people top right nbsp Asadrisa Jataka nbsp Bull and Tiger Jataka nbsp Dasaratha Jataka nbsp Chhandantiya Jataka nbsp Isi Singe Jataka nbsp Latuwa Jataka nbsp Naga Jataka nbsp Yavamajhakiya Jataka nbsp Yambumane Avayesi Jataka or Andha Bhuta Jataka nbsp Kinara Jataka nbsp Hansa Jataka nbsp Monkey Jataka nbsp Monkey Jataka Individuals nbsp nbsp Other Greek looking foreigners in Greek dress and playing carnyxes and aolus flute are known from the Stupa at Sanchi The Bharhut Yavana The Greeks specifically the Indo Greeks were evidently known at this date to people in the middle of India and called Yavanas here a Greek warrior has been coopted into the role of dvarapala Guardian of a temple gate The evidence includes his hairstyle short curly hair with Greek royal headband tunic and boots In his right hand he holds a grape plant emblematic of his origin The sheath of his broadsword is decorated with a nandipada symbol of Buddhism 45 35 There is an inscription above the relief classified as Inscription 55 in the Pillars of Railing of the SW Quadrant at Bharhut 46 is in the Brahmi script and reads from left to right Bhadanta Mahilasa thabho danam Pillar gift of the lay brother Mahila nbsp nbsp Lakshmi on a coin of Indo Scythian king Azilises Buddha s mother Mahamaya also known as Mahamaya and Mayadevi was the queen of Shakya and the birth mother of Gautama Buddha the sage on whose teachings Buddhism was founded She was the wife of Suddhodana the king of the Shakya kingdom She was sister of Mahapajapati Gotami the first Buddhist nun ordained by the Buddha But she also used to be an important deity in Buddhism where she was also a goddess of abundance and fortune and was represented on the oldest surviving stupas and cave temples 47 In this typical iconography called Mahamaya and Mayadevi she is shown standing on a lotus and being lustrated by two elephants pouring water on her Lakshmi already appeared on Indo Greek coinage as early as 180 BCE as a female dancer holding a lotus flower and later on Indo Scythian coins in the 1st century BCE nbsp Devotee nbsp Female bust nbsp Female Figure holding a Lotus nbsp Female Figure holding a Torch nbsp Male and Female Figures nbsp Male Figure nbsp Male Figure on top of Column nbsp Male Figure nbsp Male Figure holding a Lotus nbsp Male Figure holding a Flower nbsp Male FigureBharhut at the time of discovery nbsp East Gateway nbsp Railing post nbsp Post with reliefs nbsp Donators nbsp Devotees nbsp Yakshini nbsp Restoration plans Survival in 11 12th century edit nbsp Buddha sculpture at Bharhut 11 12th centA Buddha sculpture datable to 11 12th century was also found in addition to a Sanskrit inscription belonging to a vihara structure 48 This demonstrates that Buddhism at the site survived well until 11 12th century although nothing datable to the intervening period has been found 48 In addition to the magnificent stone railing of the old Stupa there are the remains of a medieval Buddhist Vihara with a colossal statue and several smaller Buddhist figures which cannot be dated much earlier than 1000 A D It seems probable therefore that the exercise of the Buddhist religion may have been carried on for nearly 15 centuries with little or perhaps no interruption Everywhere the advent of the Muhammadans gave the final blow to Buddhism and their bigotry and intolerance swept away the few lingering remains which the Brahmans had spared Alexander Cunningham The Stupa of Bharhut 48 Although the best known remains are from the 1st centuries BCE CE Bharhut just as Sanchi continued to be used as a Buddhist monastic center for more than a millennium 49 But the monuments of Bharhut were ultimately destroyed and most of the remains were used by local villagers as building material 49 Recently found Buddhist remains in region near Bharhut and Sanchi editSeveral minor Stupas and Buddhist statues have been discovered in the region near Sanchi and Bharhut dating up to 12th century CE They demonstrate that Buddhism was widespread in this region and not just confined to Sanchi and Bharhut and survived until 12th century like the Sanchi complex itself although greatly declining after 9 10th century citation needed These include Banshipur village Damoh 50 Madighat in Rewa district 51 Buddha Danda Singrauli 52 Bilahri Katni 53 Kuwarpur Sagar Dist Bansa Damoh Dist 54 Damoh Museum Buddha Deur Kothar Rewa Devgarh Lalitpur 55 Khajuraho MUseum 56 Mahoba 57 11 12th cent sculpturesGallery edit nbsp Bharhut excavation with the Bharhut Yavana nbsp The Yaksha relief at Bharhut being worshipped as Hanuman by local villagers nbsp The ruined Bharhut Stupa seen behind it is the Lal Pahadi Red Mountain nbsp Inscriptions nbsp Inscriptions nbsp Inscriptions nbsp Inscriptions nbsp Railing section at Indian Museum See also editSanchi DeorkotharReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j Le Huu Phuoc 2010 Buddhist Architecture Grafikol p 161 ISBN 9780984404308 Quintanilla Sonya Rhie 2007 History of Early Stone Sculpture at Mathura Ca 150 BCE 100 CE BRILL p 11 ISBN 9789004155374 Didactic Narration Jataka Iconography in Dunhuang with a Catalogue of Jataka Representations in China Alexander Peter Bell LIT Verlag Munster 2000 p 18 a b c d Kumar Ajit 2014 Bharhut Sculptures and their untenable Sunga Association Heritage Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies in Archaeology 2 230 Report Of A Tour In The Central Provinces Vol ix Alexander Cunningham 1879 p 2 4 Buddhist Sanskrit inscription slab from about the 10th century A D Bharhut The British Library 26 March 2009 Report Of A Tour In The Central Provinces In 1873 74 And 1874 75 Volume Ix Cunningham Alexander 1879 p 38 Kumar Ajit 2014 Bharhut Sculptures and their untenable Sunga Association Heritage Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies in Archaeology 2 223 241 Muzio Ciro Lo 2018 Problems of chronology in Gandharan art On the relationship between Gandharan toilet trays and the early Buddhist art of northern India Oxford Archaeopress Archaeology pp 123 134 Marshall John 1918 An Historical and Artistic Description of Sanchi pp 7 29 A Guide to Sanchi Calcutta Superintendent Government Printing p 11 Retrieved 29 September 2014 a b Bharhut Gallery INC ICOM Galleries Indian National Committee of the International Council of Museums Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 29 September 2014 Between the Empires Society in India 300 BCE to 400 CE by Patrick Olivelle 1 Salomon Richard 1998 Indian Epigraphy A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit Prakrit and the other Indo Aryan Languages Oxford University Press p 141 ISBN 978 0 19 535666 3 Luders H 1963 CORPUS INSCRIPTIONS INDICARUM VOL II PART II India Archaeological Society p 11 The Stupa of Bharhut Alexander Cunningham p 128 a b c Quintanilla Sonya Rhie 2007 History of Early Stone Sculpture at Mathura Ca 150 BCE 100 CE BRILL pp 8 9 ISBN 9789004155374 a b Quintanilla Sonya Rhie 2007 History of Early Stone Sculpture at Mathura Ca 150 BCE 100 CE BRILL p 13 ISBN 9789004155374 a b c d The Diffusion of Classical Art in Antiquity John Boardman Princeton University Press p 115 a b c d e f g These little balusters are of considerable interest as their sculptured statues are much superior in artistic design and execution to those of the railing pillars They are further remarkable in having Arian letters engraved on their bases or capitals a peculiarity which points unmistakably to the employment of Western artists and which fully accounts for the superiority of their execution The letters found are p s a and b of which the first three occur twice Now if the same sculptors had been employed on the railings we might confidently expect to find the same alphabetical letters used as private marks But the fact is just the reverse for the whole of the 27 marks found on any portions of the railing are Indian letters The only conclusion that I can come to from these facts is that the foreign artists who were employed on the sculptures of the gateways were certainly not engaged on any part of the railing I conclude therefore that the Raja of Shungas the donor of the gateways must have sent his own party of workmen to make them while the smaller gifts of pillars and rails were executed by the local artists in The stupa of Bharhut a Buddhist monument ornamented with numerous sculptures illustrative of Buddhist legend and history in the third century B C by Alexander Cunningham p 8 Public Domain a b c d The Buddha Image Its Origin and Development Yuvraj Krishan Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan 1996 pp 17 18 Note 3 a b Buddhist Architecture by Huu Phuoc Le p 161 When these alphabets were first deciphered scholars gave them different names such as Indian Pali for Brahmi and Arian Pali for Kharosthi but these terms are no longer in use in Upasaka Si Esa Mahavihara Nava Nalanda 2002 History of palaeography of Mauryan Brahmi script Nava Nalanda Mahavihara p 6 ISBN 9788188242047 There is evidence of Hellensitic sculptors being in touch with Sanchi and Bharhut in The Buddha Image Its Origin and Development Yuvraj Krishan Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan 1996 p 9 a b c Buddhist Architecture Huu Phuoc Le Grafikol 2010 p 149ff Cunningham Sir Alexander 1879 The Stupa of Bharhut a Buddhist monument ornamented with numerous sculptures illustrative of Buddhist legend and history in the third century B C London W H Allen Early Buddhist Narrative Art by Patricia Eichenbaum Karetzky p 16 Early Byzantine Churches in Macedonia amp Southern Serbia by R F Hoddinott p 17 The East Buddhists Hindus and the Sons of Heaven Architecture in context II Routledge 2015 by Christopher Tadgell p 24 India Archaeological Report Cunningham p185 196 Age of the Nandas and Mauryas by Kallidaikurichi Aiyah Nilakanta Sastri p 376 sq General view of remains of Buddhist temple of later date than the Stupa Bharhut Online Gallery British Library Retrieved 29 September 2014 Photograph of a slab with a Buddhist sanskrit inscription Online Gallery British Library Retrieved 29 September 2014 Freer Sackler The Art of Buddhism The Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M Sackler Gallery Smithsonian Institution 2008 Archived from the original on 17 September 2022 Retrieved 29 September 2014 a b The Diffusion of Classical Art in Antiquity John Boardman 1993 p 112 a b Luders H Waldschmidt E Mehendale M A eds 1963 Bharhut Inscriptions Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum Vol II Ootacamund Archaeological Survey of India There is evidence of Hellenesitic sculptors being in touch with Sanchi and Bharhut in The Buddha Image Its Origin and Development Yuvraj Krishan Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan 1996 p 9 a b Mahabodhi Cunningham p 4ff Public Domain text Intercourse Between India and the Western World From the Earliest Times to the Fall of Rome H G Rawlinson Uppal Publishing House 1992 p 142 The Shape of Ancient Thought Mc Evilley Allworth Press 2001 p 391 A Guide to Sanchi John Marshall p 50ff Public Domain text a b Mahabodhi Cunningham p 84ff Public Domain text The Jataka Volume I Book I Ekanipata No 12 Nigrodhamiga Jataka The Illustrated Jataka amp Other Stories of the Buddha by C B Varma The Story of the Dumb Prince Archived 2017 10 29 at the Wayback Machine Faces of Power Alexander s Image and Hellenistic Politics by Andrew Stewart p 180 The Stupa of Bharhut Cunningham p 136 2 The Goddess Lakshmi in Buddhist Art The goddess of abundance and fortune Sri Lakshmi reflected the accumulated wealth and financial independence of the Buddhist monasteries Her image became one of the popular visual themes carved on their monuments in Images of Indian Goddesses Myths Meanings and Models Madhu Bazaz Wangu Abhinav Publications 2003 p 57 3 a b c Alexander Cunningham Great Britain India Office 1879 The Stupa of Bharhut A Buddhist Monument Ornamented with Numerous W H Allen and Co p 4 a b Johnston William M 2013 Encyclopedia of Monasticism Routledge p 643 ISBN 978 1 136 78716 4 Buddhist stupas of Gupta period unearthed Indian Express June 17 1999 The Statesman New Delhi 17 06 99 Madhya Pradesh Swastika shaped 6th century Stupas found TOI April 1 2019 Buddha Stolen from Bilhari in Central India November 30 2012 Y K Malaiya Research Notes Anekanta Vol 24 No 5 November 1971 pp 213 214 Ancient Buddha Vihar Devgarh An inscribed Buddha image at Khajuraho Devangana Desai Journal of the Asiatic Society of Mumbai Volume 79 p 63 Six Sculptures from Mahoba BY K N DIKSHIT New Delhi 1921External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bharhut Bharhut sculpture images Birth of classic form BENOY K BEHL Frontline Volume 24 Issue 17 Aug 25 Sep 07 2007 covering the art of the Bharhut Stupa Life of the Historical Buddha on the Bharhut Railing Medallions from Barhut Railing at Indian Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bharhut amp oldid 1183110429, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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