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Sanchi

23°28′45″N 77°44′23″E / 23.479223°N 77.739683°E / 23.479223; 77.739683 Sanchi Stupa is a Buddhist complex, famous for its Great Stupa, on a hilltop at Sanchi Town in Raisen District of the State of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is located, about 23 kilometers from Raisen town, district headquarter and 46 kilometres (29 mi) north-east of Bhopal, capital of Madhya Pradesh.

Sanchi
The Great Stupa at Sanchi, Raisen district, MP.
Sanchi Stupa
Sanchi Stupa
Sanchi Stupa
Sanchi Stupa (Madhya Pradesh)
Sanchi Stupa
Sanchi Stupa (South Asia)
General information
TypeStupa and surrounding buildings
Architectural styleBuddhist, Mauryan
LocationSanchi Town, Raisen district, Madhya Pradesh, India
Town or citySanchi, Raisen district
Country India
Construction started3rd century BCE
Height16.46 m (54.0 ft) (dome of the Great Stupa)
Dimensions
Diameter36.6 m (120 ft) (dome of the Great Stupa)
Official nameBuddhist Monument at Sanchi
CriteriaCultural: i, ii, iii, iv, vi
Reference524
Inscription1989 (13th Session)

The Great Stupa at Sanchi is one of the oldest stone structures in India, and an important monument of Indian Architecture.[1] It was originally commissioned by the Mauryan emperor Ashoka the Great in the 3rd century BCE. Its nucleus was a simple hemispherical brick structure built over the relics of the Buddha. It was crowned by the chatra, a parasol-like structure symbolising high rank, which was intended to honour and shelter the relics. The original construction work of this stupa was overseen by Ashoka, whose wife Devi was the daughter of a merchant of nearby Vidisha. Sanchi was also her birthplace as well as the venue of her and Ashoka's wedding. In the 1st century BCE, four elaborately carved toranas (ornamental gateways) and a balustrade encircling the entire structure were added. The Sanchi Stupa built during the Mauryan period was made of bricks. The composite flourished until the 11th century.

Sanchi is the center of a region with a number of stupas, all within a few miles of Sanchi, including Satdhara (9 km to the W of Sanchi, 40 stupas, the Relics of Sariputra and Mahamoggallana, now enshrined in the new Vihara, were unearthed there), Bhojpur (also called Morel Khurd, a fortified hilltop with 60 stupas) and Andher (respectively 11 km and 17 km SE of Sanchi), as well as Sonari (10 km SW of Sanchi).[2][3] Further south, about 100 km away, is Saru Maru. Bharhut is 300 km to the northeast.

Sanchi Stupa is depicted on the reverse side of the Indian currency note of 200 to signify its importance to Indian cultural heritage.[4]

Transport edit

The nearest airport is Bhopal which is 55 km away from it. Trains are available from Bhopal and Rani Kamlapati to Sanchi railway station. Buses are available from Bhopal and Vidisha.

Overview edit

The monuments at Sanchi today comprise a series of Buddhist monuments starting from the Mauryan Empire period (3rd century BCE), continuing with the Gupta Empire period (5th century CE), and ending around the 12th century CE.[5] It is probably the best preserved group of Buddhist monuments in India.[5] The oldest, and also the largest monument, is the Great Stupa also called Stupa No. 1, initially built under the Mauryans, and adorned with one of the Pillars of Ashoka.[5] During the following centuries, especially under the Shungas and the Satavahanas, the Great Stupa was enlarged and decorated with gates and railings, and smaller stupas were also built in the vicinity, especially Stupa No.2, and Stupa No.3.[5]

Simultaneously, various temple structures were also built, down to the Gupta Empire period and later. Altogether, Sanchi encompasses most of the evolutions of ancient Indian architecture and ancient Buddhist architecture in India, from the early stages of Buddhism and its first artistic expression, to the decline of the religion in the subcontinent.[5]

Mauryan Period (3rd century BCE) edit

 
The Ashoka pillar at Sanchi.
 
Plan of the monuments of the hill of Sanchi, numbered 1 to 50.

The "Great Stupa" at Sanchi is the oldest structure and was originally commissioned by the emperor Ashoka the Great of the Maurya Empire in the 3rd century BCE.[6] Its nucleus was a hemispherical brick structure built over the sacred relics of the Buddha,[6] with a raised terrace encompassing its base, and a railing and stone umbrella on the summit, the chatra, a parasol-like structure symbolizing high rank.[7][8] The original Stupa only had about half the diameter of today's stupa, which is the result of enlargement by the Sungas. It was covered in brick, in contrast to the stones that now cover it.[7]

According to one version of the Mahavamsa, the Buddhist chronicle of Sri Lanka, Ashoka was closely connected to the region of Sanchi. When he was heir-apparent and was journeying as Viceroy to Ujjain, he is said to have halted at Vidisha (10 kilometers from Sanchi), and there married the daughter of a local banker. She was called Devi and later gave Ashoka two sons, Ujjeniya and Mahendra, and a daughter Sanghamitta. After Ashoka's accession, Mahendra headed a Buddhist mission, sent probably under the auspices of the Emperor, to Sri Lanka, and that before setting out to the island he visited his mother at Chetiyagiri near Vidisa, thought to be Sanchi. He was lodged there in a sumptuous vihara or monastery, which she herself is said to have had erected.[9]

Ashoka pillar edit

 
 
 
The capital of the Sanchi pillar of Ashoka, as discovered (left), and simulation of original appearance by Percy Brown (center).[10] It is very similar to the Lion Capital of Ashoka at Sarnath, except for the abacus, here adorned with flame palmettes and facing geese, 250 BCE. Sanchi Archaeological Museum.[11] To the right: depiction of the four lions capital surmounted by a Wheel of Law at Sanchi, Satavahana period, 1st century CE, South gateway of stupa 3.[12]

A pillar of finely polished sandstone, one of the Pillars of Ashoka, was also erected on the side of the main Torana gateway. The bottom part of the pillar still stands. The upper parts of the pillar are at the nearby Sanchi Archaeological Museum. The capital consists in four lions, which probably supported a Wheel of Law,[13] as also suggested by later illustrations among the Sanchi reliefs. The pillar has an Ashokan inscription (Schism Edict)[13] and an inscription in the ornamental Sankha Lipi from the Gupta period.[6] The Ashokan inscription is engraved in early Brahmi characters. It is unfortunately much damaged, but the commands it contains appear to be the same as those recorded in the Sarnath and Kausambi edicts, which together form the three known instances of Ashoka's "Schism Edict". It relates to the penalties for schism in the Buddhist sangha:

... the path is prescribed both for the monks and for the nuns. As long as (my) sons and great-grandsons (shall reign; and) as long as the Moon and the Sun (shall endure), the monk or nun who shall cause divisions in the Sangha, shall be compelled to put on white robes and to reside apart. For what is my desire? That the Sangha may be united and may long endure.

— Edict of Ashoka on the Sanchi pillar.[14]

The pillar, when intact, was about 42 feet in height and consisted of round and slightly tapering monolithic shaft, with bell-shaped capital surmounted by an abacus and a crowning ornament of four lions, set back to back, the whole finely finished and polished to a remarkable luster from top to bottom. The abacus is adorned with four flame palmette designs separated one from the other by pairs of geese, symbolical perhaps of the flock of the Buddha's disciples. The lions from the summit, though now quite disfigured, still testify to the skills of the sculptors.[15]

The sandstone out of which the pillar is carved came from the quarries of Chunar several hundred miles away, implying that the builders were able to transport a block of stone over forty feet in length and weighing almost as many tons over such a distance. They probably used water transport, using rafts during the rainy season up until the Ganges, Jumna and Betwa rivers.[15]

Temple 40 edit

 
Sanchi Temple 40 was a 3rd-century BCE temple, one of the first known in India, constructed around the same time as the core of the Great Stupa.
 
Conjectural reconstruction of the original timber-built Temple 40, burnt down in the 2nd century BCE.

Another structure which has been dated, at least partially, to the 3rd century BCE, is the so-called Temple 40, one of the first instances of free-standing temples in India.[16] Temple 40 has remains of three different periods, the earliest period dating to the Maurya age, which probably makes it contemporary to the creation of the Great Stupa. An inscription even suggests it might have been established by Bindusara, the father of Ashoka.[17] The original 3rd century BCE temple was built on a high rectangular stone platform, 26.52×14×3.35 metres, with two flights of stairs to the east and the west. It was an apsidal hall, probably made of timber. It was burnt down sometime in the 2nd century BCE.[18][19]

Later, the platform was enlarged to 41.76×27.74 metres and re-used to erect a pillared hall with fifty columns (5×10) of which stumps remain. Some of these pillars have inscriptions of the 2nd century BCE. In the 7th or 8th century a small shrine was established in one corner of the platform, re-using some of the pillars and putting them in their present position.[20][19]

Maurya structures and decorations at Sanchi
(3rd century BCE)
 
Approximate reconstitution of the Great Stupa with its pillar of Ashoka, under the Mauryas c. 260 BCE.

Shunga period (2nd century BCE) edit

On the basis of Ashokavadana, it is presumed that the stupa may have been vandalized at one point sometime in the 2nd century BCE, an event some have related to the rise of the Shunga emperor Pushyamitra Shunga who overtook the Mauryan Empire as an army general. It has been suggested that Pushyamitra may have destroyed the original stupa, and his son Agnimitra rebuilt it.[21] The original brick stupa was covered with stone during the Shunga period.

Given the rather decentralized and fragmentary nature of the Shunga state, with many cities actually issuing their own coinage, as well as the relative dislike of the Shungas for Buddhism, some authors argue that the constructions of that period in Sanchi cannot really be called "Shunga". They were not the result of royal sponsorship, in contrast with what happened during the Mauryas, and the dedications at Sanchi were private or collective, rather than the result of royal patronage.[22]

The style of the Shunga period decorations at Sanchi bear a close similarity to those of Bharhut, as well as the peripheral balustrades at the Mahabodhi Temple in Bodh Gaya.

 
The Great Stupa under the Sungas. The Sungas nearly doubled the diameter of the initial stupa, encasing it in stone, and built a balustrade and a railing around it.

Great Stupa (No 1) edit

During the later rule of the Shunga, the stupa was expanded with stone slabs to almost twice its original size. The dome was flattened near the top and crowned by three superimposed parasols within a square railing. With its many tiers it was a symbol of the dharma, the Wheel of the Law. The dome was set on a high circular drum meant for circumambulation, which could be accessed via a double staircase. A second stone pathway at ground level was enclosed by a stone balustrade. The railings around Stupa 1 do not have artistic reliefs. These are only slabs, with some dedicatory inscriptions. These elements are dated to circa 150 BCE,[23] or 175–125 BCE.[24] Although the railings are made up of stone, they are copied from a wooden prototype, and as John Marshall has observed the joints between the coping stones have been cut at a slant, as wood is naturally cut, and not vertically as stone should be cut. Besides the short records of the donors written on the railings in Brahmi script, there are two later inscriptions on the railings added during the time of the Gupta Period.[25] Some reliefs are visible on the stairway balustrade, but they are probably slightly later than those at Stupa No2,[26] and are dated to 125–100 BCE.[24] Some authors consider that these reliefs, rather crude and without obvious Buddhist connotations, are the oldest reliefs of all Sanchi, slightly older even than the reliefs of Sanchi Stupa No.2.[24]

Great Stupa (No1). Shunga period structures and decorations
(2nd century BCE)
 
Great Stupa
(Stupa expansion and balustrades only are Shunga).
Undecorated ground railings dated to approximately 150 BCE.[23] Some reliefs on the stairway balustrade.

Stairway balustrade reliefs

Stupa No. 2: the first Buddhist reliefs edit

 
Mason's marks in Kharoshti indicate that craftsmen from the north-west were responsible for foreign reliefs of Stupa No. 2.[27] This medallion was made circa 115 BCE.[28]

The stupas which seem to have been commissioned during the rule of the Shungas are the Second and then the Third stupas (but not the highly decorated gateways, which are from the following Satavahana period, as known from inscriptions), following the ground balustrade and stone casing of the Great Stupa (Stupa No 1). The reliefs are dated to circa 115 BCE for the medallions, and 80 BCE for the pillar carvings,[28] slightly before the reliefs of Bharhut for the earliest, with some reworks down to the 1st century CE.[23][28]

 
Sunga period railings were initially blank (left: Great Stupa), and only started to be decorated circa 115 BCE with Stupa No.2 (right).[29][30]

Stupa No. 2 was established later than the Great Stupa, but it is probably displaying the earliest architectural ornaments.[26] For the first time, clearly Buddhist themes are represented, particularly the four events in the life of the Buddha that are: the Nativity, the Enlightenment, the First Sermon and the Decease.[31]

The decorations of Stupa No. 2 have been called "the oldest extensive stupa decoration in existence",[29] and this Stupa is considered as the birthplace of Jataka illustrations.[30] The reliefs at Stupa No.2 bear mason marks in Kharoshthi, as opposed to the local Brahmi script.[27] This seems to imply that foreign workers from the north-west (from the region of Gandhara, where Kharoshthi was the current script) were responsible for the motifs and figures that can be found on the railings of the stupa.[27] Foreigners from Gandhara are otherwise known to have visited the region around the same time: in 115 BCE, the embassy of Heliodorus from Indo-Greek king Antialkidas to the court of the Sungas king Bhagabhadra in nearby Vidisha is recorded, in which Heliodorus established the Heliodorus pillar in a dedication to Vāsudeva. This would indicate that relations had improved at that time, and that people traveled between the two realms.[32]

Stupa No. 2. Shunga structures and decorations
(end of 2nd century BCE)
 
Stupa No. 2
Shunga period, but mason's marks in Kharoshti point to craftsmen from the north-west (region of Gandhara) for the earliest reliefs (circa 115 BCE).[27][28][23]

Stupa No. 3 edit

Stupa No. 3 was built during the time of the Shungas, who also built the railing around it as well as the staircase. The Relics of Sariputra and Mahamoggallana, the disciples of the Buddha are said to have been placed in Stupa No. 3, and relics boxes were excavated tending to confirm this.[34]

The reliefs on the railings are said to be slightly later than those of Stupa No. 2.[24]

The single torana gateway oriented to the south is not Shunga, and was built later under the Satavahanas, probably circa 50 BCE.[24]

Stupa No. 3. Shunga structures and decorations
(2nd century BCE)
 
Stupa No. 3
(Stupa and balustrades only are Shunga).

Sunga Pillar edit

 
Sunga pillar No25 with own capital on the side.

Pillar 25 at Sanchi is also attributed to the Sungas, in the 2nd–1st century BCE, and is considered as similar in design to the Heliodorus pillar, locally called Kham Baba pillar, dedicated by Heliodorus, the ambassador to the Indo-Greek king Antialkidas, in nearby Vidisha c. 100 BCE.[36] That it belongs to about the period of the Sunga, is clear alike from its design and from the character of the surface dressing.

The height of the pillar, including the capital, is 15 ft, its diameter at the base 1 ft. 4 in. Up to a height of 4 ft. 6 in. the shaft is octagonal; above that, sixteen-sided. In the octagonal portion all the facets are flat, but in the upper section the alternate facets are fluted, the eight other sides being produced by a concave chamfering of the arrises of the octagon. This method of finishing off the arris at the point of transition between the two sections are features characteristic of the second and first centuries BCE. The west side of the shaft is split off, but the tenon at the top, to which the capital was mortised, is still preserved. The capital is of the usual bell-shaped Persepolitan type, with lotus leaves falling over the shoulder of the bell. Above this is a circular cable necking, then a second circular necking relieved by a bead and lozenge pattern, and, finally, a deep square abacus adorned with a railing in relief. The crowning feature, probably a lion, has disappeared.[36]

Satavahana period (1st century BCE – 1st century CE) edit

Satavahana gateways (from 50 - 0 BCE)
 
The southern gateway of the Great Stupa (Stupa 1) at Sanchi was, according to an inscription (see arrow), donated under the rule of "King Satakarni", probably Satakarni II.[37]
 
The inscription appears on the relief of a stupa at the center of the top architrave, at the rear. It is written in three lines in early Brahmi script over the dome of the stupa in this relief.[38]
Dated circa 50 BCE- 0 CE.

The Satavahana Empire under Satakarni II conquered eastern Malwa from the Shungas.[39] This gave the Satavahanas access to the Buddhist site of Sanchi, in which they are credited with the building of the decorated gateways around the original Mauryan Empire and Sunga stupas.[40] From the 1st century BCE, the highly decorated gateways were built. The balustrade and the gateways were also colored.[6] Later gateways/toranas are generally dated to the 1st century CE.[26]

The Siri-Satakani inscription in the Brahmi script records the gift of one of the top architraves of the Southern Gateway by the artisans of the Satavahana king Satakarni II:[37]

𑀭𑀸𑀜𑁄 𑀲𑀺𑀭𑀺 𑀲𑀸𑀢𑀓𑀡𑀺𑀲 (Rāño Siri Sātakaṇisa)
𑀆𑀯𑁂𑀲𑀡𑀺𑀲 𑀯𑀸𑀲𑀺𑀣𑀻𑀧𑀼𑀢𑀲 (āvesaṇisa vāsitḥīputasa)
𑀆𑀦𑀁𑀤𑀲 𑀤𑀸𑀦𑀁 (Ānaṁdasa dānaṁ)

"Gift of Ananda, the son of Vasithi, the foreman of the artisans of rajan Siri Satakarni"

— Inscription of the Southern Gateway of the Great Stupa[38]

There are some uncertainties about the date and the identity of the Satakarni in question, as a king Satakarni is mentioned in the Hathigumpha inscription which is sometimes dated to the 2nd century BCE. Also, several Satavahana kings used the name "Satakarni", which complicates the matter. Usual dates given for the gateways range from 50 BCE to the 1st century CE, and the builder of the earliest gateways is generally considered to be Satakarni II, who ruled in 50-25 BCE.[39][26] Another early Satavahana monument is known, Cave No.19 of king Kanha (100-70 BCE) at the Nasik Caves, which is much less developed artistically than the Sanchi toranas.

Material and carving technique edit

From ivory to stone carving under the Satavahanas
 
Pompeii Lakshmi, 1st century CE.
 
Yashini, East Gateway, Sanchi.

Although made of stone, the torana gateways were carved and constructed in the manner of wood and the gateways were covered with narrative sculptures. It has also been suggested that the stone reliefs were made by ivory carvers from nearby Vidisha, and an inscription on the Southern Gateway of the Great Stupa ("The Worship of the Bodhisattva's hair") was dedicated by the Guild of Ivory Carvers of Vidisha.[41][42]

 
Inscription "Vedisakehi daṃtakārehi rupakaṃmaṃ kataṃ" (𑀯𑁂𑀤𑀺𑀲𑀓𑁂𑀨𑀺 𑀤𑀁𑀢𑀓𑀸𑀭𑁂𑀨𑀺 𑀭𑀼𑀧𑀓𑀁𑀫𑀁 𑀓𑀢𑀁, "Ivory workers from Vidisha have done the carving").[43]

The inscription reads: "Vedisakehi damtakārehi rupakammam katam" meaning "The ivory-workers from Vidisha have done the carving".[44][45] Some of the Begram ivories or the "Pompeii Lakshmi" give an indication of the kind of ivory works that could have influenced the carvings at Sanchi or vice-versa.

The reliefs show scenes from the life of the Buddha integrated with everyday events that would be familiar to the onlookers and so make it easier for them to understand the Buddhist creed as relevant to their lives. At Sanchi and most other stupas the local population donated money for the embellishment of the stupa to attain spiritual merit. There was no direct royal patronage. Devotees, both men and women, who donated money towards a sculpture would often choose their favourite scene from the life of the Buddha and then have their names inscribed on it. This accounts for the random repetition of particular episodes on the stupa (Dehejia 1992).

On these stone carvings the Buddha was never depicted as a human figure, due to aniconism in Buddhism. Instead the artists chose to represent him by certain attributes, such as the horse on which he left his father's home, his footprints, or a canopy under the bodhi tree at the point of his enlightenment. The human body was thought to be too confining for the Buddha.

Architecture: evolution of the load-bearing pillar capital edit

Evolution of the Indian load-bearing pillar capital, down to 1st century Sanchi
 
Mauryan capital (Pataliputra capital)
4th-3rd c. BCE
 
Sarnath capital,
Sarnath, c.3rd-1st c. BCE
 
Bharhut capital
2nd c. BCE
 
Sanchi lion capital
1st c. BCE
 
Sanchi elephant capital
1st c. BCE/CE
 
Sanchi Yakshas capital
1st c. CE

Similarities have been found in the designs of the capitals of various areas of northern India from the time of Ashoka to the time of the Satavahanas at Sanchi: particularly between the Pataliputra capital at the Mauryan Empire capital of Pataliputra (3rd century BCE), the pillar capitals at the Sunga Empire Buddhist complex of Bharhut (2nd century BCE), and the pillar capitals of the Satavahanas at Sanchi (1st centuries BCE/CE).[46]

The earliest known example in India, the Pataliputra capital (3rd century BCE) is decorated with rows of repeating rosettes, ovolos and bead and reel mouldings, wave-like scrolls and side volutes with central rosettes, around a prominent central flame palmette, which is the main motif. These are quite similar to Classical Greek designs, and the capital has been described as quasi-Ionic.[47][48] Greek influence,[49] as well as Persian Achaemenid influence have been suggested.[50]

The Sarnath capital is a pillar capital discovered in the archaeological excavations at the ancient Buddhist site of Sarnath.[51] The pillar displays Ionic volutes and palmettes.[52][53] It has been variously dated from the 3rd century BCE during the Mauryan Empire period,[54][51] to the 1st century BCE, during the Sunga Empire period.[52] One of the faces shows a galopping horse carrying a rider, while the other face shows an elephant and its mahaut.[52]

The pillar capital in Bharhut, dated to the 2nd century BCE during the Sunga Empire period, also incorporates many of these characteristics,[55][56] with a central anta capital with many rosettes, beads-and-reels, as well as a central palmette design.[46][57][58] Importantly, recumbent animals (lions, symbols of Buddhism) were added, in the style of the Pillars of Ashoka.

The Sanchi pillar capital is keeping the general design, seen at Bharhut a century earlier, of recumbent lions grouped around a central square-section post, with the central design of a flame palmette, which started with the Pataliputra capital. However the design of the central post is now simpler, with the flame palmette taking all the available room.[59] Elephants were later used to adorn the pillar capitals (still with the central palmette design), and lastly, Yakshas (here the palmette design disappears).

Main themes of the reliefs edit

 
The Great Stupa at the time of the Satavahanas.

Jatakas edit

Various Jatakas are illustrated. These are Buddhist moral tales relating edifying events of the former lives of the Buddha as he was still a Bodhisattva. Among the Jatakas being depicted are the Syama Jataka, the Vessantara Jataka and the Mahakapi Jataka.

Miracles edit

Numerous miracles made by the Buddha are recorded. Among them:

  • The miracle of the Buddha walking on water.[60]
  • The miracle of fire and wood

Temptation of the Buddha edit

Numerous scene refer to the temptation of the Buddha, when he was confronted with the seductive daughters of Mara and with his army of demons. Having resisted the temptations of Mara, the Buddha finds enlightenment. Other similar scenes on the same subject:

  • Temptation of the Buddha with Mara's army fleeing.
  • Enlightenment of the Buddha with Mara's army fleeing.[61]
 
Temptation of the Buddha, with the Buddha on the left (symbolized by his throne only) surrounded by rejoicing devotees, Mara and his daughters (center), and the demons of Mara fleeing (right).[62]

War over the Buddha's Relics edit

The southern gate of Stupa No1, thought to be oldest and main entrance to the stupa,[63] has several depictions of the story of the Buddha's relics, starting with the War over the Relics.

After the death of the Buddha, the Mallakas of Kushinagar wanted to keep his ashes, but the other kingdoms also wanting their part went to war and besieged the city of Kushinagar. Finally, an agreement was reached, and the Buddha's cremation relics were divided among 8 royal families and his disciples.[64][65] This famous view shows warfare techniques at the time of the Satavahanas, as well as a view of the city of Kushinagar of the Mallakas, which has been relied on for the understanding of ancient Indian cities.

Other narrative panels related to the War over the Buddha's Relics at Sanchi are:

  • "The King of the Mallakas bringing the relics of the Buddha to Kushinagara", right after the death of the Buddha, before the War itself. In this relief, the king is seen seated on an elephant, holding the relics on his head.[66]
  • "The siege of Kushinagara by the seven kings", another relief on the same subject.
 
War over the Buddha's Relics, kept by the city of Kushinagar, South Gate, Stupa no.1, Sanchi.[67]

Removal of the relics by Ashoka edit

According to Buddhist legend, a few centuries later, the relics would be removed from the eight guardian kingdoms by King Ashoka, and enshrined into 84,000 stupas.[64][68][69] Ashoka obtained the ashes from seven of the guardian kingdoms, but failed to take the ashes from the Nagas at Ramagrama who were too powerful, and were able to keep them. This scene is depicted in one of the transversal portions of the southern gateway of Stupa No1 at Sanchi. Ashoka is shown on the right in his chariot and his army, the stupa with the relics is in the center, and the Naga kings with their serpent hoods at the extreme left under the trees.[70]

 
King Ashoka visits Ramagrama, to take relics of the Buddha from the Nagas, but he failed, the Nagas being too powerful. Southern gateway, Stupa 1, Southern Gateway, Sanchi.[71]

Building of the Bodh Gaya temple by Ashoka edit

 
Ashoka in grief, supported by his two queens, in a relief at Sanchi. Stupa 1, Southern gateway. The identification with Ashoka is confirm by a similar relief from Kanaganahalli inscribed "Raya Asoko".[72][73][71]
 
Bodhi tree temple depicted in Sanchi, Stupa 1, Southern gateway.

Ashoka went to Bodh Gaya to visit the Bodhi Tree under which the Buddha had his enlightenment, as described his Major Rock Edict No.8. However Ashoka was profoundly grieved when he discovered that the sacred pipal tree was not properly being taken care of and dying out due to the neglect of Queen Tiṣyarakṣitā.[74]

As a consequence, Ashoka endeavoured to take care of the Bodhi Tree, and built a temple around it. This temple became the center of Bodh Gaya. A sculpture at Sanchi, southern gateway of Stupa No1, shows Ashoka in grief being supported by his two Queens. Then the relief above shows the Bodhi Tree prospering inside its new temple. Numerous other sculptures at Sanchi show scenes of devotion towards the Bodhi Tree, and the Bodhi Tree inside its temple at Bodh Gaya.[74]

Other versions of the relief depicting the temple for the Bodhi Tree are visible at Sanchi, such as the Temple for the Bodhi Tree (Eastern Gateway).

Foreign devotees edit

 
Foreign devotees and musicians on the Northern Gateway of Stupa I.[75]

Some of the friezes of Sanchi also show devotees in Greek attire, wearing kilted tunics and some of them a Greek piloi hat.[76][77][75] They are also sometimes described as Sakas, although the historical period seems too early for their presence in Central India, and the two pointed hats seem too short to be Scythian.[75] The official notice at Sanchi describes "Foreigners worshiping Stupa".[78] The men are depicted with short curly hair, often held together with a headband of the type commonly seen on Greek coins. The clothing too is Greek, complete with tunics, capes and sandals, typical of the Greek travelling costume.[79] The musical instruments are also quite characteristic, such as the "thoroughly Greek" double flute called aulos.[75][80] Also visible are carnyx-like horns.[80]

The actual participation of Yavanas/Yonas (Greek donors)[81] to the construction of Sanchi is known from three inscriptions made by self-declared Yavana donors:

  • The clearest of these reads "Setapathiyasa Yonasa danam" ("Gift of the Yona of Setapatha"),[82][83] Setapatha being an uncertain city, possibly a location near Nasik,[84] a place where other dedications by Yavanas are known, in cave No.17 of the Nasik Caves complex, and on the pillars of the Karla Caves not far away.
  • A second similar inscription on a pillar reads: "[Sv]etapathasa (Yona?)sa danam", with probably the same meaning, ("Gift of the Yona of Setapatha").[84][85]
  • The third inscription, on two adjacent pavement slabs reads "Cuda yo[vana]kasa bo silayo" ("Two slabs of Cuda, the Yonaka").[86][84]

Around 113 BCE, Heliodorus, an ambassador of the Indo-Greek ruler Antialcidas, is known to have dedicated a pillar, the Heliodorus pillar, around 5 miles from Sanchi, in the village of Vidisha.

Another rather similar foreigner is also depicted in Bharhut, the Bharhut Yavana (c. 100 BCE), also wearing a tunic and a royal headband in the manner of a Greek king, and displaying a Buddhist triratna on his sword.[87][88] Another one can be seen in the region of Odisha, in the Udayagiri and Khandagiri Caves.

Northwestern foreigners at Sanchi

Aniconism edit

 
Aniconism in Miracle at Kapilavastu: King Suddhodana praying as his son the Buddha rises in the air, praised by celestial beings (but only his path, the horizontal slab in the air, is visible).[90]

In all these scenes, the Buddha is never represented, being absent altogether even from scenes of his life where he is playing a central role: in the Miracle of the Buddha walking on the river Nairanjana he is just represented by his path on the water;[91] in the Procession of king Suddhodana from Kapilavastu, he walks in the air at the end of the procession, but his presence is only suggested by people turning their heads upward toward the symbol of his path.[91]

 
"The promenade of the Buddha", or Chankrama, used to depict the Buddha in motion in Buddhist aniconism.

In one of the reliefs of the Miracle at Kapilavastu, King Suddhodana is seen praying as his son the Buddha rises in the air. The Buddha praised is praised by celestial beings, but only his path is visible in the form of a slab hanging in middle air, called a chankrama or "promenade".[90]

Otherwise, the presence of the Buddha is symbolized by an empty throne, as in the scene of Bimbisara with his royal cortege issuing from the city of Rajagriha to visit the Buddha.[60] Similar scenes would later appear in the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara, but this time with representations of the Buddha. John Marshall detailed every panel in his seminal work "A Guide to Sanchi".[92]

This anoconism is relation to the image of the Buddha could be in conformity with an ancient Buddhist prohibition against showing the Buddha himself in human form, known from the Sarvastivada vinaya (rules of the early Buddhist school of the Sarvastivada): ""Since it is not permitted to make an image of the Buddha's body, I pray that the Buddha will grant that I can make an image of the attendant Bodhisattva. Is that acceptable?" The Buddha answered: "You may make an image of the Bodhisattava"".[93]

The Gateways or Toranas edit

The gateways depict various scenes of the life of the Buddha, as well as events after his death, in particular the War of the Relics and the efforts of emperor Ashoka to spread the Buddhist faith.

Stupa 1 Southern Gateway edit

The Southern Gateway of Stupa No1 is thought to be oldest and main entrance to the stupa.[94] The narrative friezes of this gateway put great emphasis on the relics of the Buddha, and on the role of Ashoka in spreading the Buddhist faith. This gateway is one of the two which were reconstructed by Major Cole in 1882–83. The whole of the right jamb and half of the left are new and blank, as well as the west end of the lowest architrave, the east end of the middle architrave, and the six vertical uprights between the architraves.[95]

Southern Gateway
("Great Stupa" No1, Sanchi. 1st century BCE.)
  The Southern Gateway of Stupa 1. The Southern Gateway of Stupa 1 is one of the four richly carved gateways or toranas, surrounding Stupa 1, the "Great Stupa". It is the main one as it was erected in front of the steps by which the terrace was ascended. The Southern Gateway was also the first to be erected. Then followed, in chronological order, the Northern, the Eastern and the Western, their succession in each case being demonstrated by the style of their carvings. It is probable, however, that not more than three or four decades intervened between the building of the Southern and Western gateways.

A few of the surfaces of the Southern Gateway are undecorated or lost. Like the other gateways, the Southern Gateway is composed of two square pillars surmounted by capitals, which in their turn support a superstructure of three architraves with volute ends.[96]

Architraves
 

Front architraves

 

Rear architraves

Some material was lost over two thousand years, and the restoration had to make up for lost elements with some blank slabs. The whole of the right jamb and half of the left are new, as well as the west end of the lowest architrave, the east end of the middle architrave, and the six vertical uprights between the architraves. When the gateway was restored, the top and the lowest lintels appear to have been reversed by mistake, since the more important sculptures on them now face the stupa instead of facing outwards.[95]
 

Front middle architrave

King Ashoka visits Ramagrama. King Ashoka visited Ramagrama, to take relics of the Buddha from the Nagas, but he failed, the Nagas being too powerful.

After the death of the Buddha, his relics were originally divided into eight portions, and shared between eight princes. Each of the princes constructed a stupa at or near his capital city, within which the respective portion of the ashes was enshrined.[97] These eight stupas were erected at Rajagriha, Vaisali, Kapilavastu, Allakappa, Ramagrama, Vothadvipa, Pava and Kusinara.[98]
About two centuries later, in order to spread the Buddhist faith, Asoka endeavored to gather the eight shares of the relics to divide them up, and distribute them among 84,000 stupas, which he himself erected. He only obtained seven of these portions: he failed to secure the relics of Ramagrama in the Nepal Tarai, in face of the resolute opposition of their devoted guardians, the Nagas.[95]
Here, in the centre of the architrave, is depicted the stupa of Ramagrama. Above the stupa are heavenly figures bearing garlands in their hands. To the right, the Emperor Asoka is approaching in his chariot, accompanied by a retinue of elephants, horsemen and footmen; and to the left, the Nagas and Nagis, in human form with serpent hoods, worshiping at the stupa, bringing offerings, or emerging from the waters of a lotus-pond.[95] On the projecting end of this architrave is an elephant in a lotus-pond with mahaut and females on its back, and a second female scrambling up behind; in the background, a pavilion with female figures looking out. To what particular incident this relief refers, is not known.[95]
An inscription on the dome of the stupa records that the architrave was the gift of one Balamitra, pupil of "Ayachuda (Arya-Kshudra), the preacher of the Law".

 

Rear top architrave

The seven Buddhas.

Six Buddhas of the past and Gautama Buddha, with his Bodhi Tree at the extreme right.In the central section are three stupas alternating with four trees with thrones in front of them, adored by figures both human and divine. These represent the six Buddhas of the past (namely : Vipassi, Sikhi, Vessabhu, Kakusandha, Konagamana and Kaasapa) and Gautama Buddha. Three are symbolized by their stupas, and four by the trees under which each respectively attained enlightenment. The tree on the extreme right is the pipal tree of Gautama Buddha and the one next to it is the banyan tree of Kasyapa Buddha. The identification of the others is less certain.

 
The Siri-Satakani inscription

The inscription on the dome of the central stupa reads "L. 1. rano Siri Satakanisa/ L. 2. avesanisa vasithiputasa/ L. 3. Anamdasa danam" ("Gift of Anamda, the son of Vdsithi (Vdsishthi ), the foreman of the artisans (avesanin) of rajan Siri-Satakani).[95] This inscription has been decisive in attributing the construction of the gateways to the time of the Satavahana Empire.
On each of the projecting ends of this lintel is a horse with attendants and royal umbrella, issuing from a city gate. Possibly it is Kanthaka, the horse of Gautama, when he was going forth from the city of Kapilavastu.[95]
When the gateway was restored, this lintel (together with the bottom one) appears to have been reversed by mistake, since the more important sculptures on them now face the stupa instead of facing outwards.[95]

 

Rear bottom architrave
 
Full architrave with wings

War over the Buddha's Relics.
 
This Sanchi relief permitted this reconstruction of the city of Kushinagara circa 500 BCE.

The Buddha died in Kushinagara, the capital of the Mallakas, who initially tried to keep all the relics of the Buddha for themselves. A war erupted in which the chiefs of seven other clans waged war against the Mallakas of Kushinara for the possession of the Buddha's relics. In the centre of the architrave, the siege of Kushinara is in progress; to right and left, the victorious chiefs are departing in chariots and on elephants, with the relics borne on the heads of the latter.[95]
The scene is carried through on to the projecting ends of the architrave, and the seated elephants on the intervening false capitals are clearly intended to be part and parcel of the scene.[95][67]
When the gateway was restored, this lintel (together with the top one) appears to have been reversed by mistake, since the more important sculptures on them now face the stupa instead of facing outwards.[95]

Pillar capitals
 

Left

 

Right

The pillars of the Southern Gateway feature lions in the manner of the Pillars of Ashoka. They are the only pillar capitals of the Sanchi complex to do so.
Pillars
External faces
    The left external face consists in a foliage scroll inhabited by numerous animals and garlands, as well as an amorous couple repeated several time. Of the right pillar external face, nothing remains, and it has been left blank by the reconstitution under Marshall.
Left pillar, Front face
Top panel   Ashoka with his two Queens visiting the Deer Park. A Persepolitan column, rising from a stepped base and supporting a wheel with thirty-two spokes and an equal number of triratna devices on its outer rim. This is the dharmachakra or "Wheel of the Law", the emblem of the Buddha's first sermon. On either side of the wheel are celestial figures with garlands; below them are four groups of worshipers, and below the latter, deers, to indicate the spot where the first sermon was preached, namely, in the Deer Park (Mrigadava) near Benares. In each of the groups of worshipers is a king with attendant females, the same figures apparently being repeated four times. They probably represent Asoka with his two queens visiting the Deer Park during his pilgrimage to the holy places of Buddhism.[98]
2nd panel   Procession of king Ashoka on his chariot. The Emperor Asoka in his chariot with his retinue around.[98]
3rd panel   The Cortège of Mara. According to Marshall, relating the panel to the next one on the inner face, deities are seen on foot, on horseback and on elephants, hastening to do homage to the Bodhisattva's locks.[98]
Left pillar, Inner face
Top panel   Bodhi tree temple of Bodh Gaya built by Ashoka. The temple around the Bodhi Tree (the pipal tree beneath which the Buddha had attained enlightenment) was erected by Asoka himself. This Temple is hypaethral. Here the sanctity of the tree is indicated by umbrellas and garlands, and on the throne inside the shrine are three triratna symbols.[98]
2nd panel   Ashoka in grief, supported by his two Queens. Ashoka is in grief as he saw the pipal tree of the Buddha being neglected by the jealous Queen Tishyarakshita. He is so shocked that he has to be supported by two of his wives. He would thereafter build a temple around the tree, seen in the panel above, and which would become the sacred temple of Bodh Gaya.[99][98]
3rd panel   Worship of the Bodhisattva's hair. In the lowest panel of the inner face 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.[98]

This particular relief was dedicated by the Guild of Ivory Carvers of Vidisha (horizontal inscription on the lintel), suggesting that a part of the gateways at least was made by ivory carvers.[41] At the least, the delicacy of workmanship and spatial effect attained in the panel of the Trayastrimsa heaven is particularly striking, and makes it understandable that, as the inscription on it records, it was the work of ivory-carvers of Vidisha. The inscription reads: 'Vedisehi dantakarehi rupadamam katam' meaning "The ivory-carvers from Vidisha have done the carving".[44][100] Some of the Begram ivories or the "Pompeii Lakshmi" give an indication of the kind of ivory works that could have influenced the carvings at Sanchi.

Left pillar, Rear face
Unique panel   To the left of the panel, a royal figure is seated beneath a canopy, holding a female by the hand; in the middle, another female seated on a low stool; to the right, two other figures standing, with a child behind bearing a garland (?). At the back of them is a plantain tree, and above, a Chaitya's window with an umbrella on either side. The meaning of this scene is uncertain.[98]
Right pillar
Blank. All reliefs and inscriptions lost.


Stupa 1 Northern Gateway edit

The Northern Gateway is the best preserved of all the gateways, and was the second to be erected. The numerous panels relate various events of the life of the Buddha. Only one atypical panel (Right pillar, Inner face/ Top panel) shows Foreigners making a dedication at the Southern Gateway of Stupa No 1.

Northern Gateway
("Great Stupa" No1, Sanchi. 1st century BCE.)
  The Northern Gateway of Stupa 1. The Northern Gateway of Stupa 1 is one of the four richly carved gateways or toranas, surrounding Stupa 1, the "Great Stupa". The Northern Gateway was the second to be erected.

The best preserved of all four gateways is the Northern one, which still retains most of its ornamental figures and gives a good idea of the original appearance of all the gateways. Like the other gateways, the Northern Gateway is composed of two square pillars surmounted by capitals, which in their turn support a superstructure of three architraves with volute ends.[96]

Architraves
 

Front architraves

 

Rear architraves

The architraves are all almost intact. They are crowned by two large decorated Shrivatsa symbols in the round, symbols of Buddhism, as well as the remnants of a Dharmachakra (Wheel of the Law) at the center. The lintels have seated lions and Yakshinis, also in the round, at their ends.
 

Rear central architrave

 
The actual "Diamond throne" at Bodh Gaya, built by Ashoka c. 260 BCE.

Temptation of the Buddha with Mara and his daughters, and the demons of Mara fleeing. Towards the left end of the panel is the pipal tree at Bodh Gaya with an umbrella and streamers above, and, in front, the diamond throne (Vajrasana) of the Buddha, whereon he sat when he withstood the temptations and threats of Mara, the Satan of Buddhism, and when he attained to Buddhahood. Human and celestial beings are adoring it. The figure to the left of it is perhaps Sujata, bringing the meal which she prepared for Gautama before he began his last meditation prior to his enlightenment. Near the middle of the panel is Mara, seated on a throne with attendants around, and advancing from him towards the throne are his daughters, who sought by their blandishments to seduce Gautama from his purpose. On his other side, i.e., in the right half of the panel, are the hosts of Mara's demons, personifying the vices, the passions and the fears of mankind. The vigor and humor with which these fantastic beings are portrayed is very striking, and far more forceful than anything of the kind produced by the artists of the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara.[101]
See also Mara's Defeat (in "The Life of Buddha").

Pillar capitals
 

Left

 

Right

Elephants facing the four directions decorate the top of the gateway pillars and support the architraves. They are gathered around a central pillar of square section decorated with a large flame palmette design. The capitals are flanked by a dancing Yakshini under foliage.
Pillars
External faces
 

Left

 

Right

Left. The external side of the left pillar (facing the east) doesn't have narrative reliefs, but only displays Buddhist symbols as well as intricate vegetal designs. The external face is separated vertically in three bands, the central band consisting in a superposition of numerous flame palmettes (nine in total), and the two external bands consisting in a superposition of hooks holdings garlands. The bottom of the pillar face has two footprints of the Buddha with a wheel of the Law on their sole. The pillar face is crowned by a decorated Shrivatsa symbol.[102]

Right. The external face on the right side has the same background decoration, with the three vertical bands and the superposition of flame palmettes, and hooks holdings garlands, but lacks the bottom and top symbols of the Buddha footprint and the decorated Shrivatsa.

Left pillar, Front face
(Most of the scenes on this face appear to relate to Sravasti.)
Top panel  
 
The Buddha in levitation performing the Miracle of Sravasti, Gandhara, 100-200 CE.

Great Miracle at Sravasti (also called Mango Tree Miracle, when the Buddha walks in the air).
In the center, a mango tree with the throne of the Buddha in front (the Buddha, of course, not being illustrated). Round the Buddha is a circle of his followers bringing garlands to the tree or in attitudes of adoration. It was beneath a mango tree that, according to the Pali texts, Buddha performed the great miracle at Sravasti, when he walked in the air, and flames broke from his shoulders and streams of water from his feet. But here there is no definite indication of the miracle.[102]

In the anthropomorphic (non-aniconic) Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara, the Buddha would simply be shown in his human form, rising slightly in the air, with flames springing from his feet and water emanating from his shoulders.

2nd panel   Jetavana of Sravasti, showing the three preferred residences of the Buddha.
 
Jetavana story, Bharhut, 2nd century BCE.

The Jetavana at Sravasti, showing the three favourite residences of the Buddha: the Gandhakuti, the Kosambakuti and the Karorikuti, with the throne of the Buddha in the front of each. The Jetavana garden was presented to the Buddha by the rich banker Anathapindika, who purchased it for as many gold pieces as would cover the surface of the ground. Hence, the foreground of the relief is shown covered with ancient Indian coins ( karshapanas ), just as it is in the similar relief at Bharhut, where the details of the coins are more in evidence.[102]

3rd panel   Aerial promenade of the Buddha. Presumably, the long band on top of the heads of devotees is the promenade the Buddha is walking on. The long open pavilion (mandapa) calls to mind the one at Sravasti, which is portrayed in the Bharhut relief.[102]
4th panel   Procession of King Prasenajit of Kosala leaving Sravasti to meet the Buddha. A royal procession issuing from a city gate, probably Prasenajit of Kosala going forth from Sravasti to meet the Buddha.[102]
5th panel   Paradise of Indra (nandana). The meaning of this scene, which is analogous to several others on the gateways, is not clear. Perhaps, like the scene on the gateways of

Stupa No3, it may represent the Paradise of Indra (nandana), where pleasure and passion held sway.[102]

Left pillar, Inner face
(This face refers particularly to Rajagriha)
Top panel  
 
The same scene in the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara. Loriyan Tangai.

Visit of Indra to the Buddha in the Indrasaila cave near Rajagriha. In the upper part of the panel is an artificial cave resembling in its facade many rock-cut Buddhist chaitya shrines in Western and Central India. In front of the door is the throne which marks the presence of the Buddha. The animals peering out from among the rocks serve to indicate the wildness of the spot. Below is the company of Indra in attitudes of worship, but which of these figures represents Indra and which his musician Panchasikha who accompanied him, it is not possible to determine.[102]

2nd panel   Royal cortege leaving Rajagriha. A king and his royal cortege issuing from a city. As the panel on this side of the pillar relates particularly to Rajagriha, it is probable that the King is either Bimbisara or Ajatashatru, on a visit to the Buddha at the Gridhrakuta Hill, and that the city is Rajagriha.[102]
See also: Siddhartha and King Bimbasara (in "The Life of Buddha").
3rd panel   Bamboo garden (Venuvana) at Rajagriha, the visit of Bimbisara. The Bamboo garden (Venuvana ) at Rajagriha, with the throne of the Buddha in the center and devotees around. The identity of the spot is indicated by the bamboos on either side of the panel.[102] This event refers to a visit of King Bimbisara to the Buddha.[102]
4th panel   Dvarapala guardian deity. Positioned as it is, in the inside panel of the gateway, the deity guards the left side of the entrance to the stupa. This Dvarapala is faced by another one on the right side.
Right pillar, Inner face
Top panel   Foreigners making a dedication to Southern Gateway of the Great Stupa. Probably the dedication of a stupa, but it might also refer to the death (parinirvana) of the Buddha. Among the crowds who are celebrating the occasion with music and dancing, some are wearing dresses and high boots suggestive of a cold climate. The individual and realistic features of the people can also be noticed.[103] The official notice at Sanchi reads "Foreigners worshiping Stupa".
The relief shows 18 of these foreigners and 4 Gandharva celestial deities in the sky above.
 
Foreigners playing carnyxes and aulos flute at Sanchi (detail).

These have been called "Greek-looking foreigners"[104] wearing Greek clothing complete with tunics, capes and sandals, typical of the Greek travelling costume,[79] and using Greek and Central Asian musical instruments ( the double flute aulos, or the carnyx-like Cornu horns), possibly pointing to the Indo-Greeks.
Another rather similar foreigner is also depicted in Bharhut, the Bharhut Yavana, also wearing a tunic and a royal headband in the manner of a Greek king, and displaying a Buddhist triratna on his sword.[87][88] The top of the panel show celestial divinities celebrating the dedication of the Stupa.

2nd panel   Offering of a bowl of honey to the Blessed One by a monkey. The offering of a bowl of honey to the Blessed One by a monkey. The Buddha is here represented by his pipal tree and throne, to which devotees are doing obeisance. The figure of the monkey is twice repeated, first with the bowl and then with empty hands after the gift has been made. The incident is portrayed in much the same way on the reliefs of the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara.[103]
3rd panel   Miracle at Kapilavastu. Suddhodana praying as his son the Buddha rises in the air, praised by celestial beings (only his path is visible). This panel is to be interpreted in conjunction with the corresponding panel adjoining it on the front face of the same pillar. When Buddha returned to his native city of Kapilavastu, his father Suddhodana came forth with a royal retinue to meet him, and a question of etiquette arose as to which should salute the other first: the father, who was king, or the son, who had become the Buddha. Thereupon the Buddha solved the difficulty by walking miraculously in mid-air. Here, in the panel on the inner face, we see a banyan tree, and, in front of it, the throne symbolizing the Buddha; while suspended in the air above it is the chahkrama or promenade on which the Buddha used to take his exercise and which here symbolises that he is walking in the air. Above it are celestial beings (gandharvas) with garlands in their hands. To the right of the tree is King Suddhodana with attendants, one of whom is holding the royal umbrella. The reason for the banyan tree (Ficus Indica, Skr : nyagrodha) is that King Suddhodana presented a park of banyan trees to his son on his return, and the tree, therefore, helps to localize the incident. In the corresponding scene on the front face the Buddha is probably represented in this park with disciples (but invisible due to aniconism) and followers around him.[103]
4th panel   Dvarapala guardian deity. Positioned as it is, in the inside panel of the gateway, the deity guards the right side of the entrance to the stupa. This Dvarapala is faced by another one on the left side.
Right pillar, Front face
Top panel  
 
The same scene in the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara.
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 top of the ladder is the tree and throne of the Buddha with the gods on either side in an attitude of adoration. Other devas attend on him as he descends, among whom the one to the right of the ladder holding a chauri and lotus may be Brahma. At the foot of the ladder the tree and throne are repeated with a trio of devotees on either side, indicating that the Buddha has returned again to earth.[105]
2nd panel   The Great Departure of the Buddha from Kapilavastu. A royal figure in a chariot drives forth from a city gate, with a horse in front. The scene is analogous to the scene of Buddha's departure from Kapilavastu on the East Gateway, but in that case there is no chariot, and in this case there is no umbrella above the horse to indicate the presence of the Buddha. However, a royal umbrella being held over an empty spot in the chariot would suggest the presence of the Buddha. The figure standing at its side with a water-pot (bhrihgara) in his hand indicates that a gift is being made. Alternatively, it could be King Suddhodana going forth from Kapilavastu to meet his son, the Buddha, on the occasion when he presented him with a park of mango trees.[105]

See also Siddhartha Leaves His Father's Palace (in "The Life of Buddha").

3rd panel   Teaching the Sakyans: This panel may represent the Buddha teaching the Sakyans. It can also be interpreted in relation to the panel of the Miracle at Kapilavastu on the same pillar (Right pillar, Inner face,3rd panel). When Buddha returned to his native city of Kapilavastu, his father Suddhodana came forth with a royal retinue to meet him, and the Buddha performed his Miracle of the Walk in the Air. In this scene, on the front face of the pillar, the Buddha is probably represented in this very park with disciples and followers around him.[105]
4th panel   Unidentified broken scene.

Stupa 1 Eastern Gateway edit

The Eastern Gateway describes historical events during the life of the Buddha, as well as several miracles performed by the Buddha. It was the third gateway to be erected.

Eastern Gateway
("Great Stupa" No1, Sanchi. 1st century BCE/CE.)
  The Eastern Gateway of Stupa 1. The Eastern Gateway of Stupa 1 is one of the four richly carved gateways or toranas, surrounding Stupa 1, the "Great Stupa". It is the third gateway to have been constructed. Like the other gateways, the Southern Gateway is composed of two square pillars surmounted by capitals, which in their turn support a superstructure of three architraves with volute ends.[96]
Architraves
 

Front architraves

 

Rear architraves

The architraves are all almost intact. They were crowned by two large decorated Shrivatsa symbols in the round, symbols of Buddhism (only one of them remains). The lintels have elephants mounted by Mahuts, and a single seated lion, at their ends. A single remaining Yakshini (top right corner) suggests that many more have been lost.
 

Front architrave, center

The Great Departure. During the night, Prince Siddharta leaves the Palace of Kapilavastu (far left) while his wife Yasodhara, his baby Rahula and the dancers are sleeping. Siddharta rides his horse Kanthaka, who is being lifted above the ground by Yakshas in order to keep quiet and avoid awakening the guards. The horse is seen progressing from left to right, away from the city, and progressively higher in the air. Siddharta is not visible, but a royal chatra parasol is held by Chandaka in order to signify the fact that Siddharta is riding the horse. After his arrival in the forest on the right, Siddharta discards his robes, cuts off his hair and returns the horse to Chandaka. The horse is seen returning without a rider, now walking on the ground, devoid of the chatra. When Siddharta stays in the forest, he is symbolized by the two soles of his feet (extreme right). Siddharta has renounced the world.[106]
Central front architrave, right   The famous Yakshini, under foliage and hanging in front of an elephant, on the side.of the East Gateway.
Pillar capitals
Right capital   The pillars of the Eastern Gateway feature elephants in the four direction, conducted by mahuts holding a Buddhist banner. They are gathered around a pillar of square section, decorated with a flame palmette design. A Yakshini under foliage flanks them on the side.
Pillars
Left pillar, Front face
Top panel   The Miracle of Walking in the air at Savrasti. While the Buddha walks in the air, devotees are aligned and look upwards. The Buddha is not visible (aniconism), and only his path (chankrama) is, separating the panel horizontally in two parts.
2nd panel  
 
The Diamond throne as discovered.

Temple for the Bodhi Tree in Bodh Gaya.
The illumination of the Buddha occurred here under the Bodhi Tree at Bodh Gaya, and Asoka built a Diamond throne at the location, as well as a temple to protect the Bodhi Tree within. Spreading through its upper windows, the branches of the sacred tree can be seen. To right and left of the temple are four figures in an attitude of adoration, perhaps the Guardian Kings of the Four Quarters (Lokapalas).[107]

The throne was discovered after excavations near the location of the Bodhi tree in the 19th century, and is now revered at the Mahabodhi Temple in Bodh Gaya.

3rd panel   Miracle of the Buddha walking on the River Nairanjana. The Nairanjana river is shown in flood and Kasyapa accompanied by a disciple and a boatman are hastening in a boat to the rescue of the Buddha. Then, in the lower part of the picture, the Buddha, represented by his promenade (chahbama), appears walking on the face of the waters, and in the foreground the figures of Kasyapa and his disciple are twice repeated, now on dry ground and doing homage to the Master (represented by the throne at the right hand, bottom corner).[107]

Throughout, The Buddha is not visible (aniconism), only represented by a path on the water, and his empty throne bottom right.[107]

Bottom panel   Bimbisara with his royal cortege issuing from the city of Rajagriha to visit the Buddha. Bimbisara with his royal cortege issuing from the city of Rajagriha, on a visit to the Buddha, here symbolized by his empty throne. This visit took place after the conversion of Kasyapa, which was brought about by a series of miracles, one of which is illustrated in the panel above.[107]
Left pillar, Inner face
(This face is concerned with the miracles by which Buddha converted the Brahman Kasyapa and his disciples.)
Top panel   Visit of Indra and Brahma to the Buddha. The visit of Indra and Brahma to the Buddha takes place in the town of Uruvilva. Near the center of the panel is the throne indicating the presence of the Buddha, surmounted by the umbrella; behind it, Indra and Brahma standing in an attitude of adoration; in the background, the houses of Uruvilva and the people at their daily tasks. To the left, a man and woman, the woman grinding spices on a "cari" stone; nearby, to the right, another woman is at work at a table, while a third is pounding rice with pestle and mortar, and a fourth winnowing the grain with a fan. In the foreground is the river Nairanjana, with cattle on its banks and a woman drawing water in a pitcher. One of the villagers has his hands joined in the attitude of prayer.[107]
2nd panel   Buddha tames the Naga at Uruvilva This panel is about the victory of the Buddha over the serpent in the fire chapel at Uruvilva. The Buddha obtained the permission of Kasyapa to pass the night in a fire chapel at his hermitage, which was inhabited by a fearsome Naga. The Naga attacked him with smoke and fire but was met with the same weapons, and being overcome crept into the Buddha's begging bowl. In the middle of the panel is the fire temple with a fire altar in front and a throne indicating the presence of the Buddha within, while behind the throne is the five-headed Naga. Flames are issuing from the windows in the roof. On either side of the temple are the Brahmanical ascetics standing in an attitude of respect and veneration.

In the foreground, to the right, is a leaf-hut (parna-sala) and an ascetic at its threshold seated on a mat, with his knees bound up by a band and his hair (jafa) twisted turban-wise about his head. Evidently he is a Brahman doing penance. Before him is another Brahman standing and apparently reporting to him the miracle; and near by is a small fire altar and the instruments of Vedic sacrifice. To the left is the Nairanjana river, in which another ascetic is bathing and from which three young novices are drawing water.[107]

3rd panel   The miracle of fire and wood. This is a depicting of the miracles of the wood, the fire and the offering. In the story of Kasyapa's conversion it is related that, after the miracle of the fire temple, a sacrifice was prepared by the Brahmans, but the wood for the fire could not be split, the fire could not be made to burn, and the oblation could not be offered, until in each case the Buddha gave his consent.

In the relief, this triple miracle is dramatically represented. In the foreground, to the right, a Brahman ascetic has his axe raised to split the wood, but the axe will not descend until Buddha gives the word; then we see the axe driven home into the log. Similarly, a Brahman is engaged fanning the fire on an altar, but the fire will not burn until the Buddha permits it. Then we see the altar repeated and flames blazing upon it. The third phase of the miracle, that of the oblation, is indicated by the single figure of a Brahman holding an oblation spoon over a flaming altar.
The other figures in this panel, of two novices bringing wood and provisions, are mere accessories, while the stupa in the background, decorated with shell designs and surrounded by a square railing, serves to give local color to the scene.[107]

Bottom panel   Dvarapala guardian.
Right pillar, Inner Face
(This face of the pillar is devoted to scenes at Kapilavastu, the birthplace of Gautama)
Top panel   Homage of King Suddhodana to the Buddha. In the center, the tree and throne of the Buddha, with a group of worshipers around, including King Suddhodana, the father of the Buddha, who is standing immediately in front of the throne. The king wears the same headdress here as in the panel below. The episode represented is the homage paid by the King

to his son after his return to Kapilavastu.[107]

Second panel   Procession of king Suddhodana from Kapilavastu.
 
At the top of the panel, Maya's dream of the visit of an elephant, in Kapilavastu. See also Maya's Dream (in "The life of Buddha)".

At the top is portrayed the dream of Maya, the mother of the Buddha, otherwise called the conception of the Bodhisattva. Maya, the queen, is seen lying in a pavilion of the palace, and on her is descending the Bodhisattva in the form of a white elephant. This scene, which was well known to all Buddhists, serves to identify the city here represented as Kapilavastu.
Below it is a royal procession threading its way through the streets of the city and issuing forth from the gate. This is the procession of King Suddhodana, when he went forth to meet his son on his return to Kapilavastu. Then, at the bottom of the panel, is portrayed the miracle which Buddha performed on this occasion by walking in mid-air; and, in the extreme left hand bottom corner, is a banyan tree (nyagrodha) to signify the park of banyans which Suddhodana presented to his son. The Buddha walking in mid-air is represented, as on the Northern Gateway, by his promenade (chankrama); and suggested by the upturned faces of the king and his retinue as they gaze wonderingly on the miracle.[107]

Bottom panel   Dvarapala guardian.
Right pillar, Front Face
Full length   The six inferior heavens of the Gods. The six inferior heavens of the gods (Devalokas ) or "Kamavachara heavens", in which the passions are still unsubdued, an integral part of Buddhist cosmology. Starting from the base they are as follows: (1) The heaven of the Four Great Kings: the Regents of the Four Quarters (Lokapala; Chaturmaharajika); (2) The heaven of the Thirty-three gods (Trayastrimisa) over whom Sakra presides; (3) The heaven over which Yama, the God of Death, reigns, where there is no change of day or night; (4) The Tushita heaven, where the Bodhisattvas are born before they appear on earth as the saviors of mankind, and where Maitreya now resides; (5) The heaven of the Nirmanarati, who create their own pleasures; (6) The heaven of the Parinirmita-Vasavartin gods, who indulge in pleasures created for them by others and over whom Mara is king.

Each of these six heavens or devalokas is represented by a storey of a palace, the front of which is divided by pillars into three bays, the pillars in the alternate storeys being either plain or provided with elaborate Persepolitan capitals. In the central bay there sits a god, like an Indian king, holding a thunderbolt (vajra) in his right hand and a flask containing nectar (amrita) in his left. Behind him are his women attendants holding the royal umbrella (Muttra) and flywhisk (chauri). In the bay to his right, seated on a slightly lower seat, is his viceroy (uparaja); and to his left are the court musicians and dancers. With slight variations the same figures are repeated in each of the six heavens. Nothing, perhaps, could give a better idea of the monotony of pleasure in the Buddhist heavens than the sameness of these reiterations.
The topmost panel of all, with two figures seated on a terrace and attendants behind, is treated quite differently from the Devalokas below and appears to represent the lowest of the Brahmaloka, which according to the Buddhist ideas rise above the inferior heavens.[108]

Stupa 1 Western Gateway edit

The Western Gateway of Stupa 1 is the last of the four gateway of the Great Stupa to have been built.

Western Gateway
("Great Stupa" No1, Sanchi, 1st century BCE/CE.)
  The Western Gateway of Stupa 1. The Western Gateway of Stupa 1 is one of the four richly carved gateways or toranas, surrounding Stupa 1, the "Great Stupa". It is the last of the four gateway to have been constructed.

Like the other gateways, the Western Gateway is composed of two square pillars surmounted by capitals, which in their turn support a superstructure of three architraves with volute ends.[96]

Architraves
 

Front architraves

 

Rear architraves

The architraves are all almost intact, but there are almost no remains of "in the round" decorations around or on top of the lintels. Only remains a fragment of capital with a base composed of lions, at the center top of the torana.
 

Rear top architrave

King of the Mallakas bringing the relics of the Buddha to Kushinagara. After the death of the Buddha his relics were taken possession of by the Mallakas of Kushinagara, whose chief is here depicted riding on an elephant and bearing the relics into the town of Kusinagara on his own head. The tree behind the throne in front of the city gate appears to be a Shala tree ( shorea robusta ), and to refer to the fact that Buddha's parinirvana took place in a grove of those trees. The two groups of figures carrying banners and offerings, which occupy the ends of this architrave, are probably connected with the central scene, serving to indicate the rejoicing of the Mallakas over the possession of the relics.[109]
 

Rear middle architrave

 
King of the Mallakas of Kushinagara under siege (left end of the architrave).

Siege of Kushinagara by the seven kings. This is another portrayal of "The war of the relics" (see Southern Gateway architrave). Here the seven rival claimants, distinguished by their seven royal umbrellas, are advancing with their armies to the city of Kushinagara, the siege of which has not yet begun. The seated royal figure at the left end of the architrave may represent the chief of the Mallakas within the city. The princely figures in the corresponding relief at the right end appear to be repetitions of some of the rival claimants.[109]

 

Rear bottom architrave

Temptation of the Buddha with Mara's army fleeing. This scene extends over the three sections of the architrave, In the center is the temple of Bodh Gaya with the pipal tree and the throne of the Buddha within; to the right, the armies of Mara fleeing discomfited from the Buddha; to the left, the devas celebrating the victory of the Buddha over the Evil One and exalting his glorious achievements. The temple at Bodh Gaya, which enclosed the Bodhi tree, was built two centuries later by Emperor Ashoka. Its portrayal in this scene, therefore, is an anachronism.[109]
Pillar capitals
 

Left

 

Right

The pillar capitals consist in groups of four Yakshas (tectonic deities) supporting the architraves.
Pillars
Left pillar, Front face
Unique panel   Paradise of Indra. Probably the "Paradise of Indra" (nandana) with the river Mandakini in the foreground. This can be related to the scenes on the North Gateway and on the small gateway of the Third Stupa.[109]
Left pillar, Inner face
Top panel   Syama Jataka Syama, the Buddha in a previous life, was the only son of a blind hermit and his wife, whom he supports with devotion. One day, Syama goes to draw water at the river and is shot with an arrow by the King of Benares, who is out hunting. Owing to the king's penitence and his parents' sorrow Indra intervenes and allows Syama to be healed and his parents' sight to be restored. At the right hand top corner of the panel arc the two hermitages with the father and mother seated in front of them. Below them their son Syama is coming to draw water from the stream. Then, to the left, we see the figure of the King thrice repeated, first shooting the lad in the water, then with bow in hand, then standing penitent with bow and arrow discarded; and in the left top corner are the father, mother and son restored to health, and by their side the god Indra and the king. The Buddha in a previous life was thus given as an example of filial piety.[110]
2nd panel   Enlightenment of the Buddha with the Nagas rejoincing. The scene depicts the enlightenment (sambodhi ) of the Buddha. In the center is the throne of the Buddha beneath the pipal tree, which is being garlanded by angels (gandharvas); round about are the Nagas and Nagis celebrating the victory of the Buddha over Mara.[111]
See also: Siddhartha Becomes the Buddha (in "The Life of Buddha").
Bottom panel  
 
Full relief.[112]

Miraculous crossing of the Ganges by the Buddha when he left Rajagriha to visit Vaisali (partial remain). Only the upper part of this panel remains, but it appears to depict the miraculous crossing of the Ganges by the Buddha when he left Rajagriha to visit Vaisali.
The lower part of the panel appears to have been cut away, when the gateway was restored by Col. Cole. The panel is shown complete in Maisey's illustration in Sanchi and its remains (Plaque XXI)[112][111]
See also: The Buddha Instructs the Monks of Vaisali (in "The Life of Buddha")

Right pillar, Inner Face
Top panel   Enlightenment of the Buddha with Mara's army fleeing. The enlightenment (sambodhi) of the Buddha. Towards the top of the panel is the pipal tree and the throne of the Buddha, and round them a throng of worshipers, men and women, gods and animals. It is the moment after the discomfiture of Mara and his hosts. The Nagas, winged creatures, angels and archangels, each urging his comrades on, went up to the Great Being at the Bodhi tree's foot and as they came they shouted for joy that the sage had won; that the Tempter was overthrown.

The deva with the giant head, riding either on the elephant or on the lion to the right of the panel, is probably meant to be Indra or Brahma. The interpretation of the three sorrowing figures standing on three sides of the throne in the foreground is problematical. In the Mahabhinishkramana scene on the East Gateway we have already seen that the artist inserted a jambu tree in the middle of the panel, to remind the spectator of the first meditation of the Bodhisattva and the path on which it led him. So, here, these three figures, which are strikingly similar to the three sorrowing Yakshas in the Mahdbhinishkramana scene and were probably executed by the same hand, may be a reminder of the Great Renunciation which led to the attainment of Buddhahood, the gateway behind being also a reminder of the gateway of Kapilavastu.[109]
See also: Siddhartha Becomes the Buddha (in "The Life of Buddha").

Second panel   The Gods entreating Buddha to preach. The gods entreating the Buddha to preach. The Buddhist scriptures tell us that after his enlightenment the Buddha hesitated to make known the truth to the world. Then Brahma, Indra, the four Lokapalas (Regents of the Four Quarters) and the archangels of the heavens approached him and besought him to turn the Wheel of the Law. It was when the Buddha was seated beneath the banyan tree (nyagrodha) shortly after his enlightenment, that this entreaty was made, and it is a banyan tree with the throne beneath that is depicted in this relief. The four figures side by side in the foreground may be the four Lokapalas.[109]
See also: The Buddha is Prepared to Preach the Doctrine (in "The Life of Buddha").
Bottom panel   Dvarapala guardian.
Right pillar, Front Face
Top panel   Mahakapi Jataka. The story runs that the Bodhisattva was born as a monkey, ruler over 80,000 monkeys. They lived at a spot near the Ganges and ate of the fruit of a great mango tree. King Brahmadatta of Benares, desiring to possess the mangoes, surrounded the tree with his soldiers, in order to kill the animals, but the Bodhisattva formed a bridge over the stream with his own body and by this means enabled the whole tribe to escape into safety.
 
The Mahakapi Jataka in Bharhut.

Devadatta, the jealous and wicked cousin of the Buddha, was in that life one of the monkeys and, thinking it a good chance to destroy his enemy, jumped on the Bodhisattva's back and broke his heart. The king, seeing the good deed of the Bodhisattva and repenting of his own attempt to kill him, tended him with great care when he was dying and afterwards gave him royal obsequies.
Down the panel of the relief flows, from top to bottom, the river Ganges. To the left, at the top, is the great mango tree to which two monkeys are clinging, while the king of the monkeys is stretched across the river from the mango tree to the opposite bank, and over his body some monkeys have already escaped to the rocks and jungles beyond. In the lower part of the panel, to the left, is king Brahmadatta on horseback with his soldiers, one of whom with bow and arrow is aiming upwards at the Bodhisattva. Higher up the panel the figure of the king is repeated, sitting beneath the mango tree and conversing with the dying Bodhisattva, who, according to the Jataka story, gave the king good advice on the duties of a chief.[109]

2nd panel   The Bodhisattva preaching in the Tushita Heaven. In the center of the panel is the tree and throne of the Buddha, and round about the throne a company of gods standing upon clouds in attitudes of adoration. At the top of the panel are gandharvas bringing garlands and below them, on each side of the

tree, come Indra and Brahma, riding on lion-like creatures. A conventional method is used to depict the clouds beneath the feet of the gods in the foreground and among the figures in the upper part of the panel. They have the appearance almost of rocks with flames breaking from them.[109]

3rd panel   The visit of Sakra. The Buddha, represented by his throne, beneath a flowery tree with hills and jungle around. Possibly the tree is the rajayatana tree at Bodh Gaya, beneath which the Buddha sat shortly after his enlightenment. The figures in the foreground adoring the Buddha appear to be devas.[109]
4th panel   Heraldic lions. Three heraldic lions standing on conventionalized floral device. The turn in the upper leaves is peculiar. This method of treating foliage is peculiar to the Early School and is never found in later work. The inscription over this panel records that the pillar was a gift of Balamitra, pupil of Ayachuda (Arya-kshudra).[109]

Stupa 3 Southern Gateway edit

The gateway of Stupa No 3, is the last of all the Satavahana gateways that were built at Sanchi. It is located to the immediate south of Stupa No 3, is smaller than the four gateways encircling the Great Stupa. It is also slightly older, and generally dated to the 1st century CE.

Southern Gateway
(Stupa No 3, Sanchi. 1st century CE.)
  The gateway of Stupa No 3, located to the immediate south of Stupa No 3, is smaller than the four gateways encircling the Great Stupa. It is also slightly older, and generally dated to the 1st century CE. This gateway stands 17 feet high, and is adorned with reliefs in the same style as those on the gateways of the Great Stupa. Indeed, the majority of these reliefs are mere repetitions of the subjects and scenes portrayed on the larger gateways, with a few exceptions, especially the front face of the lowest architrave.[113]
Architraves
Front architraves
 
Architrave posts, or "false capitals", are roughly square-shaped and can be seen at the junction between architrave and pillar, and between the architraves themselves. Here, there are nine of them altogether on just the surface of the front architraves.
 

Top front architrave

 
Floral scrolls in the art of Gandhara.

Genies among foliage forming scrolls. This kind of scrolls are generally considered to be of Hellenistic origin, and were to be used extensively in the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara as well.[114][115]

 

Middle front architrave

Buddhas represented by a Chaitya and two Bodhi Trees and empty thrones.
 

Bottom front architrave

The only scene which differs materially from those on the gateways of the Great Stupa is the one delineated on the front face of the lowest architrave, which appears to represent the Heaven of Indra (Nandanavana). In the centre is the pavilion of the god, with Indra himself seated on a throne surrounded by women attendants. In the foreground is the river MandakinI, which bounds the heaven of Indra, and to right and left of the pavilion are mountains and jungle forming a pleasure-garden for the gods and demigods who are taking their case therein.
Then, in the corners next to the false capitals, are Naga kings seated with their attendants on the folds of seven-hooded Nagas, whose coils mingled with the waters of the river are carried through to the ends of the architrave, and go to form the spirals adorning its extremities. The sea monsters (Makaras) and the heroes wrestling with them, which are portrayed on the false capitals of this architrave, are particularly appropriate in this position, where their coils combine effectively with those of the Nagas.[113]
Rear architraves
 
Ordered left to right, from top to bottom:
Pillar capitals
 

Left

 

Right

The pillar capitals consist in groups of four Yakshas (tectonic deities) supporting the architraves. This choice is similar to the last of the gateways of the Great Stupa, the Western Gateway.
Pillars
Left pillar, Front face
  The variety and the detail of the pillar panels is much less than at the Great Stupa. Here the first panel shows the adoration of a stupa by four Indian devotees. Then, other devotees simply line up in the second and the third panels below.
Left pillar, Inner face
 

Top panel.

Worshipping the Bodhi Tree. This classic and rather simply depicted scene is again the unique didactic scene on this face of the pillar. The following panel in only composed of aligned devotee, and at the bottom is a panel with Dvarapala guardian deity as seen on the other gateways, or possibly a devotee, as he seems not to be armed.
Left pillar, Rear face
 

Top panel.

Uncharacteristically, the rear panel of the left pillar of the gateway is fully decorated, down to its bottom. This can be explained by the fact that the stupa is not surrounded by a railing as in the Great Stupa, therefore rendering this rear space free. The right pillar of the gateway however does not have decoration on the back. The top panel is the Dharmacakra on a Pillar.
Right pillar, Inner Face
 

Top panel.

Worshipping the Bodhi Tree. This classic and rather simply depicted scene is again the unique didactic scene on this face of the pillar. It even faces a similar "Worshipping the Bodhi Tree" scene on the pillar surface facing it across the entrance. The next panel going down is only composed of aligned devotees, and at the bottom is a panel with Dvarapala guardian deity as seen on the other gateways, or possibly a devotee, as he seems not to be armed.
Right pillar, Front Face
 
 
This would be the Ashokan capital (wheel lost) depicted in this panel.

Again variety and the detail of the pillar panels is much less than at the Great Stupa. The first panel however is extremely interesting, as it shows the adoration of what looks like the pillar of Ashoka at the Southern Gateway of the Great Stupa. Then other devotees simply line up in the second and the third panels below.

Later periods edit

 
Stupas and monasteries at Sanchi in the early centuries of the Common Era. Reconstruction, 1900

Further stupas and other religious Buddhist structures were added over the centuries until the 12th century CE.

Western Satraps edit

The rule of the Satavahanas in the area Sanchi during the 1st centuries BCE/CE is well attested by the finds of Satavahana copper coins in Vidisha, Ujjain and Eran in the name of Satakarni, as well as the Satakarni inscription on the Southern Gateway of Stupa No.1.[116]

Soon after, however, the region fell to the Scythian Western Satraps, possibly under Nahapana (120 CE),[117] and then certainly under Rudradaman I (130-150 CE), as shown by his inscriptions in Junagadh.[116] The Satavahanas probably regained the region for some time, but were again replaced by the Western Satraps in the mid-3rd century CE, during the rule of Rudrasena II (255-278 CE). The Western Satraps remained well into the 4th century as shown by the nearby Kanakerha inscription mentioning the construction of a well by the Saka chief and "righteous conqueror" Sridharavarman, who ruled c. 339 – c. 368 CE.[116] Therefore, it seems that the Kushan Empire did not extend to the Sanchi area, and the few Kushan works of art found in Sanchi appear to have come from Mathura.[116] In particular, a few Mathura statues in the name of the Kushan ruler Vasishka (247-267 CE) were found in Sanchi.[118][119]

Guptas edit

The next rulers of the area were the Guptas.[116] Inscriptions of a victorious Chandragupta II in the year 412-423 CE can be found on the railing near the Eastern Gateway of the Great Stupa.[120]

 
Sanchi inscription of Chandragupta II.
 
Temple 17: a Gupta period tetrastyle prostyle temple of Classical appearance. 5th century CE[121]

"The glorious Chandragupta (II), (...) who proclaims in the world the good behaviour of the excellent people, namely, the dependents (of the king), and who has acquired banners of victory and fame in many battles"

Temple 17 is an early stand-alone temple (following the great cave temples of Indian rock-cut architecture), as it dates to the early Gupta period (probably first quarter of 5th century CE). It may have been built for Buddhist use (which is not certain), but the type of which it represents a very early version was to become very significant in Hindu temple architecture.[123] It consists of a flat roofed square sanctum with a portico and four pillars. The interior and three sides of the exterior are plain and undecorated but the front and the pillars are elegantly carved, giving the temple an almost 'classical' appearance,[121] not unlike the 2nd century rock-cut cave temples of the Nasik Caves. The four columns are more traditional, the octagonal shafts rising from square bases to bell capitals, surmounted by large abacus blocks carved with back-to-back lions.[124]

Next to Temple 17 stands Temple 18, the framework of a mostly 7th-century apsidal chaitya-hall temple, again perhaps Buddhist or Hindu, that was rebuilt over an earlier hall. This was probably covered by a wood and thatch roof.[125]

Near the Northwern Gateway also used to stand a Vajrapani pillar. Another pillar of Padmapani used to stand, and the statue is now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

Lion pillar No 26 edit

 
Pillar 26: one of the two four-lions stambha capitals at Sanchi, with lions, central flame palmette and Wheel of Law (axis, stubs of the spokes and part of the circumference only), initially located at the Northern Gateway of the Great Stupa. Sanchi Archaeological Museum.

Pillar No26 stands a little to the north of the Sunga pillar No25. It belongs to the early Gupta age. Apart from its design, it is distinguished from the other pillars on the site by the unusual quality and colour of its stone, which is harder than that ordinarily quarried in the Udayagiri hill, and of a pale buff hue splashed and streaked with amethyst. At Sanchi this particular variety of stone was used only in monuments of the Gupta period. This pillar was approximately 22 ft. 6 in. in height and was composed of two pieces only, one comprising the circular shaft and square base, the other the bell-capital, necking, lions and crowning chakra. On the northwest side of the lowest section, which is still in situ, is a short mutilated inscription in Gupta characters recording the gift of the pillar by a viharasvamin (master of a monastery), the son of Gotaisimhabala.[126]

 
Pillar 26: lion pillar capital at time of discovery, with Dharmachakra wheel (reconstruction). Northern Gateway.[127]

As was usual with pillars of the Gupta age, the square base projected above the ground level, the projection in this case being 1 ft. 2 in., and was enclosed by a small square platform. The lion capital of this pillar is a feeble imitation of the one which surmounted the pillar of Asoka, with the addition of a wheel at the summit and with certain other variations of detail. For example, the cable necking above the bell-capital, is composed of a series of strands bound together with a riband. Also, the reliefs on the circular abacus, consist of birds and lotuses of unequal sizes disposed in irregular fashion, not with the symmetrical precision of earlier Indian art. Finally, these lions, like those on the pillars of the Southern Gateway, are provided with five claws on each foot, and their modelling exhibits little regard for truth and little artistry.[126]

There has been much confusion about the dating of this pillars, since it was often presented from the beginning as a pillar of Ashoka. Marshall himself describes the pillar as early Gupta Empire in convincing terms, either from the points of view of material, technique or artistry.[126] The Government of India Photo Division describes it in this image as "An Asoka pillar and its broken lion capital near the south gateway of the Great Stupa." [6]. The British Library Online also describes it as 3rd century BCE Mauryan, although probably pasting the original text from the 19th century [7]. Sachim Kumar Tiwary in Monolithic Pillars of The Gupta Period, affirms a Gupta date.[128] The Sanchi Archaeological Museum gives it a date of 600 CE, which would even put it beyond the Gupta period proper, at the time of the Later Gupta dynasty.[129]

Pillar 35 edit

 
Pillar 35 column stump (right), and bell capital with abacus, positioned upside down.
 
Vajrapani statue of pillar 35, 5th c. CE. Sanchi Archaeological Museum.

The massive pillar near the North Gateway, numbered 35 in the plan, was erected during the Gupta period. Every feature, whether structural, stylistic or technical, is typical of Gupta workmanship. Most of the shaft has been destroyed, but the stump still remains in situ, and the foundations are intact. The form, too, of the platform around its base is sufficiently clear, and the capital and statue which it is said to have supported, are both relatively well-preserved. What remains of the shaft is 9 ft. in length, 3 ft. 10 in. of which, measured from the top, are circular and smooth, and the remainder, constituting the base, square and rough-dressed. In the Gupta age, it was the common practice to keep the bases of such monolithic columns square, whereas those of the Maurya age were invariably circular. The columns of the Maurya period are distinguished by its exquisite dressing and highly polished surface; but in this case the dressing of the stone is characterized by no such lustrous finish.[130]

The Persepolitan capital and square abacus ornamented with a balustrade in relief are cut entire from a single block of stone. So, too, is the statue which was found lying alongside the capital and which is believed to have belonged to the same pillar. This statue represents a man clad in a dhoti and adorned with bracelets, earrings, bejewelled necklace and headdress. The hair falls in curls over the shoulders and back, and beneath it at the back fall the ends of two ribbons.[130] It is thought that the statue represents Vajrapani. The attribution to Vajrapani is indicated by the stub of a vajra thunderbold in the right hand and a halo of 24 rays.[131] The dedication of the Vajrapani pillar is also mentioned in a 5th-century inscription.[132]

An interesting feature of the image is the halo which is pierced with twelve small holes evenly disposed around its edge. Manifestly the halo, is too small in proportion to the size of the statue, and these holes were no doubt intended for the attachment of the outer rays, which were probably fashioned out of copper gilt, the rest of the statue itself being possibly painted or gilded. This statue stood on the summit of the pillar, and is a work of the Gupta period.[130] The statue is currently in the Sanchi Archaeological Museum and is attributed to the 5th century CE.[133]

Gupta period remains

Following the destruction of the Guptas by the Alchon Huns, and with the decline of Buddhism in India, Buddhist artistic creation at Sanchi slowed down.

 
Temple 18 at Sanchi, an apsidal hall with Maurya foundations, rebuilt at the time of Harsha (7th century CE).

Temple 45 was the last Buddhist temple built during the mid to late 9th century.[135] Another point to be noted is that at that time the monuments were enclosed within a wall.

With the decline of Buddhism in India, the monuments of Sanchi went out of use and fell into a state of disrepair. In 1818, General Taylor of the Bengal Cavalry recorded a visit to Sanchi. At that time the monuments were left in a relatively good condition. Although the jungle had overgrown the complex, several of the Gateways were still standing, and Sanchi, being situated on a hill, had escaped the onslaught of the Muslim conquerors who had destroyed the nearby city of Vidisha (Bhilsa) only 5 miles away.[136]

Sanchi and the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara edit

Although the initial craftsmen for stone reliefs in Sanchi seem to have come from Gandhara, with the first reliefs being carved at Sanchi Stupa No.2 circa 115 BCE,[27] the art of Sanchi thereafter developed considerably in the 1st century BCE/CE and is thought to predate the blooming of the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara, which went on to flourish until around the 4th century CE. The art of Sanchi is thus considered as the ancestor of the didactic forms of Buddhist art that would follow, such as the art of Gandhara.[137] It is also, with Bharhut, the oldest.[138]

As didactic Buddhist reliefs were adopted by Gandhara, the content evolved somewhat together with the emergence of Mahayana Buddhism, a more theistic understanding of Buddhism. First, although many of the artistic themes remained the same (such as Maya's dream, The Great Departure, Mara's attacks...), many of the stories of the previous lives of the Buddha were replaced by the even more numerous stories about the Bodhisattvas of the Mahayana pantheon.[137] Second, another important difference is the treatment of the image of the Buddha: whereas the art of Sanchi, however detailed and sophisticated, is aniconic,[139] the art of Gandhara added illustrations of the Buddha as a man wearing Greek-style clothing to play a central role in its didactic reliefs.[140][141]

The presence of Greeks at or near Sanchi at the time is known (Indo-Greek ambassador Heliodorus at Vidisha c. 100 BCE, the Greek-like foreigners illustrated at Sanchi worshiping the Great Stupa, or the Greek "Yavana" devotees who had dedicatory inscriptions made at Sanchi[84]), but more precise details about exchanges or possible routes of transmission are elusive.

Sanchi and the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara
Maya's dream The Great Departure Mara's attack Enlightenment The Buddha Preaching
Sanchi
(1st c. BCE/CE)
 
Maya's dream of a white elephant.
 
The Buddha, under the umbrella on the chariot, is not illustrated.
 
The Buddha is symbolized by an empty throne.
 
The Buddha is symbolized by an empty throne.
 
The Buddha is symbolized by an empty throne.
Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara
(1st c.CE-4th c.CE)
 
Very similar illustration from Gandhara.
 
The Buddha in person leaves the city.
 
The Buddha is illustrated centrally.
 
The Buddha is illustrated centrally.
 
The Buddha is illustrated centrally.

Western rediscovery edit

 
The Great Stupa as breached by Sir Herbert Maddock in 1822. Watercolor by Frederick Charles Maisey, in 1851.
 
Ruins of the Southern Gateway, Sanchi in 1875.
 
A Gate to the Stupa of Sanchi 1932

General Henry Taylor (1784–1876) who was a British officer in the Third Maratha War of 1817–1819, was the first known Western historian to document in 1818 (in English) the existence of Sanchi Stupa. The site was in a total state of abandon. The Great Stupa was clumsily breached by Sir Herbert Maddock in 1822, although he was not able to reach the center, and he then abandoned.[142] Alexander Cunningham and Frederick Charles Maisey made the first formal survey and excavations at Sanchi and the surrounding stupas of the region in 1851.[143][142] Amateur archaeologists and treasure hunters ravaged the site until 1881, when proper restoration work was initiated. Between 1912 and 1919 the structures were restored to their present condition under the supervision of Sir John Marshall.[144]

19th Century Europeans were very much interested in the Stupa which was originally built by Ashoka. French sought the permission to take away the eastern gateway to France. English, who had established themselves in India, majorly as a political force, were interested too in carrying it to England for a museum. They were satisfied with plaster-cast copies which were carefully prepared and the original remained at the site, part of Bhopal state. The rule of Bhopal, Shahjehan Begum and her successor Sultan Jehan Begum, provided money for the preservation of the ancient site. John Marshall, Director-General of the Archaeological Survey of India from 1902 to 1928, acknowledged her contribution by dedicating his important volumes on Sanchi to Sultan Jehan. She had funded the museum that was built there. As one of the earliest and most important Buddhist architectural and cultural pieces, it has drastically transformed the understanding of early India with respect to Buddhism. It is now a marvellous example of the carefully preserved archaeological site by the Archeological Survey of India. The place of Sanchi Stupa in Indian history and culture can be gauged from the fact that Reserve Bank of India introduced new 200 Indian Rupees notes with Sanchi Stupa in 2017.[145]

Since Sanchi remained mostly intact, few artefacts of Sanchi can be found in Western Museums: for example, the Gupta statue of Padmapani is at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, and one of the Yashinis can be seen at the British Museum.

Today, around fifty monuments remain on the hill of Sanchi, including three main stupas and several temples. The monuments have been listed among other famous monuments in the UNESCO World Heritage Sites since 1989.

The reliefs of Sanchi, especially those depicting Indian cities, have been important in trying to imagine what ancient Indian cities look like. Many modern simulations are based on the urban illustrations of Sanchi.[146]

Chetiyagiri Vihara and the Sacred Relics edit

 
Chetiyagiri Vihara

The bone relics (asthi avashesh) of Buddhist Masters along with the reliquaries, obtained by Maisey and Cunningham were divided and taken by them to England as personal trophies.[147] Maisey's family sold the objects to Victoria and Albert Museum where they stayed for a long time. The Buddhists in England, Sri Lanka and India, led by the Mahabodhi Society demanded that they be returned. Some of the relics of Sariputta and Moggallana were sent back to Sri Lanka, where they were publicly displayed in 1947.[148] It was such a grand event where the entire population of Sri Lanka came to visit them. However, they were later returned to India. But a new temple Chetiyagiri Vihara was constructed to house the relics, in 1952.[149] In a nationalistic sense, this marked the formal reestablishment of the Buddhist tradition in India. Some of the relics were obtained by Burma.[150]

Inscriptions edit

 
Inscribed panel from Sanchi in Brahmi script in the British Museum[151]
 
The last two letters to the right of this inscription in Brahmi form the word "dǎnam" (donation). This hypothesis permitted the decipherment of the Brahmi script by James Prinsep in 1837.[152]

Sanchi, especially Stupa 1, has a large number of Brahmi inscriptions. Although most of them are small and mention donations, they are of great historical significance. James Prinsep in 1837, noted that most of them ended with the same two Brahmi characters. Princep took them as "danam" (donation), which permitted the decipherment of the Brahmi script.[153][154]

An analysis of the donation records[155] shows that while a large fraction of the donors were local (with no town specified), a number of them were from Ujjain, Vidisha, Kurara, Nadinagar, Mahisati, Kurghara, Bhogavadhan and Kamdagigam. Three inscriptions are known from Yavana (Indo-Greek)[81] donors at Sanchi, the clearest of which reads "Setapathiyasa Yonasa danam" ("Gift of the Yona of Setapatha"), Setapatha being an uncertain city.[84]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Buddhist Art Frontline Magazine 13–26 May 1989
  2. ^ Buddhist Landscapes in Central India: Sanchi Hill and Archaeologies of Religious and Social Change, c. Third Century BC to Fifth Century AD, Julia Shaw, Routledge, 12 Aug 2016
  3. ^ Buddhist Circuit in Central India: Sanchi, Satdhara, Sonari, Andher, Travel ... p. 31
  4. ^ [1] Rs 50, Rs 200, Rs 500 and Rs 2000 notes images: Here are the new currency notes released by RBI
  5. ^ a b c d e Buddhist Circuit in Central India: Sanchi, Satdhara, Sonari, Andher, Travel Guide. Goodearth Publications. 2010. p. 12. ISBN 9789380262055.
  6. ^ a b c d World Heritage Monuments and Related Edifices in India, Volume 1 p. 50 by Alī Jāvīd, Tabassum Javeed, Algora Publishing, New York [2]
  7. ^ a b Marshall, "A Guide to Sanchi" p. 31
  8. ^ The Butkara Stupa is an example of such a hemispherical stupa structure from the Maurya period, that was extensively documented through archaeological work
  9. ^ Marshall, "A Guide to Sanchi" p. 8ff Public Domain text
  10. ^ Reconstitution with four lions and crowning wheel by Percy Brown: Diagram of Sanchi Great Stupa
  11. ^ a b Described in Marshall pp. 25-28 Ashoka pillar.
  12. ^ Encyclopaedia Indica: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh. Anmol Publications. 1996. p. 783. ISBN 978-81-7041-859-7. It may be mentioned that the motif of lions carrying a wheel occurs at Sanchis which might be a representation of the Sarnath's Asokan pillar capital .
  13. ^ a b Buddhist Architecture by Huu Phuoc Le p. 155
  14. ^ John Marshall, "A Guide to Sanchi" p. 93 Public Domain text
  15. ^ a b Marshall, "A Guide to Sanchi" p. 90ff Public Domain text
  16. ^ Buddhist Architecture, Lee Huu Phuoc, Grafikol 2009, p. 147
  17. ^ Singh, Upinder (2016). The Idea of Ancient India: Essays on Religion, Politics, and Archaeology (in Arabic). SAGE Publications India. ISBN 9789351506454.
  18. ^ Abram, David; (Firm), Rough Guides (2003). The Rough Guide to India. Rough Guides. ISBN 9781843530893.
  19. ^ a b Marshall, John (1955). Guide to Sanchi.
  20. ^ Chakrabarty, Dilip K. (2009). India: An Archaeological History: Palaeolithic Beginnings to Early Historic Foundations. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199088140.
  21. ^ "Who was responsible for the wanton destruction of the original brick stupa of Ashoka and when precisely the great work of reconstruction was carried out is not known, but it seems probable that the author of the former was Pushyamitra, the first of the Shunga kings (184-148 BC), who was notorious for his hostility to Buddhism, and that the restoration was affected by Agnimitra or his immediate successor." in John Marshall, A Guide to Sanchi, p. 38. Calcutta: Superintendent, Government Printing (1918).
  22. ^ Shaw, Julia (12 August 2016). Buddhist Landscapes in Central India: Sanchi Hill and Archaeologies of Religious and Social Change, c. Third Century BC to Fifth Century AD. Routledge. p. 58. ISBN 978-1-315-43263-2. It is inaccurate to refer to the post-Mauryan monuments at Sanchi as Sunga. Not only was Pusyamitra reputedly animical to Buddhism, but most of the donative inscriptions during this period attest to predominantly collective and nonroyal modes of sponsorship.
sanchi, crude, tanker, tanker, 479223, 739683, 479223, 739683, stupa, buddhist, complex, famous, great, stupa, hilltop, town, raisen, district, state, madhya, pradesh, india, located, about, kilometers, from, raisen, town, district, headquarter, kilometres, no. For the crude oil tanker see Sanchi tanker 23 28 45 N 77 44 23 E 23 479223 N 77 739683 E 23 479223 77 739683 Sanchi Stupa is a Buddhist complex famous for its Great Stupa on a hilltop at Sanchi Town in Raisen District of the State of Madhya Pradesh India It is located about 23 kilometers from Raisen town district headquarter and 46 kilometres 29 mi north east of Bhopal capital of Madhya Pradesh SanchiThe Great Stupa at Sanchi Raisen district MP Sanchi StupaSanchi StupaShow map of IndiaSanchi StupaSanchi Stupa Madhya Pradesh Show map of Madhya PradeshSanchi StupaSanchi Stupa South Asia Show map of South AsiaGeneral informationTypeStupa and surrounding buildingsArchitectural styleBuddhist MauryanLocationSanchi Town Raisen district Madhya Pradesh IndiaTown or citySanchi Raisen districtCountry IndiaConstruction started3rd century BCEHeight16 46 m 54 0 ft dome of the Great Stupa DimensionsDiameter36 6 m 120 ft dome of the Great Stupa UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameBuddhist Monument at SanchiCriteriaCultural i ii iii iv viReference524Inscription1989 13th Session The Great Stupa at Sanchi is one of the oldest stone structures in India and an important monument of Indian Architecture 1 It was originally commissioned by the Mauryan emperor Ashoka the Great in the 3rd century BCE Its nucleus was a simple hemispherical brick structure built over the relics of the Buddha It was crowned by the chatra a parasol like structure symbolising high rank which was intended to honour and shelter the relics The original construction work of this stupa was overseen by Ashoka whose wife Devi was the daughter of a merchant of nearby Vidisha Sanchi was also her birthplace as well as the venue of her and Ashoka s wedding In the 1st century BCE four elaborately carved toranas ornamental gateways and a balustrade encircling the entire structure were added The Sanchi Stupa built during the Mauryan period was made of bricks The composite flourished until the 11th century Sanchi is the center of a region with a number of stupas all within a few miles of Sanchi including Satdhara 9 km to the W of Sanchi 40 stupas the Relics of Sariputra and Mahamoggallana now enshrined in the new Vihara were unearthed there Bhojpur also called Morel Khurd a fortified hilltop with 60 stupas and Andher respectively 11 km and 17 km SE of Sanchi as well as Sonari 10 km SW of Sanchi 2 3 Further south about 100 km away is Saru Maru Bharhut is 300 km to the northeast Sanchi Stupa is depicted on the reverse side of the Indian currency note of 200 to signify its importance to Indian cultural heritage 4 Contents 1 Transport 2 Overview 3 Mauryan Period 3rd century BCE 3 1 Ashoka pillar 3 2 Temple 40 4 Shunga period 2nd century BCE 4 1 Great Stupa No 1 4 2 Stupa No 2 the first Buddhist reliefs 4 3 Stupa No 3 4 4 Sunga Pillar 5 Satavahana period 1st century BCE 1st century CE 5 1 Material and carving technique 5 2 Architecture evolution of the load bearing pillar capital 5 3 Main themes of the reliefs 5 3 1 Jatakas 5 3 2 Miracles 5 3 3 Temptation of the Buddha 5 3 4 War over the Buddha s Relics 5 3 5 Removal of the relics by Ashoka 5 3 6 Building of the Bodh Gaya temple by Ashoka 5 3 7 Foreign devotees 5 3 8 Aniconism 5 4 The Gateways or Toranas 5 4 1 Stupa 1 Southern Gateway 5 4 2 Stupa 1 Northern Gateway 5 4 3 Stupa 1 Eastern Gateway 5 4 4 Stupa 1 Western Gateway 5 4 5 Stupa 3 Southern Gateway 6 Later periods 6 1 Western Satraps 6 2 Guptas 6 3 Lion pillar No 26 6 4 Pillar 35 7 Sanchi and the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara 8 Western rediscovery 9 Chetiyagiri Vihara and the Sacred Relics 10 Inscriptions 11 See also 12 References 13 Literature 14 External linksTransport editThe nearest airport is Bhopal which is 55 km away from it Trains are available from Bhopal and Rani Kamlapati to Sanchi railway station Buses are available from Bhopal and Vidisha Overview editThe monuments at Sanchi today comprise a series of Buddhist monuments starting from the Mauryan Empire period 3rd century BCE continuing with the Gupta Empire period 5th century CE and ending around the 12th century CE 5 It is probably the best preserved group of Buddhist monuments in India 5 The oldest and also the largest monument is the Great Stupa also called Stupa No 1 initially built under the Mauryans and adorned with one of the Pillars of Ashoka 5 During the following centuries especially under the Shungas and the Satavahanas the Great Stupa was enlarged and decorated with gates and railings and smaller stupas were also built in the vicinity especially Stupa No 2 and Stupa No 3 5 Simultaneously various temple structures were also built down to the Gupta Empire period and later Altogether Sanchi encompasses most of the evolutions of ancient Indian architecture and ancient Buddhist architecture in India from the early stages of Buddhism and its first artistic expression to the decline of the religion in the subcontinent 5 nbsp General view of the Stupas at Sanchi by F C Maisey 1851 The Great Stupa on top of the hill and Stupa 2 at the forefront nbsp The Great Stupa Stupa No 1 started in the 3rd century BCE nbsp Stupa No 2 nbsp Stupa No 3 nbsp Buddhist Temple No 17Mauryan Period 3rd century BCE edit nbsp The Ashoka pillar at Sanchi nbsp Plan of the monuments of the hill of Sanchi numbered 1 to 50 The Great Stupa at Sanchi is the oldest structure and was originally commissioned by the emperor Ashoka the Great of the Maurya Empire in the 3rd century BCE 6 Its nucleus was a hemispherical brick structure built over the sacred relics of the Buddha 6 with a raised terrace encompassing its base and a railing and stone umbrella on the summit the chatra a parasol like structure symbolizing high rank 7 8 The original Stupa only had about half the diameter of today s stupa which is the result of enlargement by the Sungas It was covered in brick in contrast to the stones that now cover it 7 According to one version of the Mahavamsa the Buddhist chronicle of Sri Lanka Ashoka was closely connected to the region of Sanchi When he was heir apparent and was journeying as Viceroy to Ujjain he is said to have halted at Vidisha 10 kilometers from Sanchi and there married the daughter of a local banker She was called Devi and later gave Ashoka two sons Ujjeniya and Mahendra and a daughter Sanghamitta After Ashoka s accession Mahendra headed a Buddhist mission sent probably under the auspices of the Emperor to Sri Lanka and that before setting out to the island he visited his mother at Chetiyagiri near Vidisa thought to be Sanchi He was lodged there in a sumptuous vihara or monastery which she herself is said to have had erected 9 Ashoka pillar edit See also Pillars of Ashoka nbsp nbsp nbsp The capital of the Sanchi pillar of Ashoka as discovered left and simulation of original appearance by Percy Brown center 10 It is very similar to the Lion Capital of Ashoka at Sarnath except for the abacus here adorned with flame palmettes and facing geese 250 BCE Sanchi Archaeological Museum 11 To the right depiction of the four lions capital surmounted by a Wheel of Law at Sanchi Satavahana period 1st century CE South gateway of stupa 3 12 A pillar of finely polished sandstone one of the Pillars of Ashoka was also erected on the side of the main Torana gateway The bottom part of the pillar still stands The upper parts of the pillar are at the nearby Sanchi Archaeological Museum The capital consists in four lions which probably supported a Wheel of Law 13 as also suggested by later illustrations among the Sanchi reliefs The pillar has an Ashokan inscription Schism Edict 13 and an inscription in the ornamental Sankha Lipi from the Gupta period 6 The Ashokan inscription is engraved in early Brahmi characters It is unfortunately much damaged but the commands it contains appear to be the same as those recorded in the Sarnath and Kausambi edicts which together form the three known instances of Ashoka s Schism Edict It relates to the penalties for schism in the Buddhist sangha the path is prescribed both for the monks and for the nuns As long as my sons and great grandsons shall reign and as long as the Moon and the Sun shall endure the monk or nun who shall cause divisions in the Sangha shall be compelled to put on white robes and to reside apart For what is my desire That the Sangha may be united and may long endure Edict of Ashoka on the Sanchi pillar 14 The pillar when intact was about 42 feet in height and consisted of round and slightly tapering monolithic shaft with bell shaped capital surmounted by an abacus and a crowning ornament of four lions set back to back the whole finely finished and polished to a remarkable luster from top to bottom The abacus is adorned with four flame palmette designs separated one from the other by pairs of geese symbolical perhaps of the flock of the Buddha s disciples The lions from the summit though now quite disfigured still testify to the skills of the sculptors 15 The sandstone out of which the pillar is carved came from the quarries of Chunar several hundred miles away implying that the builders were able to transport a block of stone over forty feet in length and weighing almost as many tons over such a distance They probably used water transport using rafts during the rainy season up until the Ganges Jumna and Betwa rivers 15 Temple 40 edit nbsp Sanchi Temple 40 was a 3rd century BCE temple one of the first known in India constructed around the same time as the core of the Great Stupa nbsp Conjectural reconstruction of the original timber built Temple 40 burnt down in the 2nd century BCE Another structure which has been dated at least partially to the 3rd century BCE is the so called Temple 40 one of the first instances of free standing temples in India 16 Temple 40 has remains of three different periods the earliest period dating to the Maurya age which probably makes it contemporary to the creation of the Great Stupa An inscription even suggests it might have been established by Bindusara the father of Ashoka 17 The original 3rd century BCE temple was built on a high rectangular stone platform 26 52 14 3 35 metres with two flights of stairs to the east and the west It was an apsidal hall probably made of timber It was burnt down sometime in the 2nd century BCE 18 19 Later the platform was enlarged to 41 76 27 74 metres and re used to erect a pillared hall with fifty columns 5 10 of which stumps remain Some of these pillars have inscriptions of the 2nd century BCE In the 7th or 8th century a small shrine was established in one corner of the platform re using some of the pillars and putting them in their present position 20 19 Maurya structures and decorations at Sanchi 3rd century BCE nbsp Approximate reconstitution of the Great Stupa with its pillar of Ashoka under the Mauryas c 260 BCE nbsp Remains of the Ashokan Pillar in polished stone right of the Southern Gateway with its Edict nbsp Sanchi Minor Pillar Edict of Ashoka in situ detail of the previous image nbsp Remains of the shaft of the pillar of Ashoka under a shed near the Southern Gateway nbsp Side view of the capital Sanchi Archaeological Museum 11 Shunga period 2nd century BCE editOn the basis of Ashokavadana it is presumed that the stupa may have been vandalized at one point sometime in the 2nd century BCE an event some have related to the rise of the Shunga emperor Pushyamitra Shunga who overtook the Mauryan Empire as an army general It has been suggested that Pushyamitra may have destroyed the original stupa and his son Agnimitra rebuilt it 21 The original brick stupa was covered with stone during the Shunga period Given the rather decentralized and fragmentary nature of the Shunga state with many cities actually issuing their own coinage as well as the relative dislike of the Shungas for Buddhism some authors argue that the constructions of that period in Sanchi cannot really be called Shunga They were not the result of royal sponsorship in contrast with what happened during the Mauryas and the dedications at Sanchi were private or collective rather than the result of royal patronage 22 The style of the Shunga period decorations at Sanchi bear a close similarity to those of Bharhut as well as the peripheral balustrades at the Mahabodhi Temple in Bodh Gaya nbsp The Great Stupa under the Sungas The Sungas nearly doubled the diameter of the initial stupa encasing it in stone and built a balustrade and a railing around it Great Stupa No 1 edit During the later rule of the Shunga the stupa was expanded with stone slabs to almost twice its original size The dome was flattened near the top and crowned by three superimposed parasols within a square railing With its many tiers it was a symbol of the dharma the Wheel of the Law The dome was set on a high circular drum meant for circumambulation which could be accessed via a double staircase A second stone pathway at ground level was enclosed by a stone balustrade The railings around Stupa 1 do not have artistic reliefs These are only slabs with some dedicatory inscriptions These elements are dated to circa 150 BCE 23 or 175 125 BCE 24 Although the railings are made up of stone they are copied from a wooden prototype and as John Marshall has observed the joints between the coping stones have been cut at a slant as wood is naturally cut and not vertically as stone should be cut Besides the short records of the donors written on the railings in Brahmi script there are two later inscriptions on the railings added during the time of the Gupta Period 25 Some reliefs are visible on the stairway balustrade but they are probably slightly later than those at Stupa No2 26 and are dated to 125 100 BCE 24 Some authors consider that these reliefs rather crude and without obvious Buddhist connotations are the oldest reliefs of all Sanchi slightly older even than the reliefs of Sanchi Stupa No 2 24 Great Stupa No1 Shunga period structures and decorations 2nd century BCE nbsp Great Stupa Stupa expansion and balustrades only are Shunga Undecorated ground railings dated to approximately 150 BCE 23 Some reliefs on the stairway balustrade nbsp Shunga balustrade and staircase nbsp Shunga stonework nbsp Shunga vedika railing with inscriptions nbsp Deambulatory pathway nbsp Summit railing and umbrellas Stairway balustrade reliefs nbsp Flame palmette nbsp Flame palmette and lotus nbsp Peacock nbsp Woman riding a Centaur nbsp Lotus nbsp Half lotus nbsp Lion nbsp Elephant nbsp Elephant with branch nbsp Floral motif Stupa No 2 the first Buddhist reliefs edit Main article Sanchi Stupa No 2 nbsp Mason s marks in Kharoshti indicate that craftsmen from the north west were responsible for foreign reliefs of Stupa No 2 27 This medallion was made circa 115 BCE 28 The stupas which seem to have been commissioned during the rule of the Shungas are the Second and then the Third stupas but not the highly decorated gateways which are from the following Satavahana period as known from inscriptions following the ground balustrade and stone casing of the Great Stupa Stupa No 1 The reliefs are dated to circa 115 BCE for the medallions and 80 BCE for the pillar carvings 28 slightly before the reliefs of Bharhut for the earliest with some reworks down to the 1st century CE 23 28 nbsp Sunga period railings were initially blank left Great Stupa and only started to be decorated circa 115 BCE with Stupa No 2 right 29 30 Stupa No 2 was established later than the Great Stupa but it is probably displaying the earliest architectural ornaments 26 For the first time clearly Buddhist themes are represented particularly the four events in the life of the Buddha that are the Nativity the Enlightenment the First Sermon and the Decease 31 The decorations of Stupa No 2 have been called the oldest extensive stupa decoration in existence 29 and this Stupa is considered as the birthplace of Jataka illustrations 30 The reliefs at Stupa No 2 bear mason marks in Kharoshthi as opposed to the local Brahmi script 27 This seems to imply that foreign workers from the north west from the region of Gandhara where Kharoshthi was the current script were responsible for the motifs and figures that can be found on the railings of the stupa 27 Foreigners from Gandhara are otherwise known to have visited the region around the same time in 115 BCE the embassy of Heliodorus from Indo Greek king Antialkidas to the court of the Sungas king Bhagabhadra in nearby Vidisha is recorded in which Heliodorus established the Heliodorus pillar in a dedication to Vasudeva This would indicate that relations had improved at that time and that people traveled between the two realms 32 Stupa No 2 Shunga structures and decorations end of 2nd century BCE nbsp Stupa No 2Shunga period but mason s marks in Kharoshti point to craftsmen from the north west region of Gandhara for the earliest reliefs circa 115 BCE 27 28 23 nbsp Foreigner on a horse The medallions are dated circa 115 BCE 28 nbsp Lakshmi with lotus and two child attendants probably derived from similar images of Venus 33 nbsp Griffin with Brahmi script inscription nbsp Female riding a Centaur nbsp Lotus within beads and reels motif Stupa No 3 edit Stupa No 3 was built during the time of the Shungas who also built the railing around it as well as the staircase The Relics of Sariputra and Mahamoggallana the disciples of the Buddha are said to have been placed in Stupa No 3 and relics boxes were excavated tending to confirm this 34 The reliefs on the railings are said to be slightly later than those of Stupa No 2 24 The single torana gateway oriented to the south is not Shunga and was built later under the Satavahanas probably circa 50 BCE 24 Stupa No 3 Shunga structures and decorations 2nd century BCE nbsp Stupa No 3 Stupa and balustrades only are Shunga nbsp Stairway and railing nbsp Lotus medallions nbsp Floral designs nbsp Post relief 35 nbsp Relics of Sariputra and Mahamoggallana Sunga Pillar edit nbsp Sunga pillar No25 with own capital on the side Pillar 25 at Sanchi is also attributed to the Sungas in the 2nd 1st century BCE and is considered as similar in design to the Heliodorus pillar locally called Kham Baba pillar dedicated by Heliodorus the ambassador to the Indo Greek king Antialkidas in nearby Vidisha c 100 BCE 36 That it belongs to about the period of the Sunga is clear alike from its design and from the character of the surface dressing The height of the pillar including the capital is 15 ft its diameter at the base 1 ft 4 in Up to a height of 4 ft 6 in the shaft is octagonal above that sixteen sided In the octagonal portion all the facets are flat but in the upper section the alternate facets are fluted the eight other sides being produced by a concave chamfering of the arrises of the octagon This method of finishing off the arris at the point of transition between the two sections are features characteristic of the second and first centuries BCE The west side of the shaft is split off but the tenon at the top to which the capital was mortised is still preserved The capital is of the usual bell shaped Persepolitan type with lotus leaves falling over the shoulder of the bell Above this is a circular cable necking then a second circular necking relieved by a bead and lozenge pattern and finally a deep square abacus adorned with a railing in relief The crowning feature probably a lion has disappeared 36 Satavahana period 1st century BCE 1st century CE editSatavahana gateways from 50 0 BCE nbsp The southern gateway of the Great Stupa Stupa 1 at Sanchi was according to an inscription see arrow donated under the rule of King Satakarni probably Satakarni II 37 nbsp The inscription appears on the relief of a stupa at the center of the top architrave at the rear It is written in three lines in early Brahmi script over the dome of the stupa in this relief 38 Dated circa 50 BCE 0 CE The Satavahana Empire under Satakarni II conquered eastern Malwa from the Shungas 39 This gave the Satavahanas access to the Buddhist site of Sanchi in which they are credited with the building of the decorated gateways around the original Mauryan Empire and Sunga stupas 40 From the 1st century BCE the highly decorated gateways were built The balustrade and the gateways were also colored 6 Later gateways toranas are generally dated to the 1st century CE 26 The Siri Satakani inscription in the Brahmi script records the gift of one of the top architraves of the Southern Gateway by the artisans of the Satavahana king Satakarni II 37 𑀭 𑀜 𑀲 𑀭 𑀲 𑀢𑀓𑀡 𑀲 Rano Siri Satakaṇisa 𑀆𑀯 𑀲𑀡 𑀲 𑀯 𑀲 𑀣 𑀧 𑀢𑀲 avesaṇisa vasitḥiputasa 𑀆𑀦 𑀤𑀲 𑀤 𑀦 Anaṁdasa danaṁ Gift of Ananda the son of Vasithi the foreman of the artisans of rajan Siri Satakarni Inscription of the Southern Gateway of the Great Stupa 38 There are some uncertainties about the date and the identity of the Satakarni in question as a king Satakarni is mentioned in the Hathigumpha inscription which is sometimes dated to the 2nd century BCE Also several Satavahana kings used the name Satakarni which complicates the matter Usual dates given for the gateways range from 50 BCE to the 1st century CE and the builder of the earliest gateways is generally considered to be Satakarni II who ruled in 50 25 BCE 39 26 Another early Satavahana monument is known Cave No 19 of king Kanha 100 70 BCE at the Nasik Caves which is much less developed artistically than the Sanchi toranas Material and carving technique edit From ivory to stone carving under the Satavahanas nbsp Pompeii Lakshmi 1st century CE nbsp Yashini East Gateway Sanchi Although made of stone the torana gateways were carved and constructed in the manner of wood and the gateways were covered with narrative sculptures It has also been suggested that the stone reliefs were made by ivory carvers from nearby Vidisha and an inscription on the Southern Gateway of the Great Stupa The Worship of the Bodhisattva s hair was dedicated by the Guild of Ivory Carvers of Vidisha 41 42 nbsp Inscription Vedisakehi daṃtakarehi rupakaṃmaṃ kataṃ 𑀯 𑀤 𑀲𑀓 𑀨 𑀤 𑀢𑀓 𑀭 𑀨 𑀭 𑀧𑀓 𑀫 𑀓𑀢 Ivory workers from Vidisha have done the carving 43 The inscription reads Vedisakehi damtakarehi rupakammam katam meaning The ivory workers from Vidisha have done the carving 44 45 Some of the Begram ivories or the Pompeii Lakshmi give an indication of the kind of ivory works that could have influenced the carvings at Sanchi or vice versa The reliefs show scenes from the life of the Buddha integrated with everyday events that would be familiar to the onlookers and so make it easier for them to understand the Buddhist creed as relevant to their lives At Sanchi and most other stupas the local population donated money for the embellishment of the stupa to attain spiritual merit There was no direct royal patronage Devotees both men and women who donated money towards a sculpture would often choose their favourite scene from the life of the Buddha and then have their names inscribed on it This accounts for the random repetition of particular episodes on the stupa Dehejia 1992 On these stone carvings the Buddha was never depicted as a human figure due to aniconism in Buddhism Instead the artists chose to represent him by certain attributes such as the horse on which he left his father s home his footprints or a canopy under the bodhi tree at the point of his enlightenment The human body was thought to be too confining for the Buddha Architecture evolution of the load bearing pillar capital edit Evolution of the Indian load bearing pillar capital down to 1st century Sanchi nbsp Mauryan capital Pataliputra capital 4th 3rd c BCE nbsp Sarnath capital Sarnath c 3rd 1st c BCE nbsp Bharhut capital2nd c BCE nbsp Sanchi lion capital1st c BCE nbsp Sanchi elephant capital1st c BCE CE nbsp Sanchi Yakshas capital1st c CE Similarities have been found in the designs of the capitals of various areas of northern India from the time of Ashoka to the time of the Satavahanas at Sanchi particularly between the Pataliputra capital at the Mauryan Empire capital of Pataliputra 3rd century BCE the pillar capitals at the Sunga Empire Buddhist complex of Bharhut 2nd century BCE and the pillar capitals of the Satavahanas at Sanchi 1st centuries BCE CE 46 The earliest known example in India the Pataliputra capital 3rd century BCE is decorated with rows of repeating rosettes ovolos and bead and reel mouldings wave like scrolls and side volutes with central rosettes around a prominent central flame palmette which is the main motif These are quite similar to Classical Greek designs and the capital has been described as quasi Ionic 47 48 Greek influence 49 as well as Persian Achaemenid influence have been suggested 50 The Sarnath capital is a pillar capital discovered in the archaeological excavations at the ancient Buddhist site of Sarnath 51 The pillar displays Ionic volutes and palmettes 52 53 It has been variously dated from the 3rd century BCE during the Mauryan Empire period 54 51 to the 1st century BCE during the Sunga Empire period 52 One of the faces shows a galopping horse carrying a rider while the other face shows an elephant and its mahaut 52 The pillar capital in Bharhut dated to the 2nd century BCE during the Sunga Empire period also incorporates many of these characteristics 55 56 with a central anta capital with many rosettes beads and reels as well as a central palmette design 46 57 58 Importantly recumbent animals lions symbols of Buddhism were added in the style of the Pillars of Ashoka The Sanchi pillar capital is keeping the general design seen at Bharhut a century earlier of recumbent lions grouped around a central square section post with the central design of a flame palmette which started with the Pataliputra capital However the design of the central post is now simpler with the flame palmette taking all the available room 59 Elephants were later used to adorn the pillar capitals still with the central palmette design and lastly Yakshas here the palmette design disappears Main themes of the reliefs edit nbsp The Great Stupa at the time of the Satavahanas Jatakas edit See also Jataka tales Various Jatakas are illustrated These are Buddhist moral tales relating edifying events of the former lives of the Buddha as he was still a Bodhisattva Among the Jatakas being depicted are the Syama Jataka the Vessantara Jataka and the Mahakapi Jataka Miracles edit Numerous miracles made by the Buddha are recorded Among them The miracle of the Buddha walking on water 60 The miracle of fire and woodTemptation of the Buddha edit Numerous scene refer to the temptation of the Buddha when he was confronted with the seductive daughters of Mara and with his army of demons Having resisted the temptations of Mara the Buddha finds enlightenment Other similar scenes on the same subject Temptation of the Buddha with Mara s army fleeing Enlightenment of the Buddha with Mara s army fleeing 61 nbsp Temptation of the Buddha with the Buddha on the left symbolized by his throne only surrounded by rejoicing devotees Mara and his daughters center and the demons of Mara fleeing right 62 War over the Buddha s Relics edit See also Sarira and Relics associated with Buddha The southern gate of Stupa No1 thought to be oldest and main entrance to the stupa 63 has several depictions of the story of the Buddha s relics starting with the War over the Relics After the death of the Buddha the Mallakas of Kushinagar wanted to keep his ashes but the other kingdoms also wanting their part went to war and besieged the city of Kushinagar Finally an agreement was reached and the Buddha s cremation relics were divided among 8 royal families and his disciples 64 65 This famous view shows warfare techniques at the time of the Satavahanas as well as a view of the city of Kushinagar of the Mallakas which has been relied on for the understanding of ancient Indian cities Other narrative panels related to the War over the Buddha s Relics at Sanchi are The King of the Mallakas bringing the relics of the Buddha to Kushinagara right after the death of the Buddha before the War itself In this relief the king is seen seated on an elephant holding the relics on his head 66 The siege of Kushinagara by the seven kings another relief on the same subject nbsp War over the Buddha s Relics kept by the city of Kushinagar South Gate Stupa no 1 Sanchi 67 Removal of the relics by Ashoka edit According to Buddhist legend a few centuries later the relics would be removed from the eight guardian kingdoms by King Ashoka and enshrined into 84 000 stupas 64 68 69 Ashoka obtained the ashes from seven of the guardian kingdoms but failed to take the ashes from the Nagas at Ramagrama who were too powerful and were able to keep them This scene is depicted in one of the transversal portions of the southern gateway of Stupa No1 at Sanchi Ashoka is shown on the right in his chariot and his army the stupa with the relics is in the center and the Naga kings with their serpent hoods at the extreme left under the trees 70 nbsp King Ashoka visits Ramagrama to take relics of the Buddha from the Nagas but he failed the Nagas being too powerful Southern gateway Stupa 1 Southern Gateway Sanchi 71 Building of the Bodh Gaya temple by Ashoka edit nbsp Ashoka in grief supported by his two queens in a relief at Sanchi Stupa 1 Southern gateway The identification with Ashoka is confirm by a similar relief from Kanaganahalli inscribed Raya Asoko 72 73 71 nbsp Bodhi tree temple depicted in Sanchi Stupa 1 Southern gateway Ashoka went to Bodh Gaya to visit the Bodhi Tree under which the Buddha had his enlightenment as described his Major Rock Edict No 8 However Ashoka was profoundly grieved when he discovered that the sacred pipal tree was not properly being taken care of and dying out due to the neglect of Queen Tiṣyarakṣita 74 As a consequence Ashoka endeavoured to take care of the Bodhi Tree and built a temple around it This temple became the center of Bodh Gaya A sculpture at Sanchi southern gateway of Stupa No1 shows Ashoka in grief being supported by his two Queens Then the relief above shows the Bodhi Tree prospering inside its new temple Numerous other sculptures at Sanchi show scenes of devotion towards the Bodhi Tree and the Bodhi Tree inside its temple at Bodh Gaya 74 Other versions of the relief depicting the temple for the Bodhi Tree are visible at Sanchi such as the Temple for the Bodhi Tree Eastern Gateway Foreign devotees edit nbsp Foreign devotees and musicians on the Northern Gateway of Stupa I 75 Some of the friezes of Sanchi also show devotees in Greek attire wearing kilted tunics and some of them a Greek piloi hat 76 77 75 They are also sometimes described as Sakas although the historical period seems too early for their presence in Central India and the two pointed hats seem too short to be Scythian 75 The official notice at Sanchi describes Foreigners worshiping Stupa 78 The men are depicted with short curly hair often held together with a headband of the type commonly seen on Greek coins The clothing too is Greek complete with tunics capes and sandals typical of the Greek travelling costume 79 The musical instruments are also quite characteristic such as the thoroughly Greek double flute called aulos 75 80 Also visible are carnyx like horns 80 The actual participation of Yavanas Yonas Greek donors 81 to the construction of Sanchi is known from three inscriptions made by self declared Yavana donors The clearest of these reads Setapathiyasa Yonasa danam Gift of the Yona of Setapatha 82 83 Setapatha being an uncertain city possibly a location near Nasik 84 a place where other dedications by Yavanas are known in cave No 17 of the Nasik Caves complex and on the pillars of the Karla Caves not far away A second similar inscription on a pillar reads Sv etapathasa Yona sa danam with probably the same meaning Gift of the Yona of Setapatha 84 85 The third inscription on two adjacent pavement slabs reads Cuda yo vana kasa bo silayo Two slabs of Cuda the Yonaka 86 84 Around 113 BCE Heliodorus an ambassador of the Indo Greek ruler Antialcidas is known to have dedicated a pillar the Heliodorus pillar around 5 miles from Sanchi in the village of Vidisha Another rather similar foreigner is also depicted in Bharhut the Bharhut Yavana c 100 BCE also wearing a tunic and a royal headband in the manner of a Greek king and displaying a Buddhist triratna on his sword 87 88 Another one can be seen in the region of Odisha in the Udayagiri and Khandagiri Caves Northwestern foreigners at Sanchi nbsp Foreigner on a horse circa 115 BCE Stupa No2 27 28 nbsp Detail of the foreigners in Greek dress and playing carnyxes and aolus flute Northern Gateway of Stupa I detail nbsp Foreigners holding grapes and riding winged lions Sanchi Stupa 1 Eastern Gateway 89 nbsp Foreign horseriders Southern Gateway of Stupa 3 nbsp Foreigner with headband fighting a Makara Southern Gateway of Stupa 3 nbsp Foreigners on horses wearing headbands caps and boots Western gate of Stupa 1 Aniconism edit nbsp Aniconism in Miracle at Kapilavastu King Suddhodana praying as his son the Buddha rises in the air praised by celestial beings but only his path the horizontal slab in the air is visible 90 See also Aniconism in Buddhism In all these scenes the Buddha is never represented being absent altogether even from scenes of his life where he is playing a central role in the Miracle of the Buddha walking on the river Nairanjana he is just represented by his path on the water 91 in the Procession of king Suddhodana from Kapilavastu he walks in the air at the end of the procession but his presence is only suggested by people turning their heads upward toward the symbol of his path 91 nbsp The promenade of the Buddha or Chankrama used to depict the Buddha in motion in Buddhist aniconism In one of the reliefs of the Miracle at Kapilavastu King Suddhodana is seen praying as his son the Buddha rises in the air The Buddha praised is praised by celestial beings but only his path is visible in the form of a slab hanging in middle air called a chankrama or promenade 90 Otherwise the presence of the Buddha is symbolized by an empty throne as in the scene of Bimbisara with his royal cortege issuing from the city of Rajagriha to visit the Buddha 60 Similar scenes would later appear in the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara but this time with representations of the Buddha John Marshall detailed every panel in his seminal work A Guide to Sanchi 92 This anoconism is relation to the image of the Buddha could be in conformity with an ancient Buddhist prohibition against showing the Buddha himself in human form known from the Sarvastivada vinaya rules of the early Buddhist school of the Sarvastivada Since it is not permitted to make an image of the Buddha s body I pray that the Buddha will grant that I can make an image of the attendant Bodhisattva Is that acceptable The Buddha answered You may make an image of the Bodhisattava 93 The Gateways or Toranas edit The gateways depict various scenes of the life of the Buddha as well as events after his death in particular the War of the Relics and the efforts of emperor Ashoka to spread the Buddhist faith Stupa 1 Southern Gateway edit The Southern Gateway of Stupa No1 is thought to be oldest and main entrance to the stupa 94 The narrative friezes of this gateway put great emphasis on the relics of the Buddha and on the role of Ashoka in spreading the Buddhist faith This gateway is one of the two which were reconstructed by Major Cole in 1882 83 The whole of the right jamb and half of the left are new and blank as well as the west end of the lowest architrave the east end of the middle architrave and the six vertical uprights between the architraves 95 Southern Gateway Great Stupa No1 Sanchi 1st century BCE nbsp The Southern Gateway of Stupa 1 The Southern Gateway of Stupa 1 is one of the four richly carved gateways or toranas surrounding Stupa 1 the Great Stupa It is the main one as it was erected in front of the steps by which the terrace was ascended The Southern Gateway was also the first to be erected Then followed in chronological order the Northern the Eastern and the Western their succession in each case being demonstrated by the style of their carvings It is probable however that not more than three or four decades intervened between the building of the Southern and Western gateways A few of the surfaces of the Southern Gateway are undecorated or lost Like the other gateways the Southern Gateway is composed of two square pillars surmounted by capitals which in their turn support a superstructure of three architraves with volute ends 96 Architraves nbsp Front architraves nbsp Rear architraves Some material was lost over two thousand years and the restoration had to make up for lost elements with some blank slabs The whole of the right jamb and half of the left are new as well as the west end of the lowest architrave the east end of the middle architrave and the six vertical uprights between the architraves When the gateway was restored the top and the lowest lintels appear to have been reversed by mistake since the more important sculptures on them now face the stupa instead of facing outwards 95 nbsp Front middle architrave King Ashoka visits Ramagrama King Ashoka visited Ramagrama to take relics of the Buddha from the Nagas but he failed the Nagas being too powerful After the death of the Buddha his relics were originally divided into eight portions and shared between eight princes Each of the princes constructed a stupa at or near his capital city within which the respective portion of the ashes was enshrined 97 These eight stupas were erected at Rajagriha Vaisali Kapilavastu Allakappa Ramagrama Vothadvipa Pava and Kusinara 98 About two centuries later in order to spread the Buddhist faith Asoka endeavored to gather the eight shares of the relics to divide them up and distribute them among 84 000 stupas which he himself erected He only obtained seven of these portions he failed to secure the relics of Ramagrama in the Nepal Tarai in face of the resolute opposition of their devoted guardians the Nagas 95 Here in the centre of the architrave is depicted the stupa of Ramagrama Above the stupa are heavenly figures bearing garlands in their hands To the right the Emperor Asoka is approaching in his chariot accompanied by a retinue of elephants horsemen and footmen and to the left the Nagas and Nagis in human form with serpent hoods worshiping at the stupa bringing offerings or emerging from the waters of a lotus pond 95 On the projecting end of this architrave is an elephant in a lotus pond with mahaut and females on its back and a second female scrambling up behind in the background a pavilion with female figures looking out To what particular incident this relief refers is not known 95 An inscription on the dome of the stupa records that the architrave was the gift of one Balamitra pupil of Ayachuda Arya Kshudra the preacher of the Law nbsp Rear top architrave The seven Buddhas See also List of the named Buddhas Six Buddhas of the past and Gautama Buddha with his Bodhi Tree at the extreme right In the central section are three stupas alternating with four trees with thrones in front of them adored by figures both human and divine These represent the six Buddhas of the past namely Vipassi Sikhi Vessabhu Kakusandha Konagamana and Kaasapa and Gautama Buddha Three are symbolized by their stupas and four by the trees under which each respectively attained enlightenment The tree on the extreme right is the pipal tree of Gautama Buddha and the one next to it is the banyan tree of Kasyapa Buddha The identification of the others is less certain nbsp The Siri Satakani inscriptionThe inscription on the dome of the central stupa reads L 1 rano Siri Satakanisa L 2 avesanisa vasithiputasa L 3 Anamdasa danam Gift of Anamda the son of Vdsithi Vdsishthi the foreman of the artisans avesanin of rajan Siri Satakani 95 This inscription has been decisive in attributing the construction of the gateways to the time of the Satavahana Empire On each of the projecting ends of this lintel is a horse with attendants and royal umbrella issuing from a city gate Possibly it is Kanthaka the horse of Gautama when he was going forth from the city of Kapilavastu 95 When the gateway was restored this lintel together with the bottom one appears to have been reversed by mistake since the more important sculptures on them now face the stupa instead of facing outwards 95 nbsp Rear bottom architrave nbsp Full architrave with wings War over the Buddha s Relics See also Relics associated with Buddha nbsp This Sanchi relief permitted this reconstruction of the city of Kushinagara circa 500 BCE The Buddha died in Kushinagara the capital of the Mallakas who initially tried to keep all the relics of the Buddha for themselves A war erupted in which the chiefs of seven other clans waged war against the Mallakas of Kushinara for the possession of the Buddha s relics In the centre of the architrave the siege of Kushinara is in progress to right and left the victorious chiefs are departing in chariots and on elephants with the relics borne on the heads of the latter 95 The scene is carried through on to the projecting ends of the architrave and the seated elephants on the intervening false capitals are clearly intended to be part and parcel of the scene 95 67 When the gateway was restored this lintel together with the top one appears to have been reversed by mistake since the more important sculptures on them now face the stupa instead of facing outwards 95 Pillar capitals nbsp Left nbsp Right The pillars of the Southern Gateway feature lions in the manner of the Pillars of Ashoka They are the only pillar capitals of the Sanchi complex to do so PillarsExternal faces nbsp nbsp The left external face consists in a foliage scroll inhabited by numerous animals and garlands as well as an amorous couple repeated several time Of the right pillar external face nothing remains and it has been left blank by the reconstitution under Marshall Left pillar Front faceTop panel nbsp Ashoka with his two Queens visiting the Deer Park A Persepolitan column rising from a stepped base and supporting a wheel with thirty two spokes and an equal number of triratna devices on its outer rim This is the dharmachakra or Wheel of the Law the emblem of the Buddha s first sermon On either side of the wheel are celestial figures with garlands below them are four groups of worshipers and below the latter deers to indicate the spot where the first sermon was preached namely in the Deer Park Mrigadava near Benares In each of the groups of worshipers is a king with attendant females the same figures apparently being repeated four times They probably represent Asoka with his two queens visiting the Deer Park during his pilgrimage to the holy places of Buddhism 98 2nd panel nbsp Procession of king Ashoka on his chariot The Emperor Asoka in his chariot with his retinue around 98 3rd panel nbsp The Cortege of Mara According to Marshall relating the panel to the next one on the inner face deities are seen on foot on horseback and on elephants hastening to do homage to the Bodhisattva s locks 98 Left pillar Inner faceTop panel nbsp Bodhi tree temple of Bodh Gaya built by Ashoka The temple around the Bodhi Tree the pipal tree beneath which the Buddha had attained enlightenment was erected by Asoka himself This Temple is hypaethral Here the sanctity of the tree is indicated by umbrellas and garlands and on the throne inside the shrine are three triratna symbols 98 2nd panel nbsp Ashoka in grief supported by his two Queens Ashoka is in grief as he saw the pipal tree of the Buddha being neglected by the jealous Queen Tishyarakshita He is so shocked that he has to be supported by two of his wives He would thereafter build a temple around the tree seen in the panel above and which would become the sacred temple of Bodh Gaya 99 98 3rd panel nbsp Worship of the Bodhisattva s hair In the lowest panel of the inner face 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 98 This particular relief was dedicated by the Guild of Ivory Carvers of Vidisha horizontal inscription on the lintel suggesting that a part of the gateways at least was made by ivory carvers 41 At the least the delicacy of workmanship and spatial effect attained in the panel of the Trayastrimsa heaven is particularly striking and makes it understandable that as the inscription on it records it was the work of ivory carvers of Vidisha The inscription reads Vedisehi dantakarehi rupadamam katam meaning The ivory carvers from Vidisha have done the carving 44 100 Some of the Begram ivories or the Pompeii Lakshmi give an indication of the kind of ivory works that could have influenced the carvings at Sanchi Left pillar Rear faceUnique panel nbsp To the left of the panel a royal figure is seated beneath a canopy holding a female by the hand in the middle another female seated on a low stool to the right two other figures standing with a child behind bearing a garland At the back of them is a plantain tree and above a Chaitya s window with an umbrella on either side The meaning of this scene is uncertain 98 Right pillarBlank All reliefs and inscriptions lost Stupa 1 Northern Gateway edit The Northern Gateway is the best preserved of all the gateways and was the second to be erected The numerous panels relate various events of the life of the Buddha Only one atypical panel Right pillar Inner face Top panel shows Foreigners making a dedication at the Southern Gateway of Stupa No 1 Northern Gateway Great Stupa No1 Sanchi 1st century BCE nbsp The Northern Gateway of Stupa 1 The Northern Gateway of Stupa 1 is one of the four richly carved gateways or toranas surrounding Stupa 1 the Great Stupa The Northern Gateway was the second to be erected The best preserved of all four gateways is the Northern one which still retains most of its ornamental figures and gives a good idea of the original appearance of all the gateways Like the other gateways the Northern Gateway is composed of two square pillars surmounted by capitals which in their turn support a superstructure of three architraves with volute ends 96 Architraves nbsp Front architraves nbsp Rear architraves The architraves are all almost intact They are crowned by two large decorated Shrivatsa symbols in the round symbols of Buddhism as well as the remnants of a Dharmachakra Wheel of the Law at the center The lintels have seated lions and Yakshinis also in the round at their ends nbsp Rear central architrave nbsp The actual Diamond throne at Bodh Gaya built by Ashoka c 260 BCE Temptation of the Buddha with Mara and his daughters and the demons of Mara fleeing Towards the left end of the panel is the pipal tree at Bodh Gaya with an umbrella and streamers above and in front the diamond throne Vajrasana of the Buddha whereon he sat when he withstood the temptations and threats of Mara the Satan of Buddhism and when he attained to Buddhahood Human and celestial beings are adoring it The figure to the left of it is perhaps Sujata bringing the meal which she prepared for Gautama before he began his last meditation prior to his enlightenment Near the middle of the panel is Mara seated on a throne with attendants around and advancing from him towards the throne are his daughters who sought by their blandishments to seduce Gautama from his purpose On his other side i e in the right half of the panel are the hosts of Mara s demons personifying the vices the passions and the fears of mankind The vigor and humor with which these fantastic beings are portrayed is very striking and far more forceful than anything of the kind produced by the artists of the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara 101 See also Mara s Defeat in The Life of Buddha Pillar capitals nbsp Left nbsp Right Elephants facing the four directions decorate the top of the gateway pillars and support the architraves They are gathered around a central pillar of square section decorated with a large flame palmette design The capitals are flanked by a dancing Yakshini under foliage PillarsExternal faces nbsp Left nbsp Right Left The external side of the left pillar facing the east doesn t have narrative reliefs but only displays Buddhist symbols as well as intricate vegetal designs The external face is separated vertically in three bands the central band consisting in a superposition of numerous flame palmettes nine in total and the two external bands consisting in a superposition of hooks holdings garlands The bottom of the pillar face has two footprints of the Buddha with a wheel of the Law on their sole The pillar face is crowned by a decorated Shrivatsa symbol 102 Right The external face on the right side has the same background decoration with the three vertical bands and the superposition of flame palmettes and hooks holdings garlands but lacks the bottom and top symbols of the Buddha footprint and the decorated Shrivatsa Left pillar Front face Most of the scenes on this face appear to relate to Sravasti Top panel nbsp nbsp The Buddha in levitation performing the Miracle of Sravasti Gandhara 100 200 CE Great Miracle at Sravasti also called Mango Tree Miracle when the Buddha walks in the air In the center a mango tree with the throne of the Buddha in front the Buddha of course not being illustrated Round the Buddha is a circle of his followers bringing garlands to the tree or in attitudes of adoration It was beneath a mango tree that according to the Pali texts Buddha performed the great miracle at Sravasti when he walked in the air and flames broke from his shoulders and streams of water from his feet But here there is no definite indication of the miracle 102 In the anthropomorphic non aniconic Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara the Buddha would simply be shown in his human form rising slightly in the air with flames springing from his feet and water emanating from his shoulders 2nd panel nbsp Jetavana of Sravasti showing the three preferred residences of the Buddha nbsp Jetavana story Bharhut 2nd century BCE The Jetavana at Sravasti showing the three favourite residences of the Buddha the Gandhakuti the Kosambakuti and the Karorikuti with the throne of the Buddha in the front of each The Jetavana garden was presented to the Buddha by the rich banker Anathapindika who purchased it for as many gold pieces as would cover the surface of the ground Hence the foreground of the relief is shown covered with ancient Indian coins karshapanas just as it is in the similar relief at Bharhut where the details of the coins are more in evidence 102 3rd panel nbsp Aerial promenade of the Buddha Presumably the long band on top of the heads of devotees is the promenade the Buddha is walking on The long open pavilion mandapa calls to mind the one at Sravasti which is portrayed in the Bharhut relief 102 4th panel nbsp Procession of King Prasenajit of Kosala leaving Sravasti to meet the Buddha A royal procession issuing from a city gate probably Prasenajit of Kosala going forth from Sravasti to meet the Buddha 102 5th panel nbsp Paradise of Indra nandana The meaning of this scene which is analogous to several others on the gateways is not clear Perhaps like the scene on the gateways of Stupa No3 it may represent the Paradise of Indra nandana where pleasure and passion held sway 102 Left pillar Inner face This face refers particularly to Rajagriha Top panel nbsp nbsp The same scene in the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara Loriyan Tangai Visit of Indra to the Buddha in the Indrasaila cave near Rajagriha In the upper part of the panel is an artificial cave resembling in its facade many rock cut Buddhist chaitya shrines in Western and Central India In front of the door is the throne which marks the presence of the Buddha The animals peering out from among the rocks serve to indicate the wildness of the spot Below is the company of Indra in attitudes of worship but which of these figures represents Indra and which his musician Panchasikha who accompanied him it is not possible to determine 102 2nd panel nbsp Royal cortege leaving Rajagriha A king and his royal cortege issuing from a city As the panel on this side of the pillar relates particularly to Rajagriha it is probable that the King is either Bimbisara or Ajatashatru on a visit to the Buddha at the Gridhrakuta Hill and that the city is Rajagriha 102 See also Siddhartha and King Bimbasara in The Life of Buddha 3rd panel nbsp Bamboo garden Venuvana at Rajagriha the visit of Bimbisara The Bamboo garden Venuvana at Rajagriha with the throne of the Buddha in the center and devotees around The identity of the spot is indicated by the bamboos on either side of the panel 102 This event refers to a visit of King Bimbisara to the Buddha 102 See also The Buddha at the Bamboo Grove in The Life of Buddha 4th panel nbsp Dvarapala guardian deity Positioned as it is in the inside panel of the gateway the deity guards the left side of the entrance to the stupa This Dvarapala is faced by another one on the right side Right pillar Inner faceTop panel nbsp Foreigners making a dedication to Southern Gateway of the Great Stupa Probably the dedication of a stupa but it might also refer to the death parinirvana of the Buddha Among the crowds who are celebrating the occasion with music and dancing some are wearing dresses and high boots suggestive of a cold climate The individual and realistic features of the people can also be noticed 103 The official notice at Sanchi reads Foreigners worshiping Stupa The relief shows 18 of these foreigners and 4 Gandharva celestial deities in the sky above nbsp Foreigners playing carnyxes and aulos flute at Sanchi detail These have been called Greek looking foreigners 104 wearing Greek clothing complete with tunics capes and sandals typical of the Greek travelling costume 79 and using Greek and Central Asian musical instruments the double flute aulos or the carnyx like Cornu horns possibly pointing to the Indo Greeks Another rather similar foreigner is also depicted in Bharhut the Bharhut Yavana also wearing a tunic and a royal headband in the manner of a Greek king and displaying a Buddhist triratna on his sword 87 88 The top of the panel show celestial divinities celebrating the dedication of the Stupa 2nd panel nbsp Offering of a bowl of honey to the Blessed One by a monkey The offering of a bowl of honey to the Blessed One by a monkey The Buddha is here represented by his pipal tree and throne to which devotees are doing obeisance The figure of the monkey is twice repeated first with the bowl and then with empty hands after the gift has been made The incident is portrayed in much the same way on the reliefs of the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara 103 3rd panel nbsp Miracle at Kapilavastu Suddhodana praying as his son the Buddha rises in the air praised by celestial beings only his path is visible This panel is to be interpreted in conjunction with the corresponding panel adjoining it on the front face of the same pillar When Buddha returned to his native city of Kapilavastu his father Suddhodana came forth with a royal retinue to meet him and a question of etiquette arose as to which should salute the other first the father who was king or the son who had become the Buddha Thereupon the Buddha solved the difficulty by walking miraculously in mid air Here in the panel on the inner face we see a banyan tree and in front of it the throne symbolizing the Buddha while suspended in the air above it is the chahkrama or promenade on which the Buddha used to take his exercise and which here symbolises that he is walking in the air Above it are celestial beings gandharvas with garlands in their hands To the right of the tree is King Suddhodana with attendants one of whom is holding the royal umbrella The reason for the banyan tree Ficus Indica Skr nyagrodha is that King Suddhodana presented a park of banyan trees to his son on his return and the tree therefore helps to localize the incident In the corresponding scene on the front face the Buddha is probably represented in this park with disciples but invisible due to aniconism and followers around him 103 4th panel nbsp Dvarapala guardian deity Positioned as it is in the inside panel of the gateway the deity guards the right side of the entrance to the stupa This Dvarapala is faced by another one on the left side Right pillar Front faceTop panel nbsp nbsp The same scene in the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara 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 top of the ladder is the tree and throne of the Buddha with the gods on either side in an attitude of adoration Other devas attend on him as he descends among whom the one to the right of the ladder holding a chauri and lotus may be Brahma At the foot of the ladder the tree and throne are repeated with a trio of devotees on either side indicating that the Buddha has returned again to earth 105 2nd panel nbsp The Great Departure of the Buddha from Kapilavastu A royal figure in a chariot drives forth from a city gate with a horse in front The scene is analogous to the scene of Buddha s departure from Kapilavastu on the East Gateway but in that case there is no chariot and in this case there is no umbrella above the horse to indicate the presence of the Buddha However a royal umbrella being held over an empty spot in the chariot would suggest the presence of the Buddha The figure standing at its side with a water pot bhrihgara in his hand indicates that a gift is being made Alternatively it could be King Suddhodana going forth from Kapilavastu to meet his son the Buddha on the occasion when he presented him with a park of mango trees 105 See also Siddhartha Leaves His Father s Palace in The Life of Buddha 3rd panel nbsp Teaching the Sakyans This panel may represent the Buddha teaching the Sakyans It can also be interpreted in relation to the panel of the Miracle at Kapilavastu on the same pillar Right pillar Inner face 3rd panel When Buddha returned to his native city of Kapilavastu his father Suddhodana came forth with a royal retinue to meet him and the Buddha performed his Miracle of the Walk in the Air In this scene on the front face of the pillar the Buddha is probably represented in this very park with disciples and followers around him 105 4th panel nbsp Unidentified broken scene Stupa 1 Eastern Gateway edit The Eastern Gateway describes historical events during the life of the Buddha as well as several miracles performed by the Buddha It was the third gateway to be erected Eastern Gateway Great Stupa No1 Sanchi 1st century BCE CE nbsp The Eastern Gateway of Stupa 1 The Eastern Gateway of Stupa 1 is one of the four richly carved gateways or toranas surrounding Stupa 1 the Great Stupa It is the third gateway to have been constructed Like the other gateways the Southern Gateway is composed of two square pillars surmounted by capitals which in their turn support a superstructure of three architraves with volute ends 96 Architraves nbsp Front architraves nbsp Rear architraves The architraves are all almost intact They were crowned by two large decorated Shrivatsa symbols in the round symbols of Buddhism only one of them remains The lintels have elephants mounted by Mahuts and a single seated lion at their ends A single remaining Yakshini top right corner suggests that many more have been lost nbsp Front architrave center The Great Departure During the night Prince Siddharta leaves the Palace of Kapilavastu far left while his wife Yasodhara his baby Rahula and the dancers are sleeping Siddharta rides his horse Kanthaka who is being lifted above the ground by Yakshas in order to keep quiet and avoid awakening the guards The horse is seen progressing from left to right away from the city and progressively higher in the air Siddharta is not visible but a royal chatra parasol is held by Chandaka in order to signify the fact that Siddharta is riding the horse After his arrival in the forest on the right Siddharta discards his robes cuts off his hair and returns the horse to Chandaka The horse is seen returning without a rider now walking on the ground devoid of the chatra When Siddharta stays in the forest he is symbolized by the two soles of his feet extreme right Siddharta has renounced the world 106 Central front architrave right nbsp The famous Yakshini under foliage and hanging in front of an elephant on the side of the East Gateway Pillar capitalsRight capital nbsp The pillars of the Eastern Gateway feature elephants in the four direction conducted by mahuts holding a Buddhist banner They are gathered around a pillar of square section decorated with a flame palmette design A Yakshini under foliage flanks them on the side PillarsLeft pillar Front faceTop panel nbsp The Miracle of Walking in the air at Savrasti While the Buddha walks in the air devotees are aligned and look upwards The Buddha is not visible aniconism and only his path chankrama is separating the panel horizontally in two parts 2nd panel nbsp nbsp The Diamond throne as discovered Temple for the Bodhi Tree in Bodh Gaya The illumination of the Buddha occurred here under the Bodhi Tree at Bodh Gaya and Asoka built a Diamond throne at the location as well as a temple to protect the Bodhi Tree within Spreading through its upper windows the branches of the sacred tree can be seen To right and left of the temple are four figures in an attitude of adoration perhaps the Guardian Kings of the Four Quarters Lokapalas 107 The throne was discovered after excavations near the location of the Bodhi tree in the 19th century and is now revered at the Mahabodhi Temple in Bodh Gaya 3rd panel nbsp Miracle of the Buddha walking on the River Nairanjana The Nairanjana river is shown in flood and Kasyapa accompanied by a disciple and a boatman are hastening in a boat to the rescue of the Buddha Then in the lower part of the picture the Buddha represented by his promenade chahbama appears walking on the face of the waters and in the foreground the figures of Kasyapa and his disciple are twice repeated now on dry ground and doing homage to the Master represented by the throne at the right hand bottom corner 107 Throughout The Buddha is not visible aniconism only represented by a path on the water and his empty throne bottom right 107 Bottom panel nbsp Bimbisara with his royal cortege issuing from the city of Rajagriha to visit the Buddha Bimbisara with his royal cortege issuing from the city of Rajagriha on a visit to the Buddha here symbolized by his empty throne This visit took place after the conversion of Kasyapa which was brought about by a series of miracles one of which is illustrated in the panel above 107 Left pillar Inner face This face is concerned with the miracles by which Buddha converted the Brahman Kasyapa and his disciples Top panel nbsp Visit of Indra and Brahma to the Buddha The visit of Indra and Brahma to the Buddha takes place in the town of Uruvilva Near the center of the panel is the throne indicating the presence of the Buddha surmounted by the umbrella behind it Indra and Brahma standing in an attitude of adoration in the background the houses of Uruvilva and the people at their daily tasks To the left a man and woman the woman grinding spices on a cari stone nearby to the right another woman is at work at a table while a third is pounding rice with pestle and mortar and a fourth winnowing the grain with a fan In the foreground is the river Nairanjana with cattle on its banks and a woman drawing water in a pitcher One of the villagers has his hands joined in the attitude of prayer 107 2nd panel nbsp Buddha tames the Naga at Uruvilva This panel is about the victory of the Buddha over the serpent in the fire chapel at Uruvilva The Buddha obtained the permission of Kasyapa to pass the night in a fire chapel at his hermitage which was inhabited by a fearsome Naga The Naga attacked him with smoke and fire but was met with the same weapons and being overcome crept into the Buddha s begging bowl In the middle of the panel is the fire temple with a fire altar in front and a throne indicating the presence of the Buddha within while behind the throne is the five headed Naga Flames are issuing from the windows in the roof On either side of the temple are the Brahmanical ascetics standing in an attitude of respect and veneration In the foreground to the right is a leaf hut parna sala and an ascetic at its threshold seated on a mat with his knees bound up by a band and his hair jafa twisted turban wise about his head Evidently he is a Brahman doing penance Before him is another Brahman standing and apparently reporting to him the miracle and near by is a small fire altar and the instruments of Vedic sacrifice To the left is the Nairanjana river in which another ascetic is bathing and from which three young novices are drawing water 107 3rd panel nbsp The miracle of fire and wood This is a depicting of the miracles of the wood the fire and the offering In the story of Kasyapa s conversion it is related that after the miracle of the fire temple a sacrifice was prepared by the Brahmans but the wood for the fire could not be split the fire could not be made to burn and the oblation could not be offered until in each case the Buddha gave his consent In the relief this triple miracle is dramatically represented In the foreground to the right a Brahman ascetic has his axe raised to split the wood but the axe will not descend until Buddha gives the word then we see the axe driven home into the log Similarly a Brahman is engaged fanning the fire on an altar but the fire will not burn until the Buddha permits it Then we see the altar repeated and flames blazing upon it The third phase of the miracle that of the oblation is indicated by the single figure of a Brahman holding an oblation spoon over a flaming altar The other figures in this panel of two novices bringing wood and provisions are mere accessories while the stupa in the background decorated with shell designs and surrounded by a square railing serves to give local color to the scene 107 Bottom panel nbsp Dvarapala guardian Right pillar Inner Face This face of the pillar is devoted to scenes at Kapilavastu the birthplace of Gautama Top panel nbsp Homage of King Suddhodana to the Buddha In the center the tree and throne of the Buddha with a group of worshipers around including King Suddhodana the father of the Buddha who is standing immediately in front of the throne The king wears the same headdress here as in the panel below The episode represented is the homage paid by the King to his son after his return to Kapilavastu 107 Second panel nbsp Procession of king Suddhodana from Kapilavastu nbsp At the top of the panel Maya s dream of the visit of an elephant in Kapilavastu See also Maya s Dream in The life of Buddha At the top is portrayed the dream of Maya the mother of the Buddha otherwise called the conception of the Bodhisattva Maya the queen is seen lying in a pavilion of the palace and on her is descending the Bodhisattva in the form of a white elephant This scene which was well known to all Buddhists serves to identify the city here represented as Kapilavastu Below it is a royal procession threading its way through the streets of the city and issuing forth from the gate This is the procession of King Suddhodana when he went forth to meet his son on his return to Kapilavastu Then at the bottom of the panel is portrayed the miracle which Buddha performed on this occasion by walking in mid air and in the extreme left hand bottom corner is a banyan tree nyagrodha to signify the park of banyans which Suddhodana presented to his son The Buddha walking in mid air is represented as on the Northern Gateway by his promenade chankrama and suggested by the upturned faces of the king and his retinue as they gaze wonderingly on the miracle 107 Bottom panel nbsp Dvarapala guardian Right pillar Front FaceFull length nbsp The six inferior heavens of the Gods The six inferior heavens of the gods Devalokas or Kamavachara heavens in which the passions are still unsubdued an integral part of Buddhist cosmology Starting from the base they are as follows 1 The heaven of the Four Great Kings the Regents of the Four Quarters Lokapala Chaturmaharajika 2 The heaven of the Thirty three gods Trayastrimisa over whom Sakra presides 3 The heaven over which Yama the God of Death reigns where there is no change of day or night 4 The Tushita heaven where the Bodhisattvas are born before they appear on earth as the saviors of mankind and where Maitreya now resides 5 The heaven of the Nirmanarati who create their own pleasures 6 The heaven of the Parinirmita Vasavartin gods who indulge in pleasures created for them by others and over whom Mara is king Each of these six heavens or devalokas is represented by a storey of a palace the front of which is divided by pillars into three bays the pillars in the alternate storeys being either plain or provided with elaborate Persepolitan capitals In the central bay there sits a god like an Indian king holding a thunderbolt vajra in his right hand and a flask containing nectar amrita in his left Behind him are his women attendants holding the royal umbrella Muttra and flywhisk chauri In the bay to his right seated on a slightly lower seat is his viceroy uparaja and to his left are the court musicians and dancers With slight variations the same figures are repeated in each of the six heavens Nothing perhaps could give a better idea of the monotony of pleasure in the Buddhist heavens than the sameness of these reiterations The topmost panel of all with two figures seated on a terrace and attendants behind is treated quite differently from the Devalokas below and appears to represent the lowest of the Brahmaloka which according to the Buddhist ideas rise above the inferior heavens 108 Stupa 1 Western Gateway edit The Western Gateway of Stupa 1 is the last of the four gateway of the Great Stupa to have been built Western Gateway Great Stupa No1 Sanchi 1st century BCE CE nbsp The Western Gateway of Stupa 1 The Western Gateway of Stupa 1 is one of the four richly carved gateways or toranas surrounding Stupa 1 the Great Stupa It is the last of the four gateway to have been constructed Like the other gateways the Western Gateway is composed of two square pillars surmounted by capitals which in their turn support a superstructure of three architraves with volute ends 96 Architraves nbsp Front architraves nbsp Rear architraves The architraves are all almost intact but there are almost no remains of in the round decorations around or on top of the lintels Only remains a fragment of capital with a base composed of lions at the center top of the torana nbsp Rear top architrave King of the Mallakas bringing the relics of the Buddha to Kushinagara After the death of the Buddha his relics were taken possession of by the Mallakas of Kushinagara whose chief is here depicted riding on an elephant and bearing the relics into the town of Kusinagara on his own head The tree behind the throne in front of the city gate appears to be a Shala tree shorea robusta and to refer to the fact that Buddha s parinirvana took place in a grove of those trees The two groups of figures carrying banners and offerings which occupy the ends of this architrave are probably connected with the central scene serving to indicate the rejoicing of the Mallakas over the possession of the relics 109 nbsp Rear middle architrave nbsp King of the Mallakas of Kushinagara under siege left end of the architrave Siege of Kushinagara by the seven kings This is another portrayal of The war of the relics see Southern Gateway architrave Here the seven rival claimants distinguished by their seven royal umbrellas are advancing with their armies to the city of Kushinagara the siege of which has not yet begun The seated royal figure at the left end of the architrave may represent the chief of the Mallakas within the city The princely figures in the corresponding relief at the right end appear to be repetitions of some of the rival claimants 109 nbsp Rear bottom architrave Temptation of the Buddha with Mara s army fleeing This scene extends over the three sections of the architrave In the center is the temple of Bodh Gaya with the pipal tree and the throne of the Buddha within to the right the armies of Mara fleeing discomfited from the Buddha to the left the devas celebrating the victory of the Buddha over the Evil One and exalting his glorious achievements The temple at Bodh Gaya which enclosed the Bodhi tree was built two centuries later by Emperor Ashoka Its portrayal in this scene therefore is an anachronism 109 See also Siddhartha Becomes the Buddha in The Life of Buddha Pillar capitals nbsp Left nbsp Right The pillar capitals consist in groups of four Yakshas tectonic deities supporting the architraves PillarsLeft pillar Front faceUnique panel nbsp Paradise of Indra Probably the Paradise of Indra nandana with the river Mandakini in the foreground This can be related to the scenes on the North Gateway and on the small gateway of the Third Stupa 109 Left pillar Inner faceTop panel nbsp Syama Jataka Syama the Buddha in a previous life was the only son of a blind hermit and his wife whom he supports with devotion One day Syama goes to draw water at the river and is shot with an arrow by the King of Benares who is out hunting Owing to the king s penitence and his parents sorrow Indra intervenes and allows Syama to be healed and his parents sight to be restored At the right hand top corner of the panel arc the two hermitages with the father and mother seated in front of them Below them their son Syama is coming to draw water from the stream Then to the left we see the figure of the King thrice repeated first shooting the lad in the water then with bow in hand then standing penitent with bow and arrow discarded and in the left top corner are the father mother and son restored to health and by their side the god Indra and the king The Buddha in a previous life was thus given as an example of filial piety 110 2nd panel nbsp Enlightenment of the Buddha with the Nagas rejoincing The scene depicts the enlightenment sambodhi of the Buddha In the center is the throne of the Buddha beneath the pipal tree which is being garlanded by angels gandharvas round about are the Nagas and Nagis celebrating the victory of the Buddha over Mara 111 See also Siddhartha Becomes the Buddha in The Life of Buddha Bottom panel nbsp nbsp Full relief 112 Miraculous crossing of the Ganges by the Buddha when he left Rajagriha to visit Vaisali partial remain Only the upper part of this panel remains but it appears to depict the miraculous crossing of the Ganges by the Buddha when he left Rajagriha to visit Vaisali The lower part of the panel appears to have been cut away when the gateway was restored by Col Cole The panel is shown complete in Maisey s illustration in Sanchi and its remains Plaque XXI 112 111 See also The Buddha Instructs the Monks of Vaisali in The Life of Buddha Right pillar Inner FaceTop panel nbsp Enlightenment of the Buddha with Mara s army fleeing The enlightenment sambodhi of the Buddha Towards the top of the panel is the pipal tree and the throne of the Buddha and round them a throng of worshipers men and women gods and animals It is the moment after the discomfiture of Mara and his hosts The Nagas winged creatures angels and archangels each urging his comrades on went up to the Great Being at the Bodhi tree s foot and as they came they shouted for joy that the sage had won that the Tempter was overthrown The deva with the giant head riding either on the elephant or on the lion to the right of the panel is probably meant to be Indra or Brahma The interpretation of the three sorrowing figures standing on three sides of the throne in the foreground is problematical In the Mahabhinishkramana scene on the East Gateway we have already seen that the artist inserted a jambu tree in the middle of the panel to remind the spectator of the first meditation of the Bodhisattva and the path on which it led him So here these three figures which are strikingly similar to the three sorrowing Yakshas in the Mahdbhinishkramana scene and were probably executed by the same hand may be a reminder of the Great Renunciation which led to the attainment of Buddhahood the gateway behind being also a reminder of the gateway of Kapilavastu 109 See also Siddhartha Becomes the Buddha in The Life of Buddha Second panel nbsp The Gods entreating Buddha to preach The gods entreating the Buddha to preach The Buddhist scriptures tell us that after his enlightenment the Buddha hesitated to make known the truth to the world Then Brahma Indra the four Lokapalas Regents of the Four Quarters and the archangels of the heavens approached him and besought him to turn the Wheel of the Law It was when the Buddha was seated beneath the banyan tree nyagrodha shortly after his enlightenment that this entreaty was made and it is a banyan tree with the throne beneath that is depicted in this relief The four figures side by side in the foreground may be the four Lokapalas 109 See also The Buddha is Prepared to Preach the Doctrine in The Life of Buddha Bottom panel nbsp Dvarapala guardian Right pillar Front FaceTop panel nbsp Mahakapi Jataka The story runs that the Bodhisattva was born as a monkey ruler over 80 000 monkeys They lived at a spot near the Ganges and ate of the fruit of a great mango tree King Brahmadatta of Benares desiring to possess the mangoes surrounded the tree with his soldiers in order to kill the animals but the Bodhisattva formed a bridge over the stream with his own body and by this means enabled the whole tribe to escape into safety nbsp The Mahakapi Jataka in Bharhut Devadatta the jealous and wicked cousin of the Buddha was in that life one of the monkeys and thinking it a good chance to destroy his enemy jumped on the Bodhisattva s back and broke his heart The king seeing the good deed of the Bodhisattva and repenting of his own attempt to kill him tended him with great care when he was dying and afterwards gave him royal obsequies Down the panel of the relief flows from top to bottom the river Ganges To the left at the top is the great mango tree to which two monkeys are clinging while the king of the monkeys is stretched across the river from the mango tree to the opposite bank and over his body some monkeys have already escaped to the rocks and jungles beyond In the lower part of the panel to the left is king Brahmadatta on horseback with his soldiers one of whom with bow and arrow is aiming upwards at the Bodhisattva Higher up the panel the figure of the king is repeated sitting beneath the mango tree and conversing with the dying Bodhisattva who according to the Jataka story gave the king good advice on the duties of a chief 109 2nd panel nbsp The Bodhisattva preaching in the Tushita Heaven In the center of the panel is the tree and throne of the Buddha and round about the throne a company of gods standing upon clouds in attitudes of adoration At the top of the panel are gandharvas bringing garlands and below them on each side of the tree come Indra and Brahma riding on lion like creatures A conventional method is used to depict the clouds beneath the feet of the gods in the foreground and among the figures in the upper part of the panel They have the appearance almost of rocks with flames breaking from them 109 3rd panel nbsp The visit of Sakra The Buddha represented by his throne beneath a flowery tree with hills and jungle around Possibly the tree is the rajayatana tree at Bodh Gaya beneath which the Buddha sat shortly after his enlightenment The figures in the foreground adoring the Buddha appear to be devas 109 4th panel nbsp Heraldic lions Three heraldic lions standing on conventionalized floral device The turn in the upper leaves is peculiar This method of treating foliage is peculiar to the Early School and is never found in later work The inscription over this panel records that the pillar was a gift of Balamitra pupil of Ayachuda Arya kshudra 109 Stupa 3 Southern Gateway edit The gateway of Stupa No 3 is the last of all the Satavahana gateways that were built at Sanchi It is located to the immediate south of Stupa No 3 is smaller than the four gateways encircling the Great Stupa It is also slightly older and generally dated to the 1st century CE Southern Gateway Stupa No 3 Sanchi 1st century CE nbsp The gateway of Stupa No 3 located to the immediate south of Stupa No 3 is smaller than the four gateways encircling the Great Stupa It is also slightly older and generally dated to the 1st century CE This gateway stands 17 feet high and is adorned with reliefs in the same style as those on the gateways of the Great Stupa Indeed the majority of these reliefs are mere repetitions of the subjects and scenes portrayed on the larger gateways with a few exceptions especially the front face of the lowest architrave 113 ArchitravesFront architraves nbsp Architrave posts or false capitals are roughly square shaped and can be seen at the junction between architrave and pillar and between the architraves themselves Here there are nine of them altogether on just the surface of the front architraves nbsp Foreign heroe fighting a Makara nbsp Hero with headband wrestling a Makara nbsp Foreigners riding horses nbsp Indians riding horses nbsp Indians riding bulls nbsp Indians riding bulls nbsp Queen Maya lustrated by Elephants nbsp The Buddha represented by the Dharmacakra nbsp Bodhi Tree nbsp Top front architrave nbsp Floral scrolls in the art of Gandhara Genies among foliage forming scrolls This kind of scrolls are generally considered to be of Hellenistic origin and were to be used extensively in the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara as well 114 115 nbsp Middle front architrave Buddhas represented by a Chaitya and two Bodhi Trees and empty thrones nbsp Bottom front architrave The only scene which differs materially from those on the gateways of the Great Stupa is the one delineated on the front face of the lowest architrave which appears to represent the Heaven of Indra Nandanavana In the centre is the pavilion of the god with Indra himself seated on a throne surrounded by women attendants In the foreground is the river MandakinI which bounds the heaven of Indra and to right and left of the pavilion are mountains and jungle forming a pleasure garden for the gods and demigods who are taking their case therein Then in the corners next to the false capitals are Naga kings seated with their attendants on the folds of seven hooded Nagas whose coils mingled with the waters of the river are carried through to the ends of the architrave and go to form the spirals adorning its extremities The sea monsters Makaras and the heroes wrestling with them which are portrayed on the false capitals of this architrave are particularly appropriate in this position where their coils combine effectively with those of the Nagas 113 Rear architraves nbsp Ordered left to right from top to bottom nbsp Winged lion nbsp Winged lions nbsp The Buddha represented by the Dharmacakra nbsp Men and Women on Elephants nbsp Men and Women on Elephants nbsp Stupa representing a Buddha nbsp Lakshmi lustrated by Elephants nbsp Men on lions nbsp Men on lions Pillar capitals nbsp Left nbsp Right The pillar capitals consist in groups of four Yakshas tectonic deities supporting the architraves This choice is similar to the last of the gateways of the Great Stupa the Western Gateway PillarsLeft pillar Front face nbsp The variety and the detail of the pillar panels is much less than at the Great Stupa Here the first panel shows the adoration of a stupa by four Indian devotees Then other devotees simply line up in the second and the third panels below nbsp 2nd panel nbsp 3rd panelLeft pillar Inner face nbsp Top panel Worshipping the Bodhi Tree This classic and rather simply depicted scene is again the unique didactic scene on this face of the pillar The following panel in only composed of aligned devotee and at the bottom is a panel with Dvarapala guardian deity as seen on the other gateways or possibly a devotee as he seems not to be armed nbsp Second panel nbsp Bottom panel Dvarapala guardian deity or devotee Left pillar Rear face nbsp Top panel Uncharacteristically the rear panel of the left pillar of the gateway is fully decorated down to its bottom This can be explained by the fact that the stupa is not surrounded by a railing as in the Great Stupa therefore rendering this rear space free The right pillar of the gateway however does not have decoration on the back The top panel is the Dharmacakra on a Pillar nbsp Second panel nbsp Possibly demons or the attack of Mara Right pillar Inner Face nbsp Top panel Worshipping the Bodhi Tree This classic and rather simply depicted scene is again the unique didactic scene on this face of the pillar It even faces a similar Worshipping the Bodhi Tree scene on the pillar surface facing it across the entrance The next panel going down is only composed of aligned devotees and at the bottom is a panel with Dvarapala guardian deity as seen on the other gateways or possibly a devotee as he seems not to be armed nbsp Second panel nbsp Bottom panel Dvarapala guardian deity or devotee Right pillar Front Face nbsp nbsp This would be the Ashokan capital wheel lost depicted in this panel Again variety and the detail of the pillar panels is much less than at the Great Stupa The first panel however is extremely interesting as it shows the adoration of what looks like the pillar of Ashoka at the Southern Gateway of the Great Stupa Then other devotees simply line up in the second and the third panels below nbsp 2nd panel nbsp 3rd panelLater periods edit nbsp Stupas and monasteries at Sanchi in the early centuries of the Common Era Reconstruction 1900Further stupas and other religious Buddhist structures were added over the centuries until the 12th century CE Western Satraps edit The rule of the Satavahanas in the area Sanchi during the 1st centuries BCE CE is well attested by the finds of Satavahana copper coins in Vidisha Ujjain and Eran in the name of Satakarni as well as the Satakarni inscription on the Southern Gateway of Stupa No 1 116 Soon after however the region fell to the Scythian Western Satraps possibly under Nahapana 120 CE 117 and then certainly under Rudradaman I 130 150 CE as shown by his inscriptions in Junagadh 116 The Satavahanas probably regained the region for some time but were again replaced by the Western Satraps in the mid 3rd century CE during the rule of Rudrasena II 255 278 CE The Western Satraps remained well into the 4th century as shown by the nearby Kanakerha inscription mentioning the construction of a well by the Saka chief and righteous conqueror Sridharavarman who ruled c 339 c 368 CE 116 Therefore it seems that the Kushan Empire did not extend to the Sanchi area and the few Kushan works of art found in Sanchi appear to have come from Mathura 116 In particular a few Mathura statues in the name of the Kushan ruler Vasishka 247 267 CE were found in Sanchi 118 119 Guptas edit The next rulers of the area were the Guptas 116 Inscriptions of a victorious Chandragupta II in the year 412 423 CE can be found on the railing near the Eastern Gateway of the Great Stupa 120 nbsp Sanchi inscription of Chandragupta II nbsp Temple 17 a Gupta period tetrastyle prostyle temple of Classical appearance 5th century CE 121 The glorious Chandragupta II who proclaims in the world the good behaviour of the excellent people namely the dependents of the king and who has acquired banners of victory and fame in many battles Sanchi inscription of Chandragupta II 412 413 CE 122 Temple 17 is an early stand alone temple following the great cave temples of Indian rock cut architecture as it dates to the early Gupta period probably first quarter of 5th century CE It may have been built for Buddhist use which is not certain but the type of which it represents a very early version was to become very significant in Hindu temple architecture 123 It consists of a flat roofed square sanctum with a portico and four pillars The interior and three sides of the exterior are plain and undecorated but the front and the pillars are elegantly carved giving the temple an almost classical appearance 121 not unlike the 2nd century rock cut cave temples of the Nasik Caves The four columns are more traditional the octagonal shafts rising from square bases to bell capitals surmounted by large abacus blocks carved with back to back lions 124 Next to Temple 17 stands Temple 18 the framework of a mostly 7th century apsidal chaitya hall temple again perhaps Buddhist or Hindu that was rebuilt over an earlier hall This was probably covered by a wood and thatch roof 125 Near the Northwern Gateway also used to stand a Vajrapani pillar Another pillar of Padmapani used to stand and the statue is now in the Victoria and Albert Museum London Lion pillar No 26 edit nbsp Pillar 26 one of the two four lions stambha capitals at Sanchi with lions central flame palmette and Wheel of Law axis stubs of the spokes and part of the circumference only initially located at the Northern Gateway of the Great Stupa Sanchi Archaeological Museum Pillar No26 stands a little to the north of the Sunga pillar No25 It belongs to the early Gupta age Apart from its design it is distinguished from the other pillars on the site by the unusual quality and colour of its stone which is harder than that ordinarily quarried in the Udayagiri hill and of a pale buff hue splashed and streaked with amethyst At Sanchi this particular variety of stone was used only in monuments of the Gupta period This pillar was approximately 22 ft 6 in in height and was composed of two pieces only one comprising the circular shaft and square base the other the bell capital necking lions and crowning chakra On the northwest side of the lowest section which is still in situ is a short mutilated inscription in Gupta characters recording the gift of the pillar by a viharasvamin master of a monastery the son of Gotaisimhabala 126 nbsp Pillar 26 lion pillar capital at time of discovery with Dharmachakra wheel reconstruction Northern Gateway 127 As was usual with pillars of the Gupta age the square base projected above the ground level the projection in this case being 1 ft 2 in and was enclosed by a small square platform The lion capital of this pillar is a feeble imitation of the one which surmounted the pillar of Asoka with the addition of a wheel at the summit and with certain other variations of detail For example the cable necking above the bell capital is composed of a series of strands bound together with a riband Also the reliefs on the circular abacus consist of birds and lotuses of unequal sizes disposed in irregular fashion not with the symmetrical precision of earlier Indian art Finally these lions like those on the pillars of the Southern Gateway are provided with five claws on each foot and their modelling exhibits little regard for truth and little artistry 126 There has been much confusion about the dating of this pillars since it was often presented from the beginning as a pillar of Ashoka Marshall himself describes the pillar as early Gupta Empire in convincing terms either from the points of view of material technique or artistry 126 The Government of India Photo Division describes it in this image as An Asoka pillar and its broken lion capital near the south gateway of the Great Stupa 6 The British Library Online also describes it as 3rd century BCE Mauryan although probably pasting the original text from the 19th century 7 Sachim Kumar Tiwary in Monolithic Pillars of The Gupta Period affirms a Gupta date 128 The Sanchi Archaeological Museum gives it a date of 600 CE which would even put it beyond the Gupta period proper at the time of the Later Gupta dynasty 129 Pillar 35 edit nbsp Pillar 35 column stump right and bell capital with abacus positioned upside down nbsp Vajrapani statue of pillar 35 5th c CE Sanchi Archaeological Museum The massive pillar near the North Gateway numbered 35 in the plan was erected during the Gupta period Every feature whether structural stylistic or technical is typical of Gupta workmanship Most of the shaft has been destroyed but the stump still remains in situ and the foundations are intact The form too of the platform around its base is sufficiently clear and the capital and statue which it is said to have supported are both relatively well preserved What remains of the shaft is 9 ft in length 3 ft 10 in of which measured from the top are circular and smooth and the remainder constituting the base square and rough dressed In the Gupta age it was the common practice to keep the bases of such monolithic columns square whereas those of the Maurya age were invariably circular The columns of the Maurya period are distinguished by its exquisite dressing and highly polished surface but in this case the dressing of the stone is characterized by no such lustrous finish 130 The Persepolitan capital and square abacus ornamented with a balustrade in relief are cut entire from a single block of stone So too is the statue which was found lying alongside the capital and which is believed to have belonged to the same pillar This statue represents a man clad in a dhoti and adorned with bracelets earrings bejewelled necklace and headdress The hair falls in curls over the shoulders and back and beneath it at the back fall the ends of two ribbons 130 It is thought that the statue represents Vajrapani The attribution to Vajrapani is indicated by the stub of a vajra thunderbold in the right hand and a halo of 24 rays 131 The dedication of the Vajrapani pillar is also mentioned in a 5th century inscription 132 An interesting feature of the image is the halo which is pierced with twelve small holes evenly disposed around its edge Manifestly the halo is too small in proportion to the size of the statue and these holes were no doubt intended for the attachment of the outer rays which were probably fashioned out of copper gilt the rest of the statue itself being possibly painted or gilded This statue stood on the summit of the pillar and is a work of the Gupta period 130 The statue is currently in the Sanchi Archaeological Museum and is attributed to the 5th century CE 133 Gupta period remains nbsp A Seated Buddha statue Gupta temple nbsp Buddha Statue Great Stupa nbsp Seated Buddha Great Stupa nbsp Statue of Padmapani 5th c or 9th c Victoria and Albert Museum nbsp Pillar 34 with lion 134 nbsp The winged lion capital of pillar 34 lost Following the destruction of the Guptas by the Alchon Huns and with the decline of Buddhism in India Buddhist artistic creation at Sanchi slowed down nbsp Temple 18 at Sanchi an apsidal hall with Maurya foundations rebuilt at the time of Harsha 7th century CE Temple 45 was the last Buddhist temple built during the mid to late 9th century 135 Another point to be noted is that at that time the monuments were enclosed within a wall With the decline of Buddhism in India the monuments of Sanchi went out of use and fell into a state of disrepair In 1818 General Taylor of the Bengal Cavalry recorded a visit to Sanchi At that time the monuments were left in a relatively good condition Although the jungle had overgrown the complex several of the Gateways were still standing and Sanchi being situated on a hill had escaped the onslaught of the Muslim conquerors who had destroyed the nearby city of Vidisha Bhilsa only 5 miles away 136 Sanchi and the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara editAlthough the initial craftsmen for stone reliefs in Sanchi seem to have come from Gandhara with the first reliefs being carved at Sanchi Stupa No 2 circa 115 BCE 27 the art of Sanchi thereafter developed considerably in the 1st century BCE CE and is thought to predate the blooming of the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara which went on to flourish until around the 4th century CE The art of Sanchi is thus considered as the ancestor of the didactic forms of Buddhist art that would follow such as the art of Gandhara 137 It is also with Bharhut the oldest 138 As didactic Buddhist reliefs were adopted by Gandhara the content evolved somewhat together with the emergence of Mahayana Buddhism a more theistic understanding of Buddhism First although many of the artistic themes remained the same such as Maya s dream The Great Departure Mara s attacks many of the stories of the previous lives of the Buddha were replaced by the even more numerous stories about the Bodhisattvas of the Mahayana pantheon 137 Second another important difference is the treatment of the image of the Buddha whereas the art of Sanchi however detailed and sophisticated is aniconic 139 the art of Gandhara added illustrations of the Buddha as a man wearing Greek style clothing to play a central role in its didactic reliefs 140 141 The presence of Greeks at or near Sanchi at the time is known Indo Greek ambassador Heliodorus at Vidisha c 100 BCE the Greek like foreigners illustrated at Sanchi worshiping the Great Stupa or the Greek Yavana devotees who had dedicatory inscriptions made at Sanchi 84 but more precise details about exchanges or possible routes of transmission are elusive Sanchi and the Greco Buddhist art of GandharaMaya s dream The Great Departure Mara s attack Enlightenment The Buddha PreachingSanchi 1st c BCE CE nbsp Maya s dream of a white elephant nbsp The Buddha under the umbrella on the chariot is not illustrated nbsp The Buddha is symbolized by an empty throne nbsp The Buddha is symbolized by an empty throne nbsp The Buddha is symbolized by an empty throne Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara 1st c CE 4th c CE nbsp Very similar illustration from Gandhara nbsp The Buddha in person leaves the city nbsp The Buddha is illustrated centrally nbsp The Buddha is illustrated centrally nbsp The Buddha is illustrated centrally Western rediscovery edit nbsp The Great Stupa as breached by Sir Herbert Maddock in 1822 Watercolor by Frederick Charles Maisey in 1851 nbsp Ruins of the Southern Gateway Sanchi in 1875 nbsp A Gate to the Stupa of Sanchi 1932General Henry Taylor 1784 1876 who was a British officer in the Third Maratha War of 1817 1819 was the first known Western historian to document in 1818 in English the existence of Sanchi Stupa The site was in a total state of abandon The Great Stupa was clumsily breached by Sir Herbert Maddock in 1822 although he was not able to reach the center and he then abandoned 142 Alexander Cunningham and Frederick Charles Maisey made the first formal survey and excavations at Sanchi and the surrounding stupas of the region in 1851 143 142 Amateur archaeologists and treasure hunters ravaged the site until 1881 when proper restoration work was initiated Between 1912 and 1919 the structures were restored to their present condition under the supervision of Sir John Marshall 144 19th Century Europeans were very much interested in the Stupa which was originally built by Ashoka French sought the permission to take away the eastern gateway to France English who had established themselves in India majorly as a political force were interested too in carrying it to England for a museum They were satisfied with plaster cast copies which were carefully prepared and the original remained at the site part of Bhopal state The rule of Bhopal Shahjehan Begum and her successor Sultan Jehan Begum provided money for the preservation of the ancient site John Marshall Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India from 1902 to 1928 acknowledged her contribution by dedicating his important volumes on Sanchi to Sultan Jehan She had funded the museum that was built there As one of the earliest and most important Buddhist architectural and cultural pieces it has drastically transformed the understanding of early India with respect to Buddhism It is now a marvellous example of the carefully preserved archaeological site by the Archeological Survey of India The place of Sanchi Stupa in Indian history and culture can be gauged from the fact that Reserve Bank of India introduced new 200 Indian Rupees notes with Sanchi Stupa in 2017 145 Since Sanchi remained mostly intact few artefacts of Sanchi can be found in Western Museums for example the Gupta statue of Padmapani is at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and one of the Yashinis can be seen at the British Museum Today around fifty monuments remain on the hill of Sanchi including three main stupas and several temples The monuments have been listed among other famous monuments in the UNESCO World Heritage Sites since 1989 The reliefs of Sanchi especially those depicting Indian cities have been important in trying to imagine what ancient Indian cities look like Many modern simulations are based on the urban illustrations of Sanchi 146 nbsp Great Stupa Eastern Gateway in 1875 nbsp West Gateway in 1882 nbsp South Gateway in 1882 nbsp Great Stupa Northern Gateway in 1861 nbsp Temple 18 in 1861 nbsp A vision of ancient Indian court life using motifs from Sanchi wood engraving 1878 Chetiyagiri Vihara and the Sacred Relics edit nbsp Chetiyagiri ViharaThe bone relics asthi avashesh of Buddhist Masters along with the reliquaries obtained by Maisey and Cunningham were divided and taken by them to England as personal trophies 147 Maisey s family sold the objects to Victoria and Albert Museum where they stayed for a long time The Buddhists in England Sri Lanka and India led by the Mahabodhi Society demanded that they be returned Some of the relics of Sariputta and Moggallana were sent back to Sri Lanka where they were publicly displayed in 1947 148 It was such a grand event where the entire population of Sri Lanka came to visit them However they were later returned to India But a new temple Chetiyagiri Vihara was constructed to house the relics in 1952 149 In a nationalistic sense this marked the formal reestablishment of the Buddhist tradition in India Some of the relics were obtained by Burma 150 Inscriptions edit nbsp Inscribed panel from Sanchi in Brahmi script in the British Museum 151 nbsp The last two letters to the right of this inscription in Brahmi form the word dǎnam donation This hypothesis permitted the decipherment of the Brahmi script by James Prinsep in 1837 152 Sanchi especially Stupa 1 has a large number of Brahmi inscriptions Although most of them are small and mention donations they are of great historical significance James Prinsep in 1837 noted that most of them ended with the same two Brahmi characters Princep took them as danam donation which permitted the decipherment of the Brahmi script 153 154 An analysis of the donation records 155 shows that while a large fraction of the donors were local with no town specified a number of them were from Ujjain Vidisha Kurara Nadinagar Mahisati Kurghara Bhogavadhan and Kamdagigam Three inscriptions are known from Yavana Indo Greek 81 donors at Sanchi the clearest of which reads Setapathiyasa Yonasa danam Gift of the Yona of Setapatha Setapatha being an uncertain city 84 See also editBharhut Relics of Sariputra and Mahamoggallana Begram ivories DeekshabhoomiReferences edit Buddhist Art Frontline Magazine 13 26 May 1989 Buddhist Landscapes in Central India Sanchi Hill and Archaeologies of Religious and Social Change c Third Century BC to Fifth Century AD Julia Shaw Routledge 12 Aug 2016 Buddhist Circuit in Central India Sanchi Satdhara Sonari Andher Travel p 31 1 Rs 50 Rs 200 Rs 500 and Rs 2000 notes images Here are the new currency notes released by RBI a b c d e Buddhist Circuit in Central India Sanchi Satdhara Sonari Andher Travel Guide Goodearth Publications 2010 p 12 ISBN 9789380262055 a b c d World Heritage Monuments and Related Edifices in India Volume 1 p 50 by Ali Javid Tabassum Javeed Algora Publishing New York 2 a b Marshall A Guide to Sanchi p 31 The Butkara Stupa is an example of such a hemispherical stupa structure from the Maurya period that was extensively documented through archaeological work Marshall A Guide to Sanchi p 8ff Public Domain text Reconstitution with four lions and crowning wheel by Percy Brown Diagram of Sanchi Great Stupa a b Described in Marshall pp 25 28 Ashoka pillar Encyclopaedia Indica India Pakistan Bangladesh Anmol Publications 1996 p 783 ISBN 978 81 7041 859 7 It may be mentioned that the motif of lions carrying a wheel occurs at Sanchis which might be a representation of the Sarnath s Asokan pillar capital a b Buddhist Architecture by Huu Phuoc Le p 155 John Marshall A Guide to Sanchi p 93 Public Domain text a b Marshall A Guide to Sanchi p 90ff Public Domain text Buddhist Architecture Lee Huu Phuoc Grafikol 2009 p 147 Singh Upinder 2016 The Idea of Ancient India Essays on Religion Politics and Archaeology in Arabic SAGE Publications India ISBN 9789351506454 Abram David Firm Rough Guides 2003 The Rough Guide to India Rough Guides ISBN 9781843530893 a b Marshall John 1955 Guide to Sanchi Chakrabarty Dilip K 2009 India An Archaeological History Palaeolithic Beginnings to Early Historic Foundations Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199088140 Who was responsible for the wanton destruction of the original brick stupa of Ashoka and when precisely the great work of reconstruction was carried out is not known but it seems probable that the author of the former was Pushyamitra the first of the Shunga kings 184 148 BC who was notorious for his hostility to Buddhism and that the restoration was affected by Agnimitra or his immediate successor in John Marshall A Guide to Sanchi p 38 Calcutta Superintendent Government Printing 1918 Shaw Julia 12 August 2016 Buddhist Landscapes in Central India Sanchi Hill and Archaeologies of Religious and Social Change c Third Century BC to Fifth Century AD Routledge p 58 ISBN 978 1 315 43263 2 It is inaccurate to refer to the post Mauryan monuments at Sanchi as Sunga Not only was Pusyamitra reputedly animical to Buddhism but most of the donative inscriptions during this period attest to predominantly collective and nonroyal modes of sponsorship span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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