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Manjushri

Mañjuśrī (Sanskrit: मञ्जुश्री) is a bodhisattva associated with prajñā (wisdom) in Mahāyāna Buddhism. His name means "Gentle Glory" in Sanskrit.[1] Mañjuśrī is also known by the fuller name of Mañjuśrīkumārabhūta (मञ्जुश्रीकुमारभूत),[2] literally "Mañjuśrī, Still a Youth" or, less literally, "Prince Mañjuśrī". Another name of Mañjuśrī is Mañjughoṣa.

Mañjuśrī
Mañjuśrī Pala Dynasty, India, 9th century CE
Sanskritमञ्जुश्री / 𑀫𑀜𑁆𑀚𑀼𑀰𑁆𑀭𑀻
Mañjuśrī
BikolMangushli
Burmeseမဥ္ဇူသီရိ
CebuanoMangushli
Chinese文殊菩薩
(Pinyin: Wénshū Púsà)
文殊师利菩薩
(Pinyin: Wénshūshīlì Púsà)
曼殊室利菩薩
(Pinyin: Mànshūshìlì Púsà)
妙吉祥菩薩
(Pinyin: Miàojíxiáng Púsà)
妙德菩薩
(Pinyin Miàodé Púsà)
妙音菩薩
(Pinyin: Miàoyīn Púsà)
Cyrillicᠵᠦᠭᠡᠯᠡᠨ ᠡᠭᠰᠢᠭᠲᠦ
Зөөлөн эгшигт
Манзушир
Japanese文殊菩薩もんじゅぼさつ
(romaji: Monju Bosatsu)
文殊師利菩薩もんじゅしりぼさつ
(romaji: Monjushiri Bosatsu)
文珠菩薩もんじゅぼさつ
(romaji: Monju Bosatsu)
妙吉祥菩薩みょうきっしょうぼさつ
(romaji: Myōkisshō Bosatsu)
Khmerមញ្ចុស្រី
(manh-cho-srei)
Korean문수보살
(RR: Munsu Bosal)
만수보살
(RR: Mansu Bosal)
묘길상보살
(RR: Myokilsang Bosal)
TagalogMangushli
Thaiพระมัญชุศรีโพธิสัตว์
Tibetanའཇམ་དཔལ་དབྱངས་
Wylie: 'jam dpel dbyang
THL: Jampelyang

འཇམ་དཔལ་
Wylie: 'jam dpel
THL: jampel
VietnameseVăn Thù Sư Lợi Bồ Tát
Văn-thù
Diệu Đức
Diệu Cát Tường
Diệu Âm
Information
Venerated byMahayana, Vajrayana
 Religion portal

It is claimed that Nurhaci, the founder of what would become the Qing dynasty of China, named his tribe Man (滿) after Manjushri. Moreover, the Emperor Manjushri was an honorific title in Tibetan Buddhism given to some Qing emperors.

In Mahāyāna Buddhism edit

 
Manjushri statue, Lhalung Gompa, Spiti Valley, India
 
Bodhisattva Monju (Manjushri), Kamakura period, Tokyo National Museum, Japan

Scholars have identified Mañjuśrī as the oldest and most significant bodhisattva in Mahāyāna literature.[3] Mañjuśrī is first referred to in early Mahāyāna sūtras such as the Prajñāpāramitā sūtras and through this association, very early in the tradition he came to symbolize the embodiment of prajñā (transcendent wisdom).[2] The Lotus Sutra assigns him a pure land called Vimala, which according to the Avatamsaka Sutra is located in the East. His pure land is predicted to be one of the two best pure lands in all of existence in all the past, present, and future. When he attains Buddhahood his name will be Universal Sight[citation needed]. In the Lotus Sūtra, Mañjuśrī also leads the Nagaraja's daughter to enlightenment. He also figures in the Vimalakīrti Sūtra in a debate with Vimalakīrti where he is presented as a Bodhisattva who discusses non-duality with him.

An example of a wisdom teaching of Mañjuśrī can be found in the Saptaśatikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra (Taishō Tripiṭaka 232).[4] This sūtra contains a dialogue between Mañjuśrī and the Buddha on the One Samādhi (Skt. Ekavyūha Samādhi). Sheng-yen renders the following teaching of Mañjuśrī, for entering samādhi naturally through transcendent wisdom:

Contemplate the five skandhas as originally empty and quiescent, non-arising, non-perishing, equal, without differentiation. Constantly thus practicing, day or night, whether sitting, walking, standing or lying down, finally one reaches an inconceivable state without any obstruction or form. This is the Samadhi of One Act (一行三昧; Yīxíng sānmèi).[5]

Vajrayāna Buddhism edit

Within Vajrayāna Buddhism, Mañjuśrī is a meditational deity and considered a fully enlightened Buddha. In Shingon Buddhism, he is one of the Thirteen Buddhas to whom disciples devote themselves. He figures extensively in many esoteric texts such as the Mañjuśrīmūlakalpa[2] and the Mañjuśrīnāmasamgīti. His consort in some traditions is Saraswati.

The Mañjuśrīmūlakalpa, which later came to classified under Kriyātantra, states that mantras taught in the Śaiva, Garuḍa, and Vaiṣṇava tantras will be effective if applied by Buddhists since they were all taught originally by Mañjuśrī.[6]

Iconography edit

Mañjuśrī is depicted as a male bodhisattva wielding a flaming sword in his right hand, representing the realization of transcendent wisdom which cuts down ignorance and duality. The scripture supported by the padma (lotus) held in his left hand is a Prajñāpāramitā sūtra, representing his attainment of ultimate realization from the blossoming of wisdom. Mañjuśrī is often depicted as riding on a blue lion[citation needed] or sitting on the skin of a lion. This represents the use of wisdom to tame the mind, which is compared to riding or subduing a ferocious lion.

In Chinese and Japanese Buddhist art, Mañjuśrī's sword is sometimes replaced with a ruyi scepter, especially in representations of his Vimalakirti Sutra discussion with the layman Vimalakirti.[7] According to Berthold Laufer, the first Chinese representation of a ruyi was in an 8th-century Mañjuśrī painting by Wu Daozi, showing it held in his right hand taking the place of the usual sword. In subsequent Chinese and Japanese paintings of Buddhas, a ruyi was occasionally represented as a Padma with a long stem curved like a ruyi.[8]

He is one of the Four Great Bodhisattvas of Chinese Buddhism, the other three being Kṣitigarbha, Avalokiteśvara, and Samantabhadra. In China, he is often paired with Samantabhadra[citation needed].

In Tibetan Buddhism, Mañjuśrī is sometimes depicted in a trinity with Avalokiteśvara and Vajrapāṇi[citation needed].

Mantras edit

A mantra commonly associated with Mañjuśrī is the following:[9]

oṃ arapacana dhīḥ

The Arapacana is a syllabary consisting of forty-two letters, and is named after the first five letters: a, ra, pa, ca, na.[10] This syllabary was most widely used for the Gāndhārī language with the Kharoṣṭhī script but also appears in some Sanskrit texts. The syllabary features in Mahāyāna texts such as the longer Prajñāpāramitā texts, the Gaṇḍavyūha Sūtra, the Lalitavistara Sūtra, the Avataṃsaka Sūtra, the Dharmaguptaka Vinaya, and the Mūlasarvāstivāda Vinaya.[10] In some of these texts, the Arapacana syllabary serves as a mnemonic for important Mahāyāna concepts.[10] Due to its association with him, Arapacana may even serve as an alternate name for Mañjuśrī.[9]

The Sutra on Perfect Wisdom (Conze 1975) defines the significance of each syllable thus:[citation needed]

  1. A is a door to the insight that all dharmas are unproduced from the very beginning (ādya-anutpannatvād).
  2. RA is a door to the insight that all dharmas are without dirt (rajas).
  3. PA is a door to the insight that all dharmas have been expounded in the ultimate sense (paramārtha).
  4. CA is a door to the insight that the decrease (cyavana) or rebirth of any dharma cannot be apprehended, because all dharmas do not decrease, nor are they reborn.
  5. NA is a door to the insight that the names (i.e. nāma) of all dharmas have vanished; the essential nature behind names cannot be gained or lost.

Tibetan pronunciation is slightly different and so the Tibetan characters read: oṃ a ra pa tsa na dhīḥ (Tibetan: ༀ་ཨ་ར་པ་ཙ་ན་དྷཱི༔, Wylie: om a ra pa tsa na d+hIH).[11] In Tibetan tradition, this mantra is believed to enhance wisdom and improve one's skills in debating, memory, writing, and other literary abilities. "Dhīḥ" is the seed syllable of the mantra and is chanted with greater emphasis and also repeated a number of times as a decrescendo.

In Buddhist cultures edit

 
A painting of the Buddhist manjusri from the Yulin Caves of Gansu, China, from the Tangut-led Western Xia dynasty

In China edit

Mañjuśrī is known in China as Wenshu (Chinese: 文殊; pinyin: Wénshū). Mount Wutai in Shanxi, one of the four Sacred Mountains of China, is considered by Chinese Buddhists to be his bodhimaṇḍa. He was said to bestow spectacular visionary experiences to those on selected mountain peaks and caves there. In Mount Wutai's Foguang Temple, the Manjusri Hall to the right of its main hall was recognized to have been built in 1137 during the Jin dynasty. The hall was thoroughly studied, mapped and first photographed by early twentieth-century Chinese architects Liang Sicheng and Lin Huiyin.[12] These made it a popular place of pilgrimage, but patriarchs including Linji Yixuan and Yunmen Wenyan declared the mountain off limits.[13]

Mount Wutai was also associated with the East Mountain Teaching.[14] Mañjuśrī has been associated with Mount Wutai since ancient times. Paul Williams writes:[15]

Apparently the association of Mañjuśrī with Wutai (Wu-t'ai) Shan in north China was known in classical times in India itself, identified by Chinese scholars with the mountain in the 'north-east' (when seen from India or Central Asia) referred to as the abode of Mañjuśrī in the Avataṃsaka Sūtra. There are said to have been pilgrimages from India and other Asian countries to Wutai Shan by the seventh century.

According to official histories from the Qing dynasty, Nurhaci, a military leader of the Jurchens of Northeast China and founder of what became the Qing dynasty, named his tribe after Mañjuśrī as the Manchus.[16] The true origin of the name Manchu is disputed.[17]

Monk Hanshan (寒山) is widely considered to be a metaphorical manifestation of Mañjuśrī. He is known for having co-written the following famous poem about reincarnation with monk Shide:[18][19]

Drumming your grandpa in the shrine,
Cooking your aunts in the pot,
Marrying your grandma in the past,
Should I laugh or not?

堂上打鼓打公皮,
鍋內煎煮是姑娘,
三世祖母娶為婦,
我今不笑等何時。

In Tibetan Buddhism, Mañjuśrī manifests in a number of different Tantric forms. Yamāntaka (meaning 'terminator of Yama i.e. Death') is the wrathful manifestation of Mañjuśrī, popular within the Gelug school of Tibetan Buddhism. Other variations upon his traditional form as Mañjuśrī include Namasangiti, Arapacana Manjushri, etc. In Tibetan Buddhism, Mañjuśrī is also an yidam. The Emperor Manjushri as a honorific title was also given to Qing emperors such as the Qianlong Emperor.

In the Taoist pantheon, Mañjuśrī is adopted as a Taoist deity known as Wenshu Guangfa Tianzun. This deity appears in the Ming Dynasty novel Fengshen Yanyi as a senior disciple of Yuanshi Tianzun, the highest deity in Taoism. However, the books Qunxian Xianpo Tianmen and Western Tang Dynasty Biography state that Wenshu Guangfa Tianzun and Mañjuśrī Bodhisattva are not the same person.[20][21]

 
Black and white chalk drawing of a Mañjusri statue from Singhasari temple (East Java, Indonesia), probably made in 1823 by J.Th. Bik in Batavia.

In Nepal edit

According to Swayambhu Purana, the Kathmandu Valley was once a lake. It is believed that Mañjuśrī came on a pilgrimage from his earthly abode-Wutaishan (five-peaked mountain) in China. He saw a lotus flower in the center of the lake, which emitted brilliant radiance. He cut a gorge at Chovar with his flaming sword to allow the lake to drain. The place where the lotus flower settled became the great Swayambhunath Stupa, and the valley thus became habitable.

In Indonesia edit

In eighth century Java during the Mataram Kingdom, Mañjuśrī was a prominent deity revered by the Sailendra dynasty, patrons of Mahayana Buddhism. The Kelurak inscription (782) and Manjusrigrha inscription (792) mentioned about the construction of a grand Prasada named Vajrāsana Mañjuśrīgṛha (Vajra House of Mañjuśrī) identified today as Sewu temple, located just 800 meters north of the Prambanan. Sewu is the second largest Buddhist temple in Central Java after Borobudur. The depiction of Mañjuśrī in Sailendra art is similar to those of the Pala Empire style of Nalanda, Bihar. Mañjuśrī was portrayed as a youthful handsome man with the palm of his hands tattooed with the image of a flower. His right hand is facing down with an open palm while his left-hand holds an utpala (blue lotus). He also uses the necklace made of tiger canine teeth.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Lopez Jr., Donald S. (2001). The Story of Buddhism: A Concise Guide to its History and Teachings. New York, USA: HarperSanFrancisco. ISBN 0-06-069976-0 (cloth) P.260.
  2. ^ a b c Keown, Damien (editor) with Hodge, Stephen; Jones, Charles; Tinti, Paola (2003). A Dictionary of Buddhism. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860560-9 p.172.
  3. ^ A View of Manjushri: Wisdom and Its Crown Prince in Pala Period India. Harrington, Laura. Doctoral Thesis, Columbia University, 2002
  4. ^ The Korean Buddhist Canon: A Descriptive Catalog (T 232)
  5. ^ Sheng-Yen, Master (聖嚴法師)(1988). , p.364
  6. ^ Sanderson, Alexis. "The Śaiva Age: The Rise and Dominance of Śaivism during the Early Medieval Period." In: Genesis and Development of Tantrism, edited by Shingo Einoo. Tokyo: Institute of Oriental Culture, University of Tokyo, 2009. Institute of Oriental Culture Special Series, 23, pp. 129-131.
  7. ^ Davidson, J. LeRoy, "The Origin and Early Use of the Ju-i", Artibus Asiae 1950,13.4, 240.
  8. ^ Laufer, Berthold, Jade, a Study in Chinese Archaeology and Religion, Field Museum of Natural History, 1912, 339.
  9. ^ a b Buswell, Robert. Lopez, Donald. The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism. 2013. p. 527
  10. ^ a b c Buswell, Robert. Lopez, Donald. The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism. 2013. p. 61
  11. ^ [1] - Visible Mantra's website
  12. ^ Liang, Ssucheng. A Pictorial History of Chinese Architecture. Ed. Wilma Fairbank. Cambridge, Michigan: The MIT Press, 1984.
  13. ^ *See Robert M. Gimello, "Chang Shang-ying on Wu-t'ai Shan", in Pilgrims and Sacred Sites in China:, ed. Susan Naquin and Chün-fang Yü (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992), pp. 89–149; and Steven Heine, "Visions, Divisions, Revisions: The Encounter Between Iconoclasm and Supernaturalism in Kōan Cases about Mount Wu-t'ai", in The Kōan, pp. 137–167.
  14. ^ Heine, Steven (2002). Opening a Mountain: Koans of the Zen Masters. USA: Oxford University Press. p. [2]. ISBN 0-19-513586-5.
  15. ^ Williams, Paul. Mahayana Buddhism: The Doctrinal Foundations. 2000. p. 227
  16. ^ Agui (1988). 满洲源流考 (the Origin of Manchus). Liaoning Nationality Publishing House. ISBN 9787805270609.
  17. ^ Yan, Chongnian (2008). 明亡清兴六十年 (彩图珍藏版). Zhonghua Book Company. ISBN 9787101059472.
  18. ^ "诗僧寒山与拾得:文殊菩萨普贤菩萨化身" (in Chinese). Beijing: NetEase Buddhism Channel. 2014-12-10.
  19. ^ 韩廷杰. "寒山诗赏析" (in Chinese). Zhejiang: 灵山海会期刊社.
  20. ^ 四川道敎史话 [Sichuan Taoist History] (in Chinese). 四川人民出版社. 1985. ... 文殊广法天尊,就是文殊,至于观音,改名叫作慈航道人,自称"贫道乃灵鹫山元觉洞燃灯道人"者,前身就是燃灯佛,西方极乐世界的孔雀明王,成了准提道人。
  21. ^ 当代 (in Chinese). 人民文学出版社. 2009. ... 文殊广法天尊" ,这与三教中的大师法号习惯带"子" ,如"广成子" "云中子" "赤精子"也大异其趣。却不可认为这位"文殊"便真是佛家那位"文殊菩萨" [Translation:... Wenshu Guangfa Tianzun," this differs significantly from the usual naming conventions for masters in the Three Religions, where they typically include "Zi" (子) in their titles, such as "Guangcheng Zi," "Yunzhong Zi," "Chijing Zi," and others. However, it should not be assumed that this "Wenshu" is indeed the same as the Buddhist figure "Manjushri Bodhisattva."]

Sources edit

Further reading edit

Harrison, Paul M. (2000). , Chung-Hwa Buddhist Journal 13, 157-193

External links edit

  • Manjushri at Khandro Net.
  • Page dedicated to the Manjusri mantra, with several audio versions.

manjushri, mañjuśrī, sanskrit, मञ, bodhisattva, associated, with, prajñā, wisdom, mahāyāna, buddhism, name, means, gentle, glory, sanskrit, mañjuśrī, also, known, fuller, name, mañjuśrīkumārabhūta, मञ, रभ, literally, mañjuśrī, still, youth, less, literally, pr. Manjusri Sanskrit मञ ज श र is a bodhisattva associated with prajna wisdom in Mahayana Buddhism His name means Gentle Glory in Sanskrit 1 Manjusri is also known by the fuller name of Manjusrikumarabhuta मञ ज श र क म रभ त 2 literally Manjusri Still a Youth or less literally Prince Manjusri Another name of Manjusri is Manjughoṣa ManjusriManjusri Pala Dynasty India 9th century CESanskritमञ ज श र 𑀫𑀜 𑀚 𑀰 𑀭 ManjusriBikolMangushliBurmeseမဥ ဇ သ ရ CebuanoMangushliChinese文殊菩薩 Pinyin Wenshu Pusa 文殊师利菩薩 Pinyin Wenshushili Pusa 曼殊室利菩薩 Pinyin Manshushili Pusa 妙吉祥菩薩 Pinyin Miaojixiang Pusa 妙德菩薩 Pinyin Miaode Pusa 妙音菩薩 Pinyin Miaoyin Pusa Cyrillicᠵᠦᠭᠡᠯᠡᠨ ᠡᠭᠰᠢᠭᠲᠦZoolon egshigtManzushirJapanese文殊菩薩 もんじゅぼさつ romaji Monju Bosatsu 文殊師利菩薩 もんじゅしりぼさつ romaji Monjushiri Bosatsu 文珠菩薩 もんじゅぼさつ romaji Monju Bosatsu 妙吉祥菩薩 みょうきっしょうぼさつ romaji Myōkisshō Bosatsu Khmerមញ ច ស រ manh cho srei Korean문수보살 RR Munsu Bosal 만수보살 RR Mansu Bosal 묘길상보살 RR Myokilsang Bosal TagalogMangushliThaiphramychusriophthistwTibetanའཇམ དཔལ དབ ངས Wylie jam dpel dbyangTHL Jampelyangའཇམ དཔལ Wylie jam dpelTHL jampelVietnameseVăn Thu Sư Lợi Bồ TatVăn thuDiệu ĐứcDiệu Cat TườngDiệu AmInformationVenerated byMahayana Vajrayana Religion portalIt is claimed that Nurhaci the founder of what would become the Qing dynasty of China named his tribe Man 滿 after Manjushri Moreover the Emperor Manjushri was an honorific title in Tibetan Buddhism given to some Qing emperors Contents 1 In Mahayana Buddhism 2 Vajrayana Buddhism 3 Iconography 4 Mantras 5 In Buddhist cultures 5 1 In China 5 2 In Nepal 5 3 In Indonesia 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksIn Mahayana Buddhism edit nbsp Manjushri statue Lhalung Gompa Spiti Valley India nbsp Bodhisattva Monju Manjushri Kamakura period Tokyo National Museum JapanScholars have identified Manjusri as the oldest and most significant bodhisattva in Mahayana literature 3 Manjusri is first referred to in early Mahayana sutras such as the Prajnaparamita sutras and through this association very early in the tradition he came to symbolize the embodiment of prajna transcendent wisdom 2 The Lotus Sutra assigns him a pure land called Vimala which according to the Avatamsaka Sutra is located in the East His pure land is predicted to be one of the two best pure lands in all of existence in all the past present and future When he attains Buddhahood his name will be Universal Sight citation needed In the Lotus Sutra Manjusri also leads the Nagaraja s daughter to enlightenment He also figures in the Vimalakirti Sutra in a debate with Vimalakirti where he is presented as a Bodhisattva who discusses non duality with him An example of a wisdom teaching of Manjusri can be found in the Saptasatika Prajnaparamita Sutra Taishō Tripiṭaka 232 4 This sutra contains a dialogue between Manjusri and the Buddha on the One Samadhi Skt Ekavyuha Samadhi Sheng yen renders the following teaching of Manjusri for entering samadhi naturally through transcendent wisdom Contemplate the five skandhas as originally empty and quiescent non arising non perishing equal without differentiation Constantly thus practicing day or night whether sitting walking standing or lying down finally one reaches an inconceivable state without any obstruction or form This is the Samadhi of One Act 一行三昧 Yixing sanmei 5 Vajrayana Buddhism editWithin Vajrayana Buddhism Manjusri is a meditational deity and considered a fully enlightened Buddha In Shingon Buddhism he is one of the Thirteen Buddhas to whom disciples devote themselves He figures extensively in many esoteric texts such as the Manjusrimulakalpa 2 and the Manjusrinamasamgiti His consort in some traditions is Saraswati The Manjusrimulakalpa which later came to classified under Kriyatantra states that mantras taught in the Saiva Garuḍa and Vaiṣṇava tantras will be effective if applied by Buddhists since they were all taught originally by Manjusri 6 Iconography editManjusri is depicted as a male bodhisattva wielding a flaming sword in his right hand representing the realization of transcendent wisdom which cuts down ignorance and duality The scripture supported by the padma lotus held in his left hand is a Prajnaparamita sutra representing his attainment of ultimate realization from the blossoming of wisdom Manjusri is often depicted as riding on a blue lion citation needed or sitting on the skin of a lion This represents the use of wisdom to tame the mind which is compared to riding or subduing a ferocious lion In Chinese and Japanese Buddhist art Manjusri s sword is sometimes replaced with a ruyi scepter especially in representations of his Vimalakirti Sutra discussion with the layman Vimalakirti 7 According to Berthold Laufer the first Chinese representation of a ruyi was in an 8th century Manjusri painting by Wu Daozi showing it held in his right hand taking the place of the usual sword In subsequent Chinese and Japanese paintings of Buddhas a ruyi was occasionally represented as a Padma with a long stem curved like a ruyi 8 He is one of the Four Great Bodhisattvas of Chinese Buddhism the other three being Kṣitigarbha Avalokitesvara and Samantabhadra In China he is often paired with Samantabhadra citation needed In Tibetan Buddhism Manjusri is sometimes depicted in a trinity with Avalokitesvara and Vajrapaṇi citation needed Mantras editA mantra commonly associated with Manjusri is the following 9 oṃ arapacana dhiḥThe Arapacana is a syllabary consisting of forty two letters and is named after the first five letters a ra pa ca na 10 This syllabary was most widely used for the Gandhari language with the Kharoṣṭhi script but also appears in some Sanskrit texts The syllabary features in Mahayana texts such as the longer Prajnaparamita texts the Gaṇḍavyuha Sutra the Lalitavistara Sutra the Avataṃsaka Sutra the Dharmaguptaka Vinaya and the Mulasarvastivada Vinaya 10 In some of these texts the Arapacana syllabary serves as a mnemonic for important Mahayana concepts 10 Due to its association with him Arapacana may even serve as an alternate name for Manjusri 9 The Sutra on Perfect Wisdom Conze 1975 defines the significance of each syllable thus citation needed A is a door to the insight that all dharmas are unproduced from the very beginning adya anutpannatvad RA is a door to the insight that all dharmas are without dirt rajas PA is a door to the insight that all dharmas have been expounded in the ultimate sense paramartha CA is a door to the insight that the decrease cyavana or rebirth of any dharma cannot be apprehended because all dharmas do not decrease nor are they reborn NA is a door to the insight that the names i e nama of all dharmas have vanished the essential nature behind names cannot be gained or lost Tibetan pronunciation is slightly different and so the Tibetan characters read oṃ a ra pa tsa na dhiḥ Tibetan ༀ ཨ ར པ ཙ ན ད Wylie om a ra pa tsa na d hIH 11 In Tibetan tradition this mantra is believed to enhance wisdom and improve one s skills in debating memory writing and other literary abilities Dhiḥ is the seed syllable of the mantra and is chanted with greater emphasis and also repeated a number of times as a decrescendo In Buddhist cultures edit nbsp A painting of the Buddhist manjusri from the Yulin Caves of Gansu China from the Tangut led Western Xia dynastyIn China edit Manjusri is known in China as Wenshu Chinese 文殊 pinyin Wenshu Mount Wutai in Shanxi one of the four Sacred Mountains of China is considered by Chinese Buddhists to be his bodhimaṇḍa He was said to bestow spectacular visionary experiences to those on selected mountain peaks and caves there In Mount Wutai s Foguang Temple the Manjusri Hall to the right of its main hall was recognized to have been built in 1137 during the Jin dynasty The hall was thoroughly studied mapped and first photographed by early twentieth century Chinese architects Liang Sicheng and Lin Huiyin 12 These made it a popular place of pilgrimage but patriarchs including Linji Yixuan and Yunmen Wenyan declared the mountain off limits 13 Mount Wutai was also associated with the East Mountain Teaching 14 Manjusri has been associated with Mount Wutai since ancient times Paul Williams writes 15 Apparently the association of Manjusri with Wutai Wu t ai Shan in north China was known in classical times in India itself identified by Chinese scholars with the mountain in the north east when seen from India or Central Asia referred to as the abode of Manjusri in the Avataṃsaka Sutra There are said to have been pilgrimages from India and other Asian countries to Wutai Shan by the seventh century According to official histories from the Qing dynasty Nurhaci a military leader of the Jurchens of Northeast China and founder of what became the Qing dynasty named his tribe after Manjusri as the Manchus 16 The true origin of the name Manchu is disputed 17 Monk Hanshan 寒山 is widely considered to be a metaphorical manifestation of Manjusri He is known for having co written the following famous poem about reincarnation with monk Shide 18 19 Drumming your grandpa in the shrine Cooking your aunts in the pot Marrying your grandma in the past Should I laugh or not 堂上打鼓打公皮 鍋內煎煮是姑娘 三世祖母娶為婦 我今不笑等何時 In Tibetan Buddhism Manjusri manifests in a number of different Tantric forms Yamantaka meaning terminator of Yama i e Death is the wrathful manifestation of Manjusri popular within the Gelug school of Tibetan Buddhism Other variations upon his traditional form as Manjusri include Namasangiti Arapacana Manjushri etc In Tibetan Buddhism Manjusri is also an yidam The Emperor Manjushri as a honorific title was also given to Qing emperors such as the Qianlong Emperor In the Taoist pantheon Manjusri is adopted as a Taoist deity known as Wenshu Guangfa Tianzun This deity appears in the Ming Dynasty novel Fengshen Yanyi as a senior disciple of Yuanshi Tianzun the highest deity in Taoism However the books Qunxian Xianpo Tianmen and Western Tang Dynasty Biography state that Wenshu Guangfa Tianzun and Manjusri Bodhisattva are not the same person 20 21 nbsp Black and white chalk drawing of a Manjusri statue from Singhasari temple East Java Indonesia probably made in 1823 by J Th Bik in Batavia In Nepal edit According to Swayambhu Purana the Kathmandu Valley was once a lake It is believed that Manjusri came on a pilgrimage from his earthly abode Wutaishan five peaked mountain in China He saw a lotus flower in the center of the lake which emitted brilliant radiance He cut a gorge at Chovar with his flaming sword to allow the lake to drain The place where the lotus flower settled became the great Swayambhunath Stupa and the valley thus became habitable In Indonesia edit In eighth century Java during the Mataram Kingdom Manjusri was a prominent deity revered by the Sailendra dynasty patrons of Mahayana Buddhism The Kelurak inscription 782 and Manjusrigrha inscription 792 mentioned about the construction of a grand Prasada named Vajrasana Manjusrigṛha Vajra House of Manjusri identified today as Sewu temple located just 800 meters north of the Prambanan Sewu is the second largest Buddhist temple in Central Java after Borobudur The depiction of Manjusri in Sailendra art is similar to those of the Pala Empire style of Nalanda Bihar Manjusri was portrayed as a youthful handsome man with the palm of his hands tattooed with the image of a flower His right hand is facing down with an open palm while his left hand holds an utpala blue lotus He also uses the necklace made of tiger canine teeth Gallery edit nbsp Manjusri figure brandishing sword of wisdom in Nepal nbsp Palm leaf manuscript painting of Manjusri Nalanda Bihar India nbsp Silver figure of Manjusri holding a long stemmed lotus Central Java Indonesia nbsp Blanc de Chine figure of Manjusri holding a ruyi scepter China 17th century nbsp Manjusri on lion with cintamani Quan Am Temple Ho Chi Minh City nbsp Manjusri crossing the sea Japan nbsp Manjushri at Buddha Tooth Relic Temple and Museum Singapore nbsp Bodhisattva Manjushri seated in lalitasana from China Jin Dynasty 12th century CE British Museum nbsp Drawing of Manjusri Bodhisattva of Wisdom nbsp Statue of Manjusri at Bangka Lungshan Temple TaipeiSee also editManjusrimitra Manjusri Monastery Washing the ElephantReferences editCitations edit Lopez Jr Donald S 2001 The Story of Buddhism A Concise Guide to its History and Teachings New York USA HarperSanFrancisco ISBN 0 06 069976 0 cloth P 260 a b c Keown Damien editor with Hodge Stephen Jones Charles Tinti Paola 2003 A Dictionary of Buddhism Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 860560 9 p 172 A View of Manjushri Wisdom and Its Crown Prince in Pala Period India Harrington Laura Doctoral Thesis Columbia University 2002 The Korean Buddhist Canon A Descriptive Catalog T 232 Sheng Yen Master 聖嚴法師 1988 Tso Ch an p 364 Sanderson Alexis The Saiva Age The Rise and Dominance of Saivism during the Early Medieval Period In Genesis and Development of Tantrism edited by Shingo Einoo Tokyo Institute of Oriental Culture University of Tokyo 2009 Institute of Oriental Culture Special Series 23 pp 129 131 Davidson J LeRoy The Origin and Early Use of the Ju i Artibus Asiae 1950 13 4 240 Laufer Berthold Jade a Study in Chinese Archaeology and Religion Field Museum of Natural History 1912 339 a b Buswell Robert Lopez Donald The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism 2013 p 527 a b c Buswell Robert Lopez Donald The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism 2013 p 61 1 Visible Mantra s website Liang Ssucheng A Pictorial History of Chinese Architecture Ed Wilma Fairbank Cambridge Michigan The MIT Press 1984 See Robert M Gimello Chang Shang ying on Wu t ai Shan in Pilgrims and Sacred Sites in China ed Susan Naquin and Chun fang Yu Berkeley University of California Press 1992 pp 89 149 and Steven Heine Visions Divisions Revisions The Encounter Between Iconoclasm and Supernaturalism in Kōan Cases about Mount Wu t ai in The Kōan pp 137 167 Heine Steven 2002 Opening a Mountain Koans of the Zen Masters USA Oxford University Press p 2 ISBN 0 19 513586 5 Williams Paul Mahayana Buddhism The Doctrinal Foundations 2000 p 227 Agui 1988 满洲源流考 the Origin of Manchus Liaoning Nationality Publishing House ISBN 9787805270609 Yan Chongnian 2008 明亡清兴六十年 彩图珍藏版 Zhonghua Book Company ISBN 9787101059472 诗僧寒山与拾得 文殊菩萨普贤菩萨化身 in Chinese Beijing NetEase Buddhism Channel 2014 12 10 韩廷杰 寒山诗赏析 in Chinese Zhejiang 灵山海会期刊社 四川道敎史话 Sichuan Taoist History in Chinese 四川人民出版社 1985 文殊广法天尊 就是文殊 至于观音 改名叫作慈航道人 自称 贫道乃灵鹫山元觉洞燃灯道人 者 前身就是燃灯佛 西方极乐世界的孔雀明王 成了准提道人 当代 in Chinese 人民文学出版社 2009 文殊广法天尊 这与三教中的大师法号习惯带 子 如 广成子 云中子 赤精子 也大异其趣 却不可认为这位 文殊 便真是佛家那位 文殊菩萨 Translation Wenshu Guangfa Tianzun this differs significantly from the usual naming conventions for masters in the Three Religions where they typically include Zi 子 in their titles such as Guangcheng Zi Yunzhong Zi Chijing Zi and others However it should not be assumed that this Wenshu is indeed the same as the Buddhist figure Manjushri Bodhisattva Sources edit Doniger Wendy ed 1993 Purana Perennis Reciprocity and Transformation in Hindu and Jaina Texts State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 1381 0Further reading editHarrison Paul M 2000 Manjusri and the Cult of the Celestial Bodhisattvas Chung Hwa Buddhist Journal 13 157 193External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Manjusri Manjushri at Khandro Net Page dedicated to the Manjusri mantra with several audio versions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Manjushri amp oldid 1185404968, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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