fbpx
Wikipedia

Stupa

In Buddhism, a stupa (Sanskrit: स्तूप, lit.'heap', IAST: stūpa) is a mound-like or hemispherical structure containing relics (such as śarīra – typically the remains of Buddhist monks or nuns) that is used as a place of meditation.[1]

Translations of
Stupa
EnglishStupa
Sanskritस्तूप
Pali𑀣𑀼𑀩𑁂 ("thube"), thūpa
Bengaliস্তূপ
(st̪up)
Burmeseစေတီ
(MLCTS: zèdì)
Chinese窣堵坡
(Pinyin: sūdǔpō)
Japanese卒塔婆
(Rōmaji: sotoba)
Khmerចេតិយ
(UNGEGN: chétĕy)
Korean솔도파
(RR: soldopha)
Mongolianсуварга
(suvarga)
Sinhalaදාගැබ්
(dagab)
Tibetanམཆོད་རྟེན་
(mchod rten (chorten))
Tamilதாது கோபுரம்
Thaiสถูป, เจดีย์
(RTGS: sa thup, chedi)
VietnamesePhù đồ
Glossary of Buddhism

Circumambulation or pradakhshina has been an important ritual and devotional practice in Buddhism since the earliest times, and stupas always have a pradakhshina path around them. The original South Asian form is a large solid dome above a tholobate or drum with vertical sides, which usually sits on a square base. There is no access to the inside of the structure. In large stupas there may be walkways for circumambulation on top of the base as well as on the ground below it. Large stupas have or had vedikā railings outside the path around the base, often highly decorated with sculpture, especially at the torana gateways, of which there are usually four. At the top of the dome is a thin vertical element, with one of more horizontal discs spreading from it. These were chatras, symbolic umbrellas, and tend not to have survived, if not restored. The Great Stupa at Sanchi, Madhya Pradesh, is the most famous and best-preserved early stupa in India.

Apart from very large stupas, designed to attract pilgrims, there were large numbers of smaller stupas in a whole range of sizes, which typically had much taller drums, relative to the height of the dome. Small votive stupas paid for by pilgrims might be less than a metre high, and laid out in rows by the hundred, as at Ratnagiri, Odisha.

As Buddhism spread, other forms were used for the same purposes, and the chortens of Tibetan Buddhism, and the pagodas of East Asian Buddhism are some of these. In South-East Asia various rather different elongated shapes of dome evolved, leading to high, thin spires. A related architectural term is a chaitya, which is a prayer hall or temple containing a stupa.

Description and history

 
The "Tomb of Midas" in Gordion, dated to circa 740 BCE
 
Royal funeral tumulus of King Alyattes, Lydia, 6th c. BCE
 
Amrit, Phoenicia, 5th c. BCE

Stupas may have originated as pre-Buddhist tumuli in which śramaṇas were buried in a seated position[2] called chaitya.[3]

In early Buddhist inscriptions in India stupa and caitya appear to be almost interchangable, though caitya has a broader meaning, and unlike stupa does not define an architectural form. In pre-Buddhist India caitya was a term for a shrine, sanctuary or holy place in the landscape, generally outdoors, inhabited by, or sacred to, a particular deity. In the Mahāyāna Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra, near the end of his life the Buddha remarks to Ananda how beautiful are the various caitya round Vaishali.[4] In later times and in other countries Cetiya/caitya implies the presence of important relics. Both words have forms prefixed by maha for "great", "large" or "important", but scholars find the difference between a mahastupa and a stupa, or mahacetiya and cetiya hard to pin down.[5]

Some authors have suggested that stupas were derived from a wider cultural tradition from the Mediterranean to the Ganges Valley,[6] and can be related to the conical mounds on circular bases from the 8th century BCE that can be found in Phrygia (tomb of Midas, 8th c. BCE), Lydia (such as the tomb of Alyattes, 6th c. BCE), or in Phoenicia (tombs of Amrit, 5th c. BCE).[7][8]

Archaeologists in India have observed that a number of early Buddhist stupas or burials are found in the vicinity of much older, pre-historic burials, including megalithic sites.[9][10] This includes site associated with the Indus Valley civilization where broken Indus-era pottery was incorporated into later Buddhist burials.[9] Structural features of the stupa- including its general shape and the practice of surrounding stupas with a stone or wooden railing- resemble both pre-Mauryan era cairn burials, as well as pre-historic relic burials found in southern India.[9] Some stupas not believed to have been looted have been found to be empty when excavated, as have some pre-historic cairn sites, and animal bones are suspected to have occasionally been deposited at both types of sites.[9]

Mounds for the relics of the Buddha (5th century BCE)

 
The Piprahwa stupa is one of the earliest surviving stupas
 
Buddha's ashes Stupa built by the Licchavis, Vaishali and one of the earliest stupas

Religious buildings in the form of the Buddhist stupa, a dome shaped monument, started to be used in India as commemorative monuments associated with storing sacred relics of the Buddha.[11] After the parinirvana of the Buddha, his remains were cremated and the ashes divided and buried under eight mounds with two further mounds encasing the urn and the embers.[11]

According to some early Buddhist sources, the Buddha himself had suggested this treatment, and when asked what a stupa was, had demonstrated the basic design: he folded his robe on the ground, placed his begging-bowl upside down on it, with his staff above that.[12]

The relics of the Buddha were spread between eight stupas, in Rajagriha, Vaishali, Kapilavastu, Allakappa, Ramagrama, Pava, Kushinagar, and Vethapida.[13] The Piprahwa stupa also seems to have been one of the first to be built.[13] Lars Fogelin stated that the Vaisali relic stupa and Nigali Sagar stupa are likely the earliest archaeologically known stupas.[14][15]

Guard rails —consisting of posts, crossbars, and a coping— became a feature of safety surrounding a stupa.[16] The Buddha had left instructions about how to pay homage to the stupas: "And whoever lays wreaths or puts sweet perfumes and colours there with a devout heart, will reap benefits for a long time".[17] This practice would lead to the decoration of the stupas with stone sculptures of flower garlands in the Classical period.[17]

Expansion under Ashoka (250 BCE)

 
An early stupa, 6 meters (20 ft) in diameter, with fallen umbrella on side at Chakpat, near Chakdara; probably Maurya, 3rd century BCE[18]

According to Buddhist tradition, Emperor Ashoka (rule: 273—232 BCE) recovered the relics of the Buddha from the earlier stupas (except from the Ramagrama stupa), and erected 84,000 stupas to distribute the relics across India. In effect, many stupas are thought to date originally from the time of Ashoka, such as Sanchi or Kesariya, where he also erected pillars with his inscriptions, and possibly Bharhut, Amaravati or Dharmarajika in Gandhara.[13] Ashoka also established the Pillars of Ashoka throughout his realm, generally next to Buddhist stupas.

The first known appearance of the word "Stupa" is from an inscribed dedication by Ashoka on the Nigali Sagar pillar (spelled in Pali in the Brahmi script as 𑀣𑀼𑀩𑁂 "Thube" ).[19]

Decorated stupas (from 125 BCE)

Stupas were soon to be richly decorated with sculptural reliefs, following the first attempts at Sanchi Stupa No.2 (125 BCE). Full-fledged sculptural decorations and scenes of the life of the Buddha would soon follow at Bharhut (115 BCE), Bodh Gaya (60 BCE), Mathura (125-60 BCE), again at Sanchi for the elevation of the toranas (1st century BCE/CE) and then Amaravati (1st-2nd century CE).[20] The decorative embellishment of stupas also had a considerable development in the northwest in the area of Gandhara, with decorated stupas such as the Butkara Stupa ("monumentalized" with Hellenistic decorative elements from the 2nd century BCE)[21] or the Loriyan Tangai stupas (2nd century CE).

Development in Gandhara (3rd century BCE-5th century CE)

 
ButkaraStupa
 
The Ahin Posh stupa was dedicated in the 2nd century CE under the Kushans, and contained coins of Kaniska I.
 
Manikyala stupa, from the period of Kaniska I.

The stupa underwent major evolutions in the area of Gandhara. Since Buddhism spread to Central Asia, China and ultimately Korea and Japan through Gandhara, the stylistic evolution of the Gandharan stupa was very influential in the later development of the stupa (and related artistic or architectural forms) in these areas.[24] The Gandhara stupa followed several steps, generally moving towards more and more elevation and addition of decorative element, leading eventually to the development of the pagoda tower.[25] The main stupa type are, in chronological order:

  1. The Dharmarajika Stupa with a near-Indian design of a semi-hemispheric stupa almost directly on the ground surface, probably dated to the 3rd century BCE. Similar stupas are the Butkara stupa, the Manikyala stupa or the Chakpat stupa.[18]
  2. The Saidu Sharif Stupa, pillared and quincunxial, with a flight of stairs to a dome elevated on a square platform. Many Gandhara minutiures represent this spectacular type (1st century CE).[26]
  3. The Loriyan Tangai Stupa, with an elongated shape and many narrative reliefs, in many way the Classical Gandharan stupa (2nd century CE).[27]
  4. The near-pyramidal Jaulian stupa (2nd century CE).[28]
  5. The cruciform type, as in the Bhamala Stupa, with flights of stairs in the four cardinal directions (4th century CE).[29]
  6. The towering design of the second Kanishka stupa (4-5th century CE).[30]

Origin of the pyramidal temple

Pyramidal temples
 
The Mahabodhi Temple in 150-200 CE.
 
The Mahabodhi Temple: a stepped pyramid with round stupa on top.[33]
 
Model of the sikhara of a Buddhist temple; 900s

It is thought that the temple in the shape of a truncated pyramid may have derived from the design of the stepped stupas which developed in Gandhara. The Mahabodhi Temple in Bodh Gaya is one such example, formed of a succession of steps with niches containing Buddha images, alternating with Greco-Roman pillars.[33] The structure is crowned by the shape of a hemispherical stupa topped by finials, forming a logical elongation of the stepped Gandharan stupas such as those seen in Jaulian.[33]

Although the current structure of the Mahabdhodi Temple dates to the Gupta period (5th century CE), the "Plaque of Mahabhodi Temple", discovered in Kumrahar and dated to 150-200 CE based on its dated Kharoshthi inscriptions and combined finds of Huvishka coins, suggests that the pyramidal structure already existed in the 2nd century CE.[33] This is confirmed by archaeological excavations in Bodh Gaya.[33]

This truncated pyramid design also marked the evolution from the aniconic stupa dedicated to the cult of relics, to the iconic temple with multiple images of the Buddha and Bodhisattvas.[33] This design was very influential in the development of later Hindu temples.[34]

Expansion in Asia

Asian stupas

 
The Chinese Songyue Pagoda (523 CE) is thought to derive from the Gandharan tower-stupa model.[35]
 
Row of chorten stupas on roadside east of Leh, Ladakh

Stupa architecture was adopted in Southeast and East Asia, where it became prominent as a Buddhist monument used for enshrining sacred relics.[11] The Indian gateway arches, the torana, reached East Asia with the spread of Buddhism.[36] Some scholars hold that torii derives from the torana gates at the Buddhist historic site of Sanchi (3rd century BCE – 11th century CE).[37] In Tibet, the stupa became the chorten,[38] and the pagoda in East Asia.[39] The pagoda has varied forms that also include bell-shaped and pyramidal styles. In the Western context, there is no clear distinction between a stupa and a pagoda. In general, however, "stupa" is the term used for a Buddhist structure in India or Southeast Asia while "pagoda" refers to a building in East Asia which can be entered and which may be used for secular purposes. However, use of the term varies by region. For example, stupas in Burma tend to be referred to as "pagodas."

Stupas were built in Sri Lanka soon after Devanampiya Tissa of Anuradhapura converted to Buddhism. The first stupa to be built was the Thuparamaya. Later, many more were built over the years, some like the Jetavanaramaya in Anuradhapura, being one of the tallest ancient structures in the world.

Development of the pagoda

The Asian words for pagoda ( in Chinese, t'ap in Korean, tháp in Vietnamese, in Japanese) are all thought to derive from the Pali word for stupa, thupa, the Sanskrit pronunciation being stupa.[40] In particular the type of the tower-like stupa, the last stage of Gandharan stupa development, visible in the second Kanishka stupa (4th century), is thought to be the precussor of the tower stupas in Turkestan and the Chinese pagodas such as Songyue Pagoda (523 CE).[35]

Notable stupas

 
Borobudur bell-shaped stupas

The earliest archaeological evidence for the presence of Buddhist stupas dates to the late 4th century BCE. Some of the oldest known examples of stupas are found in Vaishali, Kushinagar, Piprahwa, Ramgram, Sanchi, Sarnath, Amaravati and Bharhut.

With the top of its spire reaching 120.45 meters in height, Phra Pathommachedi in Nakhon Pathom, Thailand is the tallest extant stupa in the world.[41] The Swat Valley hosts a well-preserved stupa at Shingardar near Ghalegay; another stupa is located near Barikot and Dharmarajika-Taxila in Pakistan. In Sri Lanka, the ancient city of Anuradhapura includes some of the tallest, most ancient and best preserved stupas in the world, such as Ruwanwelisaya.

The most elaborate stupa is the 8th century Borobudur monument in Java, Indonesia. The upper rounded terrace with rows of bell-shaped stupas contained Buddha images symbolizing Arūpajhāna, the sphere of formlessness. The main stupa itself is empty, symbolizing complete perfection of enlightenment. The main stupa is the crown part of the monument, while the base is a pyramidal structure elaborated with galleries adorned with bas relief scenes derived from Buddhist texts and depicting the life of Gautama Buddha. Borobudur's unique and significant architecture has been acknowledged by UNESCO as the largest Buddhist monument in the world. It is also the world's largest Buddhist temple.[42][43] as well as one of the greatest Buddhist monuments in the world.[44]

 
A Jain stupa, Mathura, 1st century CE

A Jain stupa was excavated at Mathura in the 19th century.[45]

The Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon, Myanmar is one of the largest and most holy stupas in the world.

European stupas

The Benalmádena Stupa is the tallest stupa in Europe. It is 33 m (108 ft) high and was inaugurated on 5 October 2003, the final project of Buddhist master Lopon Tsechu Rinpoche. Rinpoche built his first stupa at Karma Guen near Málaga in 1994,[46] a symbol of peace and prosperity for Spain.[47] Rinpoche went on to build 16 more stupas in Europe before his death in 2003.

A stupa was built on the ground of the Kalachakra Kalapa Centre in southwest Styria, Austria, between 2000 and 2002.

A stupa based on the bell shaped stupas at Boropodur, Central Java, is located at Amaravati Buddhist Monastery near Hemel Hempstead in the United Kingdom.[48]

Types of stupas

Built for a variety of reasons, Buddhist stupas are classified based on form and function into five types:[49]

  • Relic stupa, in which the relics or remains of the Buddha, his disciples, and lay saints are interred.
  • Object stupa, in which the items interred are objects belonged to the Buddha or his disciples, such as a begging bowl or robe, or important Buddhist scriptures.
  • Commemorative stupa, built to commemorate events in the lives of Buddha or his disciples.
  • Symbolic stupa, to symbolise aspects of Buddhist theology; for example, Borobudur is considered to be the symbol of "the Three Worlds (dhatu) and the spiritual stages (bhumi) in a Mahayana bodhisattva's character."[49]
  • Votive stupa, constructed to commemorate visits or to gain spiritual benefits, usually at the site of prominent stupas which are regularly visited.

Symbolism

 
View of the Wat Phra Kaew complex from the northeast, temple complex of the Emerald Buddha with stupas

"The shape of the stupa represents the Buddha, crowned and sitting in meditation posture on a lion throne. His crown is the top of the spire; his head is the square at the spire's base; his body is the vase shape; his legs are the four steps of the lower terrace; and the base is his throne."[50]

Five purified elements

Although not described in any Tibetan text on stupa symbolism, the stupa may represent the five purified elements:[51]

  • The square base represents earth
  • The hemispherical dome/vase represents water
  • The conical spire represents fire
  • The upper lotus parasol and the crescent moon represent air
  • The sun and the dissolving point represent wisdom

Construction

To build a stupa, Dharma transmission and ceremonies known to a Buddhist teacher are necessary.[52] The type of stupa to be constructed in a certain area is decided together with the teacher assisting in the construction. Sometimes the type is chosen directly connected with events that have taken place in the area.[52]

 
The sharing of the relics of the Buddha. Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara, 2-3rd century CE. ZenYouMitsu Temple Museum, Tokyo.
 
Buddha relics from Kanishka's stupa in Peshawar, Pakistan. These surviving relics are now housed in Mandalay, Myanmar.

Treasury

All stupas contain a treasury filled with various objects. Small clay votive offerings called tsatsas in Tibetan fill most of the treasury. Creation of various types of tsatsas is a ceremony itself. Mantras written on paper are rolled into thin rolls and put into small clay stupas.[52] One layer of tsatsas is placed in the treasury, and the empty space between them is filled with dry sand. On the thus created new surface, another layer of tsatsas is made, and so on until the entire space of the treasury is full.[52]

The number of tsatsas required to completely fill the treasury depends on its size and the size of the tsatsa. For example, the Kalachakra stupa in southern Spain contains approximately 14,000 tsatsas.[52]

Jewellery and other "precious" objects are also placed in the treasury. It is not necessary that they be expensive, since it is the symbolic value that is important, not the market price.[52] It is believed that the more objects placed into the stupa, the stronger the energy of the stupa.[52]

Tree of Life

An important element in every stupa is the "Tree of Life". This is a wooden pole covered with gems and thousands of mantras; it is placed in the central channel of the stupa.[52] It is positioned during a ceremony or initiation, where the participants hold colorful ribbons connected to the Tree of Life. Together, the participants make their most positive and powerful wishes, which are stored in the Tree of Life. In this way the stupa is charged, and starts to function.[52]

Benefits

Building a stupa is considered extremely beneficial, leaving very positive karmic imprints in the mind. Future benefits from this action result in fortunate rebirths. Fortunate worldly benefits will be the result, such as being born into a rich family, having a beautiful body, a nice voice, being attractive, bringing joy to others, and having a long and happy life in which one's wishes are quickly fulfilled.[53] On the absolute level, one will also be able quickly to reach enlightenment, the goal of Buddhism.[53]

Destroying a stupa, on the other hand, is considered an extremely negative deed, similar to killing.[54] Such an action is said to create massive negative karmic imprints, leading to serious future problems. It is said this action leaves the mind in a state of paranoia after death has occurred, leading to totally unfortunate rebirths.[54]

Tibetan stupas

 
The Eight Great Stupas
 
Row of chortens at roadside near Leh, Ladakh

Stupas in Tibet and the Tibetan influenced regions of the Himalayas such as Bhutan are usually called chorten in English, reflecting the term in the Tibetan language. There are eight different shapes of chortens in Tibetan Buddhism, each referring to a major event in the Buddha's life.[51] The chortens are often made as a set, placed in a row. The Tibetan set differs slightly (by two events) from the Indian set of Eight Great Events in the Life of Buddha.

Lotus Blossom Stupa

Also known as "Stupa of Heaped Lotuses" or "Birth of the Sugata Stupa", this stupa refers to the birth of Gautama Buddha. "At birth Buddha took seven steps in each of the four directions"[51] (east, south, west and north). In each direction lotuses sprang up, symbolizing the brahmavihāras: love, compassion, joy and equanimity. The base of this stupa is circular and has four steps, and it is decorated with lotus-petal designs. Occasionally, seven heaped lotus steps are constructed. These refer to the seven first steps of the Buddha.[51]

Enlightenment Stupa

 
Enlightenment Stupa at Ogoy Island, Russia

Also known as the "Stupa of the Conquest of Mara", this stupa symbolizes the 35-year-old Gautama Buddha|Buddha's attainment of enlightenment under the bodhi tree in Bodh Gaya, where he conquered worldly temptations and attacks, manifesting in the form of Mara.[51]

Stupa of Many Doors

This stupa is also known as the "Stupa of Many Gates". After reaching enlightenment, the Buddha taught his first students in a deer park near Sarnath. The series of doors on each side of the steps represents the first teachings: the Four Noble Truths, the Six Pāramitās, the Noble Eightfold Path and the Twelve Nidānas.[51]

Stupa of Descent from the God Realm

At 42 years of age, Buddha spent a summer retreat in the Tuṣita Heaven where his mother had taken rebirth. In order to repay her kindness he taught the dharma to her rebirth. Local inhabitants built a stupa in Sankassa in order to commemorate this event. This type of stupa is characterized by having a central projection at each side containing a triple ladder or steps.[51]

Stupa of Great Miracles

Also known as the "Stupa of Conquest of the Tirthikas", this stupa refers to various miracles performed by the Buddha when he was 50 years old. Legend claims that he overpowered maras and heretics by engaging them in intellectual arguments and also by performing miracles. This stupa was raised by the Lichavi kingdom to commemorate the event.[51]

Stupa of Reconciliation

This stupa commemorates the Buddha's resolution of a dispute among the sangha. A stupa in this design was built in the kingdom of Magadha, where the reconciliation occurred. It has four octagonal steps with equal sides.[51]

Stupa of Complete Victory

This stupa commemorates Buddha's successful prolonging of his life by three months. It has only three steps, which are circular and unadorned.[51]

Stupa of Nirvana

This stupa refers to the parinirvana or death of the Buddha when he was 80 years old. It symbolizes his complete absorption into the highest state of mind. It is bell-shaped and usually unornamented.[51]

Kalachakra stupa

A ninth kind of stupa exists, the Kalachakra stupa. Its symbolism is not connected to events in the Buddha's life, but instead to the symbolism of the Kalachakra Tantra, created to protect against negative energies.[55]

Gallery

Cambodia

Kathmandu, Nepal

See also

References

  1. ^ encyclopedia.com. Credited to James Stevens Curl, A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, 2000, originally published by Oxford University Press 2000.
  2. ^ "Buddhist Art and Architecture: Symbolism of the Stupa / Chorten". 2006-08-14. Retrieved 2013-01-07.
  3. ^ "THE BUDDHIST STUPA: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT". 2005-01-13. Retrieved 2013-01-07.
  4. ^ Skilling, 25
  5. ^ Skilling, 23-24
  6. ^ "It is probably traceable to a common cultural inheritance, stretching from the Mediterranean to the Ganges valley, and manifested by the sepulchres, conical mounds of earth on a circular foundation, of about the eighth century B.C. found in Eritrea and Lydia." Rao, P. R. Ramachandra (2002). Amaravati. Youth Advancement, Tourism & Cultural Department Government of Andhra Pradesh. p. 33.
  7. ^ On the hemispherical Phenician tombs of Amrit: Coomaraswamy, Ananda K. (1972). History of Indian and Indonesian art. p. 12.
  8. ^ Commenting on Gisbert Combaz: "In his study L'évolution du stupa en Asie, he even observed that "long before India, the classical Orient was inspired by the shape of the tumulus for constructing its tombs: Phrygia, Lydia, Phenicia ." in Bénisti, Mireille; K, Thanikaimony (2003). Stylistics of Buddhist art in India. Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts. p. 12. ISBN 9788173052415.
  9. ^ a b c d Schopen, Gregory. 2004. Buddhist Monks & Business Matters, pg. 361-74
  10. ^ The “Round Mound” and its Structural Requirements: A Possible Scenario for the Evolution of the Form of the Stupa. Srikumar M. Menon et al. 2016 https://www.nias.res.in/publication/%E2%80%9Cround-mound%E2%80%9D-and-its-structural-requirements-possible-scenario-evolution-form-stupa
  11. ^ a b c Encyclopædia Britannica (2008), Pagoda.
  12. ^ Soekmono, Dr, Chandi Borobudur: A Monument of Mankind, p. 39, 1976, Paris: Unesco Press. ISBN 92-3-101292-4, Full PDF
  13. ^ a b c Buddhist Architecture, Lee Huu Phuoc, Grafikol 2009, p.140-174
  14. ^ Fogelin, Lars (2015). An Archaeological History of Indian Buddhism. Oxford University Press. p. 85. ISBN 9780199948239.
  15. ^ Lahiri, Nayanjot (2015). Ashoka in Ancient India. Harvard University Press. pp. 246–247. ISBN 9780674057777.
  16. ^ Chandra (2008)
  17. ^ a b Buddhist Architecture, Lee Huu Phuoc, Grafikol 2009, p.143
  18. ^ a b Buddhist architecture, p.173
  19. ^ Amaravati: The Art of an early Buddhist Monument in context. p.23
  20. ^ a b c Buddhist Architecture, Lee Huu Phuoc, Grafikol 2009, p.149-150
  21. ^ "De l'Indus a l'Oxus: archaeologie de l'Asie Centrale", Pierfrancesco Callieri, p212: "The diffusion, from the second century BCE, of Hellenistic influences in the architecture of Swat is also attested by the archaeological searches at the sanctuary of Butkara I, which saw its stupa "monumentalized" at that exact time by basal elements and decorative alcoves derived from Hellenistic architecture".
  22. ^ Didactic Narration: Jataka Iconography in Dunhuang with a Catalogue of Jataka Representations in China, Alexander Peter Bell, LIT Verlag Münster, 2000 p.15ff
  23. ^ World Heritage Monuments and Related Edifices in India, Volume 1 p.50 by Alī Jāvīd, Tabassum Javeed, Algora Publishing, New York [1]
  24. ^ Buddhist architecture, p.181
  25. ^ Buddhist architecture, p.182-183
  26. ^ Buddhist architecture, p.174-176
  27. ^ Buddhist architecture, p.176-177
  28. ^ After Le Huu Phuoc, Buddhist Architecture, Grafikol 2009, p.179
  29. ^ Buddhist architecture, p.178
  30. ^ a b Le, Huu Phuoc (2010). Buddhist Architecture. Grafikol. pp. 179–180. ISBN 9780984404308.
  31. ^ Le Huu Phuoc, Buddhist Architecture, Grafikol 2009, p.174-176
  32. ^ Dated "between A.D. 300-350 based on Kharosthi, Brahmi, and Sodian inscriptions written before and after the drawing was completed (fig.3) In the center of the triptych, a spectacular stupa with a relatively small dome [anda], a chattravali with seven disks, columns, banners, and multiple bells illustrates a trend towards decorative profusion." "Chital petroglyphs". Bulletin of the Asia Institute. Wayne State University Press: 152. 2002.
  33. ^ a b c d e f Le Huu Phuoc, Buddhist Architecture, pp.238-248
  34. ^ Le Huu Phuoc, Buddhist Architecture, p.234
  35. ^ a b Buddhist architecture, p.180
  36. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica (2008), torii
  37. ^ Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System (2001), torii.
  38. ^ . Bhutan Majestic Travel. 2013-01-17. Archived from the original on 2012-12-31. Retrieved 2013-01-17.
  39. ^ The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Columbia University Press
  40. ^ Buddhist architecture, p.183
  41. ^ "พระปฐมเจดีย์". jedeethai.com.
  42. ^ "Largest Buddhist temple". Guinness World Records. Guinness World Records. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
  43. ^ Purnomo Siswoprasetjo (July 4, 2012). . The Jakarta Post. Archived from the original on 5 November 2014. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
  44. ^ "Borobudur Temple Compounds". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. UNESCO. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
  45. ^ Smith, Vincent Arthur (1901). The Jain stûpa and other antiquities of Mathurâ. Allahabad: KFrank Luker, Superintendent, Government Press, North-Western Provinces and Oudh.
  46. ^ Karma Guen
  47. ^ "Buddhist Stupa". 27 February 2013.
  48. ^ friends, Venerable Kusalo Bhikkhu - with help from his teachers and. "Stupa construction at Amaravati Buddhist Monastery". www.buddhamind.info. Retrieved 2018-11-25.
  49. ^ a b Le Huu Phuoc (March 2010). Buddhist Architecture. Grafikol. p. 140. ISBN 978-0-9844043-0-8. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  50. ^ "Introduction to stupas". stupa.org. Retrieved 2009-04-18.
  51. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Beer, Robert: The Encyclopedia of Tibetan Symbols and Motifs (2004) Serindia Publications Inc. ISBN 1-932476-10-5
  52. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Miracle Stupa - Stupa". stupa.pl. Retrieved 2009-04-18.
  53. ^ a b "Benefits Resulting from the Building of Stupas". stupa.org. Retrieved 2009-04-18.
  54. ^ a b Article: Lopon Tsechu Rinpoche: The Four Thoughts which Turn the Mind from Samsara. BUDDHISM TODAY, Vol.5, 1998. Available online 2009-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  55. ^ . karmaguen.org. Archived from the original on December 5, 2008. Retrieved 2009-04-18.

Sources

  • Chandra, Pramod (2008), South Asian arts, Encyclopædia Britannica.
  • Le Huu Phuoc (2009), Buddhist architecture, Grafikol ISBN 978-0-9844043-0-8
  • Skilling, Peter, Chapter 2 in Amaravati: The Art of an Early Buddhist Monument in Context, Edited by Akira Shimada and Michael Willis, British Museum, 2016, PDF

Further reading

  • Das Gupta, P. C. (October 1977). "Stupa in Mexican Art". Jain Journal. 12 (2): 51–60.
  • Harvey, Peter (1984). , Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 7 (2), 67-94
  • Mitra, D. (1971). Buddhist Monuments. Sahitya Samsad: Calcutta. ISBN 0-89684-490-0.
  • Smith, Vincent Arthur (1901). The Jain stupa and other antiquities of Mathura. Allahabad: Allahabad, Printed by KFrank Luker, Superintendent, Government Press, North-Western Provinces and Oudh.
  • Snodgrass, Adrian (1992). The Symbolism of the Stupa. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers, Delhi.

External links

  • The Stupa Information Page
  • Boudhanath Stupa at Kathmandu Nepal
  • The Great Stupa of Universal Compassion, under construction in Bendigo, Victoria, Australia
  • Stupa at Rigpawiki

stupa, zedi, redirects, here, people, named, zedi, zedi, name, buddhism, stupa, sanskrit, heap, iast, stūpa, mound, like, hemispherical, structure, containing, relics, such, śarīra, typically, remains, buddhist, monks, nuns, that, used, place, meditation, grea. Zedi redirects here For people named Zedi see Zedi name In Buddhism a stupa Sanskrit स त प lit heap IAST stupa is a mound like or hemispherical structure containing relics such as sarira typically the remains of Buddhist monks or nuns that is used as a place of meditation 1 StupaThe Great Stupa of Sanchi Madhya Pradesh IndiaA stupa chorten in Samye Lhasa TibetShwedagon Pagoda Yangon MyanmarRuwanweliseya Anuradhapura Sri LankaVarious architectural styles of Stupa Sanchi Tibetan Burmese and Sri Lankan Translations ofStupaEnglishStupaSanskritस त पPali𑀣 𑀩 thube thupaBengaliস ত প st up Burmeseစ တ MLCTS zedi Chinese窣堵坡 Pinyin sudǔpō Japanese卒塔婆 Rōmaji sotoba Khmerច ត យ UNGEGN chetĕy Korean솔도파 RR soldopha Mongoliansuvarga suvarga Sinhalaද ග බ dagab Tibetanམཆ ད ར ན mchod rten chorten Tamilத த க ப ரம Thaisthup ecdiy RTGS sa thup chedi VietnamesePhu đồGlossary of BuddhismCircumambulation or pradakhshina has been an important ritual and devotional practice in Buddhism since the earliest times and stupas always have a pradakhshina path around them The original South Asian form is a large solid dome above a tholobate or drum with vertical sides which usually sits on a square base There is no access to the inside of the structure In large stupas there may be walkways for circumambulation on top of the base as well as on the ground below it Large stupas have or had vedika railings outside the path around the base often highly decorated with sculpture especially at the torana gateways of which there are usually four At the top of the dome is a thin vertical element with one of more horizontal discs spreading from it These were chatras symbolic umbrellas and tend not to have survived if not restored The Great Stupa at Sanchi Madhya Pradesh is the most famous and best preserved early stupa in India Apart from very large stupas designed to attract pilgrims there were large numbers of smaller stupas in a whole range of sizes which typically had much taller drums relative to the height of the dome Small votive stupas paid for by pilgrims might be less than a metre high and laid out in rows by the hundred as at Ratnagiri Odisha As Buddhism spread other forms were used for the same purposes and the chortens of Tibetan Buddhism and the pagodas of East Asian Buddhism are some of these In South East Asia various rather different elongated shapes of dome evolved leading to high thin spires A related architectural term is a chaitya which is a prayer hall or temple containing a stupa Contents 1 Description and history 1 1 Mounds for the relics of the Buddha 5th century BCE 1 2 Expansion under Ashoka 250 BCE 1 3 Decorated stupas from 125 BCE 1 4 Development in Gandhara 3rd century BCE 5th century CE 1 4 1 Origin of the pyramidal temple 1 5 Expansion in Asia 1 5 1 Asian stupas 1 5 2 Development of the pagoda 2 Notable stupas 2 1 European stupas 2 2 Types of stupas 3 Symbolism 3 1 Five purified elements 4 Construction 4 1 Treasury 4 2 Tree of Life 4 3 Benefits 5 Tibetan stupas 5 1 Lotus Blossom Stupa 5 2 Enlightenment Stupa 5 3 Stupa of Many Doors 5 4 Stupa of Descent from the God Realm 5 5 Stupa of Great Miracles 5 6 Stupa of Reconciliation 5 7 Stupa of Complete Victory 5 8 Stupa of Nirvana 6 Kalachakra stupa 7 Gallery 7 1 Cambodia 7 2 Kathmandu Nepal 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksDescription and history Edit The Tomb of Midas in Gordion dated to circa 740 BCE Royal funeral tumulus of King Alyattes Lydia 6th c BCE Amrit Phoenicia 5th c BCE See also Cetiya and Tumulus Stupas may have originated as pre Buddhist tumuli in which sramaṇas were buried in a seated position 2 called chaitya 3 In early Buddhist inscriptions in India stupa and caitya appear to be almost interchangable though caitya has a broader meaning and unlike stupa does not define an architectural form In pre Buddhist India caitya was a term for a shrine sanctuary or holy place in the landscape generally outdoors inhabited by or sacred to a particular deity In the Mahayana Mahaparinirvaṇa Sutra near the end of his life the Buddha remarks to Ananda how beautiful are the various caitya round Vaishali 4 In later times and in other countries Cetiya caitya implies the presence of important relics Both words have forms prefixed by maha for great large or important but scholars find the difference between a mahastupa and a stupa or mahacetiya and cetiya hard to pin down 5 Some authors have suggested that stupas were derived from a wider cultural tradition from the Mediterranean to the Ganges Valley 6 and can be related to the conical mounds on circular bases from the 8th century BCE that can be found in Phrygia tomb of Midas 8th c BCE Lydia such as the tomb of Alyattes 6th c BCE or in Phoenicia tombs of Amrit 5th c BCE 7 8 Archaeologists in India have observed that a number of early Buddhist stupas or burials are found in the vicinity of much older pre historic burials including megalithic sites 9 10 This includes site associated with the Indus Valley civilization where broken Indus era pottery was incorporated into later Buddhist burials 9 Structural features of the stupa including its general shape and the practice of surrounding stupas with a stone or wooden railing resemble both pre Mauryan era cairn burials as well as pre historic relic burials found in southern India 9 Some stupas not believed to have been looted have been found to be empty when excavated as have some pre historic cairn sites and animal bones are suspected to have occasionally been deposited at both types of sites 9 Mounds for the relics of the Buddha 5th century BCE Edit The Piprahwa stupa is one of the earliest surviving stupas Buddha s ashes Stupa built by the Licchavis Vaishali and one of the earliest stupas Further information Buddhist architecture Religious buildings in the form of the Buddhist stupa a dome shaped monument started to be used in India as commemorative monuments associated with storing sacred relics of the Buddha 11 After the parinirvana of the Buddha his remains were cremated and the ashes divided and buried under eight mounds with two further mounds encasing the urn and the embers 11 According to some early Buddhist sources the Buddha himself had suggested this treatment and when asked what a stupa was had demonstrated the basic design he folded his robe on the ground placed his begging bowl upside down on it with his staff above that 12 The relics of the Buddha were spread between eight stupas in Rajagriha Vaishali Kapilavastu Allakappa Ramagrama Pava Kushinagar and Vethapida 13 The Piprahwa stupa also seems to have been one of the first to be built 13 Lars Fogelin stated that the Vaisali relic stupa and Nigali Sagar stupa are likely the earliest archaeologically known stupas 14 15 Guard rails consisting of posts crossbars and a coping became a feature of safety surrounding a stupa 16 The Buddha had left instructions about how to pay homage to the stupas And whoever lays wreaths or puts sweet perfumes and colours there with a devout heart will reap benefits for a long time 17 This practice would lead to the decoration of the stupas with stone sculptures of flower garlands in the Classical period 17 Expansion under Ashoka 250 BCE Edit An early stupa 6 meters 20 ft in diameter with fallen umbrella on side at Chakpat near Chakdara probably Maurya 3rd century BCE 18 According to Buddhist tradition Emperor Ashoka rule 273 232 BCE recovered the relics of the Buddha from the earlier stupas except from the Ramagrama stupa and erected 84 000 stupas to distribute the relics across India In effect many stupas are thought to date originally from the time of Ashoka such as Sanchi or Kesariya where he also erected pillars with his inscriptions and possibly Bharhut Amaravati or Dharmarajika in Gandhara 13 Ashoka also established the Pillars of Ashoka throughout his realm generally next to Buddhist stupas The first known appearance of the word Stupa is from an inscribed dedication by Ashoka on the Nigali Sagar pillar spelled in Pali in the Brahmi script as 𑀣 𑀩 Thube 19 Decorated stupas from 125 BCE Edit Stupas were soon to be richly decorated with sculptural reliefs following the first attempts at Sanchi Stupa No 2 125 BCE Full fledged sculptural decorations and scenes of the life of the Buddha would soon follow at Bharhut 115 BCE Bodh Gaya 60 BCE Mathura 125 60 BCE again at Sanchi for the elevation of the toranas 1st century BCE CE and then Amaravati 1st 2nd century CE 20 The decorative embellishment of stupas also had a considerable development in the northwest in the area of Gandhara with decorated stupas such as the Butkara Stupa monumentalized with Hellenistic decorative elements from the 2nd century BCE 21 or the Loriyan Tangai stupas 2nd century CE Sanchi Stupa No 2 the earliest known stupa with important displays of decorative reliefs circa 125 BCE 22 East Gateway and Railings of Bharhut Stupa Sculptured railings 115 BCE toranas 75 BCE 20 The Great Stupa at Sanchi 23 Decorated toranas built from the 1st c BCE to the 1st c CE 20 Amaravati stupa 1st 2nd century CEDevelopment in Gandhara 3rd century BCE 5th century CE Edit ButkaraStupa The Ahin Posh stupa was dedicated in the 2nd century CE under the Kushans and contained coins of Kaniska I Manikyala stupa from the period of Kaniska I The stupa underwent major evolutions in the area of Gandhara Since Buddhism spread to Central Asia China and ultimately Korea and Japan through Gandhara the stylistic evolution of the Gandharan stupa was very influential in the later development of the stupa and related artistic or architectural forms in these areas 24 The Gandhara stupa followed several steps generally moving towards more and more elevation and addition of decorative element leading eventually to the development of the pagoda tower 25 The main stupa type are in chronological order The Dharmarajika Stupa with a near Indian design of a semi hemispheric stupa almost directly on the ground surface probably dated to the 3rd century BCE Similar stupas are the Butkara stupa the Manikyala stupa or the Chakpat stupa 18 The Saidu Sharif Stupa pillared and quincunxial with a flight of stairs to a dome elevated on a square platform Many Gandhara minutiures represent this spectacular type 1st century CE 26 The Loriyan Tangai Stupa with an elongated shape and many narrative reliefs in many way the Classical Gandharan stupa 2nd century CE 27 The near pyramidal Jaulian stupa 2nd century CE 28 The cruciform type as in the Bhamala Stupa with flights of stairs in the four cardinal directions 4th century CE 29 The towering design of the second Kanishka stupa 4 5th century CE 30 A model resembling the Saidu Sharif Stupa with square base and four columns 1st century CE 31 Loriyan Tangai decorated stupa in the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara 2nd century CE A tower shaped stupa thought to be the design of the second rebuilt Kanishka stupa Jaulian monastery 30 Stupa shaped reliquary Kushan period about 2nd century CE Chilas petroglyphs Buddhist stupa circa 300 350 CE based on paleography 32 Origin of the pyramidal temple Edit Pyramidal temples The Mahabodhi Temple in 150 200 CE The Mahabodhi Temple a stepped pyramid with round stupa on top 33 Model of the sikhara of a Buddhist temple 900s It is thought that the temple in the shape of a truncated pyramid may have derived from the design of the stepped stupas which developed in Gandhara The Mahabodhi Temple in Bodh Gaya is one such example formed of a succession of steps with niches containing Buddha images alternating with Greco Roman pillars 33 The structure is crowned by the shape of a hemispherical stupa topped by finials forming a logical elongation of the stepped Gandharan stupas such as those seen in Jaulian 33 Although the current structure of the Mahabdhodi Temple dates to the Gupta period 5th century CE the Plaque of Mahabhodi Temple discovered in Kumrahar and dated to 150 200 CE based on its dated Kharoshthi inscriptions and combined finds of Huvishka coins suggests that the pyramidal structure already existed in the 2nd century CE 33 This is confirmed by archaeological excavations in Bodh Gaya 33 This truncated pyramid design also marked the evolution from the aniconic stupa dedicated to the cult of relics to the iconic temple with multiple images of the Buddha and Bodhisattvas 33 This design was very influential in the development of later Hindu temples 34 Expansion in Asia Edit Asian stupas Edit The Chinese Songyue Pagoda 523 CE is thought to derive from the Gandharan tower stupa model 35 Row of chorten stupas on roadside east of Leh Ladakh Stupa architecture was adopted in Southeast and East Asia where it became prominent as a Buddhist monument used for enshrining sacred relics 11 The Indian gateway arches the torana reached East Asia with the spread of Buddhism 36 Some scholars hold that torii derives from the torana gates at the Buddhist historic site of Sanchi 3rd century BCE 11th century CE 37 In Tibet the stupa became the chorten 38 and the pagoda in East Asia 39 The pagoda has varied forms that also include bell shaped and pyramidal styles In the Western context there is no clear distinction between a stupa and a pagoda In general however stupa is the term used for a Buddhist structure in India or Southeast Asia while pagoda refers to a building in East Asia which can be entered and which may be used for secular purposes However use of the term varies by region For example stupas in Burma tend to be referred to as pagodas Stupas were built in Sri Lanka soon after Devanampiya Tissa of Anuradhapura converted to Buddhism The first stupa to be built was the Thuparamaya Later many more were built over the years some like the Jetavanaramaya in Anuradhapura being one of the tallest ancient structures in the world Development of the pagoda Edit The Asian words for pagoda ta in Chinese t ap in Korean thap in Vietnamese tō in Japanese are all thought to derive from the Pali word for stupa thupa the Sanskrit pronunciation being stupa 40 In particular the type of the tower like stupa the last stage of Gandharan stupa development visible in the second Kanishka stupa 4th century is thought to be the precussor of the tower stupas in Turkestan and the Chinese pagodas such as Songyue Pagoda 523 CE 35 Notable stupas Edit Borobudur bell shaped stupas The earliest archaeological evidence for the presence of Buddhist stupas dates to the late 4th century BCE Some of the oldest known examples of stupas are found in Vaishali Kushinagar Piprahwa Ramgram Sanchi Sarnath Amaravati and Bharhut With the top of its spire reaching 120 45 meters in height Phra Pathommachedi in Nakhon Pathom Thailand is the tallest extant stupa in the world 41 The Swat Valley hosts a well preserved stupa at Shingardar near Ghalegay another stupa is located near Barikot and Dharmarajika Taxila in Pakistan In Sri Lanka the ancient city of Anuradhapura includes some of the tallest most ancient and best preserved stupas in the world such as Ruwanwelisaya The most elaborate stupa is the 8th century Borobudur monument in Java Indonesia The upper rounded terrace with rows of bell shaped stupas contained Buddha images symbolizing Arupajhana the sphere of formlessness The main stupa itself is empty symbolizing complete perfection of enlightenment The main stupa is the crown part of the monument while the base is a pyramidal structure elaborated with galleries adorned with bas relief scenes derived from Buddhist texts and depicting the life of Gautama Buddha Borobudur s unique and significant architecture has been acknowledged by UNESCO as the largest Buddhist monument in the world It is also the world s largest Buddhist temple 42 43 as well as one of the greatest Buddhist monuments in the world 44 A Jain stupa Mathura 1st century CE A Jain stupa was excavated at Mathura in the 19th century 45 The Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon Myanmar is one of the largest and most holy stupas in the world European stupas Edit See also Buddhism in Europe The Benalmadena Stupa is the tallest stupa in Europe It is 33 m 108 ft high and was inaugurated on 5 October 2003 the final project of Buddhist master Lopon Tsechu Rinpoche Rinpoche built his first stupa at Karma Guen near Malaga in 1994 46 a symbol of peace and prosperity for Spain 47 Rinpoche went on to build 16 more stupas in Europe before his death in 2003 A stupa was built on the ground of the Kalachakra Kalapa Centre in southwest Styria Austria between 2000 and 2002 A stupa based on the bell shaped stupas at Boropodur Central Java is located at Amaravati Buddhist Monastery near Hemel Hempstead in the United Kingdom 48 Types of stupas Edit Boudhanath Stupa Kathmandu Nepal Built for a variety of reasons Buddhist stupas are classified based on form and function into five types 49 Relic stupa in which the relics or remains of the Buddha his disciples and lay saints are interred Object stupa in which the items interred are objects belonged to the Buddha or his disciples such as a begging bowl or robe or important Buddhist scriptures Commemorative stupa built to commemorate events in the lives of Buddha or his disciples Symbolic stupa to symbolise aspects of Buddhist theology for example Borobudur is considered to be the symbol of the Three Worlds dhatu and the spiritual stages bhumi in a Mahayana bodhisattva s character 49 Votive stupa constructed to commemorate visits or to gain spiritual benefits usually at the site of prominent stupas which are regularly visited Symbolism Edit View of the Wat Phra Kaew complex from the northeast temple complex of the Emerald Buddha with stupas The shape of the stupa represents the Buddha crowned and sitting in meditation posture on a lion throne His crown is the top of the spire his head is the square at the spire s base his body is the vase shape his legs are the four steps of the lower terrace and the base is his throne 50 Five purified elements Edit Although not described in any Tibetan text on stupa symbolism the stupa may represent the five purified elements 51 The square base represents earth The hemispherical dome vase represents water The conical spire represents fire The upper lotus parasol and the crescent moon represent air The sun and the dissolving point represent wisdomConstruction EditTo build a stupa Dharma transmission and ceremonies known to a Buddhist teacher are necessary 52 The type of stupa to be constructed in a certain area is decided together with the teacher assisting in the construction Sometimes the type is chosen directly connected with events that have taken place in the area 52 The sharing of the relics of the Buddha Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara 2 3rd century CE ZenYouMitsu Temple Museum Tokyo Buddha relics from Kanishka s stupa in Peshawar Pakistan These surviving relics are now housed in Mandalay Myanmar Treasury Edit All stupas contain a treasury filled with various objects Small clay votive offerings called tsatsas in Tibetan fill most of the treasury Creation of various types of tsatsas is a ceremony itself Mantras written on paper are rolled into thin rolls and put into small clay stupas 52 One layer of tsatsas is placed in the treasury and the empty space between them is filled with dry sand On the thus created new surface another layer of tsatsas is made and so on until the entire space of the treasury is full 52 The number of tsatsas required to completely fill the treasury depends on its size and the size of the tsatsa For example the Kalachakra stupa in southern Spain contains approximately 14 000 tsatsas 52 Jewellery and other precious objects are also placed in the treasury It is not necessary that they be expensive since it is the symbolic value that is important not the market price 52 It is believed that the more objects placed into the stupa the stronger the energy of the stupa 52 Tree of Life Edit An important element in every stupa is the Tree of Life This is a wooden pole covered with gems and thousands of mantras it is placed in the central channel of the stupa 52 It is positioned during a ceremony or initiation where the participants hold colorful ribbons connected to the Tree of Life Together the participants make their most positive and powerful wishes which are stored in the Tree of Life In this way the stupa is charged and starts to function 52 Benefits Edit Building a stupa is considered extremely beneficial leaving very positive karmic imprints in the mind Future benefits from this action result in fortunate rebirths Fortunate worldly benefits will be the result such as being born into a rich family having a beautiful body a nice voice being attractive bringing joy to others and having a long and happy life in which one s wishes are quickly fulfilled 53 On the absolute level one will also be able quickly to reach enlightenment the goal of Buddhism 53 Destroying a stupa on the other hand is considered an extremely negative deed similar to killing 54 Such an action is said to create massive negative karmic imprints leading to serious future problems It is said this action leaves the mind in a state of paranoia after death has occurred leading to totally unfortunate rebirths 54 Tibetan stupas Edit The Eight Great Stupas Row of chortens at roadside near Leh Ladakh Stupas in Tibet and the Tibetan influenced regions of the Himalayas such as Bhutan are usually called chorten in English reflecting the term in the Tibetan language There are eight different shapes of chortens in Tibetan Buddhism each referring to a major event in the Buddha s life 51 The chortens are often made as a set placed in a row The Tibetan set differs slightly by two events from the Indian set of Eight Great Events in the Life of Buddha Lotus Blossom Stupa Edit Also known as Stupa of Heaped Lotuses or Birth of the Sugata Stupa this stupa refers to the birth of Gautama Buddha At birth Buddha took seven steps in each of the four directions 51 east south west and north In each direction lotuses sprang up symbolizing the brahmaviharas love compassion joy and equanimity The base of this stupa is circular and has four steps and it is decorated with lotus petal designs Occasionally seven heaped lotus steps are constructed These refer to the seven first steps of the Buddha 51 Enlightenment Stupa Edit Enlightenment Stupa at Ogoy Island Russia Also known as the Stupa of the Conquest of Mara this stupa symbolizes the 35 year old Gautama Buddha Buddha s attainment of enlightenment under the bodhi tree in Bodh Gaya where he conquered worldly temptations and attacks manifesting in the form of Mara 51 Stupa of Many Doors Edit This stupa is also known as the Stupa of Many Gates After reaching enlightenment the Buddha taught his first students in a deer park near Sarnath The series of doors on each side of the steps represents the first teachings the Four Noble Truths the Six Paramitas the Noble Eightfold Path and the Twelve Nidanas 51 Stupa of Descent from the God Realm Edit At 42 years of age Buddha spent a summer retreat in the Tuṣita Heaven where his mother had taken rebirth In order to repay her kindness he taught the dharma to her rebirth Local inhabitants built a stupa in Sankassa in order to commemorate this event This type of stupa is characterized by having a central projection at each side containing a triple ladder or steps 51 Stupa of Great Miracles Edit Also known as the Stupa of Conquest of the Tirthikas this stupa refers to various miracles performed by the Buddha when he was 50 years old Legend claims that he overpowered maras and heretics by engaging them in intellectual arguments and also by performing miracles This stupa was raised by the Lichavi kingdom to commemorate the event 51 Stupa of Reconciliation Edit This stupa commemorates the Buddha s resolution of a dispute among the sangha A stupa in this design was built in the kingdom of Magadha where the reconciliation occurred It has four octagonal steps with equal sides 51 Stupa of Complete Victory Edit This stupa commemorates Buddha s successful prolonging of his life by three months It has only three steps which are circular and unadorned 51 Stupa of Nirvana Edit This stupa refers to the parinirvana or death of the Buddha when he was 80 years old It symbolizes his complete absorption into the highest state of mind It is bell shaped and usually unornamented 51 Kalachakra stupa EditMain article Kalachakra stupa A ninth kind of stupa exists the Kalachakra stupa Its symbolism is not connected to events in the Buddha s life but instead to the symbolism of the Kalachakra Tantra created to protect against negative energies 55 Gallery Edit An early stupa at Guntupalle probably Maurya Empire third century BCE Buddha statue inside a votive stupa Sarnath Abayagiri Dageba Sri Lanka Chorten near Potala Palace Lhasa Tibet The white stupa in Miaoying Temple China The Kalachakra stupa in Karma Guen SpainCambodia Edit Stupa of Kantha Bopha Stupa of King Norodom Suramarit Main stupa at Wat Phnom Stupa at Wat Botum Stupa at Oudong Golden stupa at Wat OunalomKathmandu Nepal Edit Roadside stupa Kathmandu 1979 Swayambhunath Boudhanath Stupa Kaathe Swyambhu Stupa Mahabaudha Tahiti stupa Yetkha Stupa Small stupa in Kathmandu streetSee also EditAncient stupas of Sri Lanka Candi Gorintō Great Stupa of Universal Compassion Hōkyōintō Kurgan Kyaung Mankiala Stupa Ovoo Peace Pagoda Reliquary Round barrow Wat ZigguratReferences Edit encyclopedia com Credited to James Stevens Curl A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture 2000 originally published by Oxford University Press 2000 Buddhist Art and Architecture Symbolism of the Stupa Chorten 2006 08 14 Retrieved 2013 01 07 THE BUDDHIST STUPA ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT 2005 01 13 Retrieved 2013 01 07 Skilling 25 Skilling 23 24 It is probably traceable to a common cultural inheritance stretching from the Mediterranean to the Ganges valley and manifested by the sepulchres conical mounds of earth on a circular foundation of about the eighth century B C found in Eritrea and Lydia Rao P R Ramachandra 2002 Amaravati Youth Advancement Tourism amp Cultural Department Government of Andhra Pradesh p 33 On the hemispherical Phenician tombs of Amrit Coomaraswamy Ananda K 1972 History of Indian and Indonesian art p 12 Commenting on Gisbert Combaz In his study L evolution du stupa en Asie he even observed that long before India the classical Orient was inspired by the shape of the tumulus for constructing its tombs Phrygia Lydia Phenicia in Benisti Mireille K Thanikaimony 2003 Stylistics of Buddhist art in India Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts p 12 ISBN 9788173052415 a b c d Schopen Gregory 2004 Buddhist Monks amp Business Matters pg 361 74 The Round Mound and its Structural Requirements A Possible Scenario for the Evolution of the Form of the Stupa Srikumar M Menon et al 2016 https www nias res in publication E2 80 9Cround mound E2 80 9D and its structural requirements possible scenario evolution form stupa a b c Encyclopaedia Britannica 2008 Pagoda Soekmono Dr Chandi Borobudur A Monument of Mankind p 39 1976 Paris Unesco Press ISBN 92 3 101292 4 Full PDF a b c Buddhist Architecture Lee Huu Phuoc Grafikol 2009 p 140 174 Fogelin Lars 2015 An Archaeological History of Indian Buddhism Oxford University Press p 85 ISBN 9780199948239 Lahiri Nayanjot 2015 Ashoka in Ancient India Harvard University Press pp 246 247 ISBN 9780674057777 Chandra 2008 a b Buddhist Architecture Lee Huu Phuoc Grafikol 2009 p 143 a b Buddhist architecture p 173 Amaravati The Art of an early Buddhist Monument in context p 23 a b c Buddhist Architecture Lee Huu Phuoc Grafikol 2009 p 149 150 De l Indus a l Oxus archaeologie de l Asie Centrale Pierfrancesco Callieri p212 The diffusion from the second century BCE of Hellenistic influences in the architecture of Swat is also attested by the archaeological searches at the sanctuary of Butkara I which saw its stupa monumentalized at that exact time by basal elements and decorative alcoves derived from Hellenistic architecture Didactic Narration Jataka Iconography in Dunhuang with a Catalogue of Jataka Representations in China Alexander Peter Bell LIT Verlag Munster 2000 p 15ff World Heritage Monuments and Related Edifices in India Volume 1 p 50 by Ali Javid Tabassum Javeed Algora Publishing New York 1 Buddhist architecture p 181 Buddhist architecture p 182 183 Buddhist architecture p 174 176 Buddhist architecture p 176 177 After Le Huu Phuoc Buddhist Architecture Grafikol 2009 p 179 Buddhist architecture p 178 a b Le Huu Phuoc 2010 Buddhist Architecture Grafikol pp 179 180 ISBN 9780984404308 Le Huu Phuoc Buddhist Architecture Grafikol 2009 p 174 176 Dated between A D 300 350 based on Kharosthi Brahmi and Sodian inscriptions written before and after the drawing was completed fig 3 In the center of the triptych a spectacular stupa with a relatively small dome anda a chattravali with seven disks columns banners and multiple bells illustrates a trend towards decorative profusion Chital petroglyphs Bulletin of the Asia Institute Wayne State University Press 152 2002 a b c d e f Le Huu Phuoc Buddhist Architecture pp 238 248 Le Huu Phuoc Buddhist Architecture p 234 a b Buddhist architecture p 180 Encyclopaedia Britannica 2008 torii Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System 2001 torii Stupa Bhutanese Nepalese Tibetan Style Chortens or Stupa is the symbol of enlightened mind Bhutan Majestic Travel 2013 01 17 Archived from the original on 2012 12 31 Retrieved 2013 01 17 The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition Columbia University Press Buddhist architecture p 183 phrapthmecdiy jedeethai com Largest Buddhist temple Guinness World Records Guinness World Records Retrieved 27 January 2014 Purnomo Siswoprasetjo July 4 2012 Guinness names Borobudur world s largest Buddha temple The Jakarta Post Archived from the original on 5 November 2014 Retrieved 27 January 2014 Borobudur Temple Compounds UNESCO World Heritage Centre UNESCO Retrieved 28 December 2008 Smith Vincent Arthur 1901 The Jain stupa and other antiquities of Mathura Allahabad KFrank Luker Superintendent Government Press North Western Provinces and Oudh Karma Guen Buddhist Stupa 27 February 2013 friends Venerable Kusalo Bhikkhu with help from his teachers and Stupa construction at Amaravati Buddhist Monastery www buddhamind info Retrieved 2018 11 25 a b Le Huu Phuoc March 2010 Buddhist Architecture Grafikol p 140 ISBN 978 0 9844043 0 8 Retrieved 8 December 2011 Introduction to stupas stupa org Retrieved 2009 04 18 a b c d e f g h i j k Beer Robert The Encyclopedia of Tibetan Symbols and Motifs 2004 Serindia Publications Inc ISBN 1 932476 10 5 a b c d e f g h i Miracle Stupa Stupa stupa pl Retrieved 2009 04 18 a b Benefits Resulting from the Building of Stupas stupa org Retrieved 2009 04 18 a b Article Lopon Tsechu Rinpoche The Four Thoughts which Turn the Mind from Samsara BUDDHISM TODAY Vol 5 1998 Available online Archived 2009 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Kalachakra Stupa karmaguen org Archived from the original on December 5 2008 Retrieved 2009 04 18 Sources EditChandra Pramod 2008 South Asian arts Encyclopaedia Britannica Le Huu Phuoc 2009 Buddhist architecture Grafikol ISBN 978 0 9844043 0 8 Skilling Peter Chapter 2 in Amaravati The Art of an Early Buddhist Monument in Context Edited by Akira Shimada and Michael Willis British Museum 2016 PDFFurther reading EditDas Gupta P C October 1977 Stupa in Mexican Art Jain Journal 12 2 51 60 Harvey Peter 1984 The Symbolism of the Early Stupa Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 7 2 67 94 Mitra D 1971 Buddhist Monuments Sahitya Samsad Calcutta ISBN 0 89684 490 0 Smith Vincent Arthur 1901 The Jain stupa and other antiquities of Mathura Allahabad Allahabad Printed by KFrank Luker Superintendent Government Press North Western Provinces and Oudh Snodgrass Adrian 1992 The Symbolism of the Stupa Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Delhi External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stupas The Stupa Information Page Boudhanath Stupa at Kathmandu Nepal The Great Stupa of Universal Compassion under construction in Bendigo Victoria Australia Stupa at Rigpawiki Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stupa amp oldid 1139270910, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.