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Swayambhunath

Swayambhu (Devanagari: स्वयम्भू स्तूप; Nepal bhasa: स्वयंभू; sometimes Swayambu or Swoyambhu) is an ancient religious complex atop a hill in the Kathmandu Valley, west of Kathmandu city. The Tibetan name for the site means 'Sublime Trees' (Wylie: Phags.pa Shing.kun), for the many varieties of trees found on the hill. However, Shingun may be of in Nepalbhasa name for the complex, Swayambhu, meaning 'self-sprung'.[1] For the Buddhist Newars, in whose mythological history and origin myth as well as day-to-day religious practice Swayambhu occupies a central position, it is probably the most sacred among Buddhist pilgrimage sites. For Tibetans and followers of Tibetan Buddhism, it is second only to Boudha. Swayambhu is the Hindu name.

Swayambhu
Swayambhu Mahachaitya
स्वयम्भू स्तूप
Stupa at Swayambhu
Religion
AffiliationBuddhism
Location
LocationSwayambhu, Kathmandu
CountryNepal
Geographic coordinates27°42′54″N 85°17′24″E / 27.71500°N 85.29000°E / 27.71500; 85.29000

The complex consists of a stupa, a variety of shrines and temples, some dating back to the Licchavi period. A Tibetan monastery, museum and library are more recent additions. The stupa has Buddha's eyes and eyebrows painted on. Between them, the number one (in Nepal script) is painted in the fashion of a nose. There are also shops, restaurants and hostels. The site has two access points: a long staircase leading directly to the main platform of the temple, which is from the top of the hill to the east; and a car road around the hill from the south leading to the south-west entrance. The first sight on reaching the top of the stairway is the Vajra. Tsultrim Allione describes the experience:

We were breathless and sweating as we stumbled up the last steep steps and practically fell upon the biggest vajra (thunderbolt scepter) that I have ever seen. Behind this Vajra was the vast, round, white dome of the stupa, like a full solid skirt, at the top of which were two giant Buddha eyes wisely looking out over the peaceful valley which was just beginning to come alive.[2]

Much of Swayambhu's iconography comes from the Vajrayana tradition of Newar Buddhism. However, the complex is an important site for Buddhists of many schools, and is also revered by Hindus.

Mythology Edit

According to Swayambhu Purana, the entire valley was once filled with an enormous lake, out of which grew a lotus. The valley came to be known as Swayambhu, meaning "Self-Created." The name comes from an eternal self-existent flame (svyaṃbhu) over which a sūpa was later built.[3]

There are holy monkeys living in the north-west parts of the temple. They are holy because Manjushri, the bodhisattva of wisdom and learning, was raising the hill which the stupa stands on. He was supposed to leave his hair short, but he made it grow long and head lice grew. It is said that the head lice transformed into these monkeys.

Manjusri had a vision of the Lotus at Swayambhu and traveled there to worship it. Seeing that the valley could be a good settlement, and to make the site more accessible to human pilgrims, he cut a gorge at Chovar. The water drained out of the lake, leaving the valley in which Kathmandu now lies. The Lotus was transformed into a hill and the flower became the stupa.

 
Swayambhunath in 1877

History Edit

Swayambhu is among the oldest religious sites in Nepal. According to the Gopālarājavaṃśāvalī, it was founded by the great-grandfather of King Mānadeva (464–505 CE), King Vṛsadeva, about the beginning of the fifth century CE. This seems to be confirmed by a damaged stone inscription found at the site, which indicates that King Vrsadeva ordered work done in 640 CE.[3]

However, Emperor Ashoka is said to have visited the site in the third century BCE and built a temple on the hill which was later destroyed.

Although the site is considered Buddhist, the place is revered by both Buddhists and Hindus. Numerous Hindu monarch followers are known to have paid their homage to the temple, including Pratap Malla, the powerful king of Kathmandu, who is responsible for the construction of the eastern stairway in the seventeenth century.[4]

The stupa was completely renovated in May 2010, its first major renovation since 1921[5][6] and its 15th in the nearly 1,500 years since it was built. The Swayambhu Shrine was re-gilded using 20 kg of gold. The renovation was funded by the Tibetan Nyingma Meditation Center of California, and began in June 2008.[7]

At around 5 a.m. on 14 February 2011, Pratapur Temple in the Swayambhu Monument Zone suffered damage from a lightning strike during a sudden thunderstorm.[8]

The Swayambunath complex suffered damage in the April 2015 Nepal earthquake.[9]

Architecture Edit

 
Torana on top of Swayambhunath stupa
 
Buddha shrines
 
White Tara shrine

The stupa consists of a dome at the base, on top of which is a cube structure, painted with eyes of Buddha looking in all four directions. There are pentagonal toranas present above each of the four sides of the cube with Buddha reliefs on them. Behind and above the toranas there are thirteen tiers. Above all the tiers there is a small space above which the Gajur is present.

There are five gilt Buddha shrines at the base of the stupa, all with a Buddha statue inside them. Equally five Tara shrines can be found here, but only four of them are gilt and actually house a Tara statue. The shrine of Vajradhatishori Tara, or White Tara, is empty.[10]

 
Swayambhunath stupa with Harati Devi's temple [11] and smaller stupas and pagodas in the foreground

Symbolism Edit

The dome at the base represents the entire world. When a person awakes (represented by eyes of wisdom and compassion) from the bonds of the world, the person reaches the state of enlightenment. The thirteen pinnacles on the top symbolize that sentient beings have to go through the thirteen stages of spiritual realizations to reach enlightenment or Buddhahood.

There is a large pair of eyes on each of the four sides of the main stupa which represent Wisdom and Compassion, known as the Eyes of Buddha. Above each pair of eyes is another eye, the third eye. It is said that when Buddha preaches, cosmic rays emanate from the third eye which acts as messages to heavenly beings so that those interested can come down to earth to listen to the Buddha. The hellish beings and beings below the human realm cannot come to earth to listen to the Buddha's teaching, however, the cosmic rays relieve their suffering when Buddha preaches. Between the two eyes (also called Wisdom Eyes), a curly symbol, symbolizing the nose, is depicted which looks like a question mark, which is a Nepali sign of number figure one. This sign represents the unity of all things existing in the world as well as the only path to enlightenment through the teachings of Buddha.

There are carvings of the Panch Buddhas (five Buddhas) on each of the four sides of top of the stupa, just like there are statues of the Buddhas at the base of the stupa. Panch Buddhas are Buddha in a metaphorical sense in Tantrayana. They are Vairochana (occupies the center and is the master of the temple), Akshobhya (faces the east and represents the cosmic element of consciousness), Ratna Sambhava (faces the south and represents the cosmic element of sensation), Amitabha (He represents the cosmic element of Sanjna (name) and always faces the West) and Amoghsiddhi (He represents the cosmic element of confirmation and faces the north).

Each morning before dawn hundreds of Buddhist (Vajrayana) and Hindu pilgrims ascend the steps from the eastern side that lead up the hill, passing the gilded Vajra (Tibetan: Dorje) and two lions guarding the entrance, and begin a series of clockwise circumambulations of the stupa.

Swayambhu Purana Edit

Swayambhu Purana (Devnagari: स्वयम्भू पूराण) is a Buddhist scripture about the origin and development of Kathmandu valley. Swayambhu Purana gives detail of all the Buddhas who came to Kathmandu. It also provides information about the first and the second Buddhas in Buddhism.

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ Allione, Tsultrim (1986). Women of Wisdom. London: Arkana. xxxiii. ISBN 1-85063-044-5.
  2. ^ Allione, Tsultrim (1986). Women of Wisdom. London: Arkana. xiv. ISBN 1-85063-044-5.
  3. ^ a b Shaha, Rishikesh. Ancient and Medieval Nepal. (1992), p. 122. Manohar Publications, New Delhi. ISBN 81-85425-69-8.
  4. ^ Lonely Planet Nepal (2005). Swayambhu.
  5. ^ Gutschow, Niels (1997). The Nepalese Caitya: 1500 Years of Buddhist Votive Architecture in the Kathmandu Valley. Edition Axel Menges. p. 92. ISBN 9783930698752. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
  6. ^ Shakya, Hem Raj. (2002) Sri Svayambhu Mahacaitya. Kathmandu: Svayambhu Vikash Mandala. ISBN 99933-864-0-5
  7. ^ Utpal Parashar (14 June 2010). . Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 17 June 2010. Retrieved 19 March 2018.
  8. ^ Lightning damages Pratapur Temple of Kathmandu Valley World Heritage site, Nepal, UNESCO, 16 February 2011
  9. ^ "Nepal earthquake damages Swayambhunath temple complex". BBCNews. 25 April 2015. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  10. ^ Map of Swoyambhu Stupa, retrieved 27 June 2022
  11. ^ Harati Ajima Temple, retrieved 27 June 2022

Additional references Edit

  • Swoyambu Historical Pictorial. Edited by Richard Josephon. (1985). Satya Ho. Kathmandu.
  • Psycho-cosmic Symbolism of the Buddhist Stūpa. Lama Anagarika Govinda. (1976) Dharma Books. Berkeley, California. ISBN 0-913546-35-6; ISBN 0-913546-36-4 (pbk).

Further reading Edit

  • Ehrhard, Franz-Karl (1989). "A Renovation of Svayambhunath-Stupa in the 18th Century and its History (according to Tibetan sources)." Ancient Nepal – Journal of the Department of Archaeology, Number 114, October–November 1989, pp. 1–8.
  • von Schroeder, Ulrich. 2019. Nepalese Stone Sculptures. Volume One: Hindu; Volume Two: Buddhist. (Visual Dharma Publications). ISBN 978-3-033-06381-5. SD card with 15,000 digital photographs of Nepalese sculptures and other subjects as public domain.

swayambhunath, this, article, about, temple, sanskrit, word, swayambhu, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sourc. This article is about the temple For the Sanskrit word see Swayambhu This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Swayambhunath news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Swayambhu Devanagari स वयम भ स त प Nepal bhasa स वय भ sometimes Swayambu or Swoyambhu is an ancient religious complex atop a hill in the Kathmandu Valley west of Kathmandu city The Tibetan name for the site means Sublime Trees Wylie Phags pa Shing kun for the many varieties of trees found on the hill However Shingun may be of in Nepalbhasa name for the complex Swayambhu meaning self sprung 1 For the Buddhist Newars in whose mythological history and origin myth as well as day to day religious practice Swayambhu occupies a central position it is probably the most sacred among Buddhist pilgrimage sites For Tibetans and followers of Tibetan Buddhism it is second only to Boudha Swayambhu is the Hindu name SwayambhuSwayambhu Mahachaityaस वयम भ स त पStupa at SwayambhuReligionAffiliationBuddhismLocationLocationSwayambhu KathmanduCountryNepalGeographic coordinates27 42 54 N 85 17 24 E 27 71500 N 85 29000 E 27 71500 85 29000The complex consists of a stupa a variety of shrines and temples some dating back to the Licchavi period A Tibetan monastery museum and library are more recent additions The stupa has Buddha s eyes and eyebrows painted on Between them the number one in Nepal script is painted in the fashion of a nose There are also shops restaurants and hostels The site has two access points a long staircase leading directly to the main platform of the temple which is from the top of the hill to the east and a car road around the hill from the south leading to the south west entrance The first sight on reaching the top of the stairway is the Vajra Tsultrim Allione describes the experience We were breathless and sweating as we stumbled up the last steep steps and practically fell upon the biggest vajra thunderbolt scepter that I have ever seen Behind this Vajra was the vast round white dome of the stupa like a full solid skirt at the top of which were two giant Buddha eyes wisely looking out over the peaceful valley which was just beginning to come alive 2 Much of Swayambhu s iconography comes from the Vajrayana tradition of Newar Buddhism However the complex is an important site for Buddhists of many schools and is also revered by Hindus Contents 1 Mythology 2 History 3 Architecture 4 Symbolism 5 Swayambhu Purana 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 Additional references 10 Further readingMythology EditAccording to Swayambhu Purana the entire valley was once filled with an enormous lake out of which grew a lotus The valley came to be known as Swayambhu meaning Self Created The name comes from an eternal self existent flame svyaṃbhu over which a supa was later built 3 There are holy monkeys living in the north west parts of the temple They are holy because Manjushri the bodhisattva of wisdom and learning was raising the hill which the stupa stands on He was supposed to leave his hair short but he made it grow long and head lice grew It is said that the head lice transformed into these monkeys Manjusri had a vision of the Lotus at Swayambhu and traveled there to worship it Seeing that the valley could be a good settlement and to make the site more accessible to human pilgrims he cut a gorge at Chovar The water drained out of the lake leaving the valley in which Kathmandu now lies The Lotus was transformed into a hill and the flower became the stupa nbsp Swayambhunath in 1877History EditSwayambhu is among the oldest religious sites in Nepal According to the Gopalarajavaṃsavali it was founded by the great grandfather of King Manadeva 464 505 CE King Vṛsadeva about the beginning of the fifth century CE This seems to be confirmed by a damaged stone inscription found at the site which indicates that King Vrsadeva ordered work done in 640 CE 3 However Emperor Ashoka is said to have visited the site in the third century BCE and built a temple on the hill which was later destroyed Although the site is considered Buddhist the place is revered by both Buddhists and Hindus Numerous Hindu monarch followers are known to have paid their homage to the temple including Pratap Malla the powerful king of Kathmandu who is responsible for the construction of the eastern stairway in the seventeenth century 4 The stupa was completely renovated in May 2010 its first major renovation since 1921 5 6 and its 15th in the nearly 1 500 years since it was built The Swayambhu Shrine was re gilded using 20 kg of gold The renovation was funded by the Tibetan Nyingma Meditation Center of California and began in June 2008 7 At around 5 a m on 14 February 2011 Pratapur Temple in the Swayambhu Monument Zone suffered damage from a lightning strike during a sudden thunderstorm 8 The Swayambunath complex suffered damage in the April 2015 Nepal earthquake 9 Architecture Edit nbsp Torana on top of Swayambhunath stupa nbsp Buddha shrines nbsp White Tara shrineThe stupa consists of a dome at the base on top of which is a cube structure painted with eyes of Buddha looking in all four directions There are pentagonal toranas present above each of the four sides of the cube with Buddha reliefs on them Behind and above the toranas there are thirteen tiers Above all the tiers there is a small space above which the Gajur is present There are five gilt Buddha shrines at the base of the stupa all with a Buddha statue inside them Equally five Tara shrines can be found here but only four of them are gilt and actually house a Tara statue The shrine of Vajradhatishori Tara or White Tara is empty 10 nbsp Swayambhunath stupa with Harati Devi s temple 11 and smaller stupas and pagodas in the foregroundSymbolism EditThe dome at the base represents the entire world When a person awakes represented by eyes of wisdom and compassion from the bonds of the world the person reaches the state of enlightenment The thirteen pinnacles on the top symbolize that sentient beings have to go through the thirteen stages of spiritual realizations to reach enlightenment or Buddhahood There is a large pair of eyes on each of the four sides of the main stupa which represent Wisdom and Compassion known as the Eyes of Buddha Above each pair of eyes is another eye the third eye It is said that when Buddha preaches cosmic rays emanate from the third eye which acts as messages to heavenly beings so that those interested can come down to earth to listen to the Buddha The hellish beings and beings below the human realm cannot come to earth to listen to the Buddha s teaching however the cosmic rays relieve their suffering when Buddha preaches Between the two eyes also called Wisdom Eyes a curly symbol symbolizing the nose is depicted which looks like a question mark which is a Nepali sign of number figure one This sign represents the unity of all things existing in the world as well as the only path to enlightenment through the teachings of Buddha There are carvings of the Panch Buddhas five Buddhas on each of the four sides of top of the stupa just like there are statues of the Buddhas at the base of the stupa Panch Buddhas are Buddha in a metaphorical sense in Tantrayana They are Vairochana occupies the center and is the master of the temple Akshobhya faces the east and represents the cosmic element of consciousness Ratna Sambhava faces the south and represents the cosmic element of sensation Amitabha He represents the cosmic element of Sanjna name and always faces the West and Amoghsiddhi He represents the cosmic element of confirmation and faces the north Each morning before dawn hundreds of Buddhist Vajrayana and Hindu pilgrims ascend the steps from the eastern side that lead up the hill passing the gilded Vajra Tibetan Dorje and two lions guarding the entrance and begin a series of clockwise circumambulations of the stupa Swayambhu Purana EditMain article Swayambhu PuranaSwayambhu Purana Devnagari स वयम भ प र ण is a Buddhist scripture about the origin and development of Kathmandu valley Swayambhu Purana gives detail of all the Buddhas who came to Kathmandu It also provides information about the first and the second Buddhas in Buddhism Gallery Edit nbsp The hillock of Swayambhu nbsp Swayambhunath Temple view from Kritipur Bhag Bhairav nbsp Eastern staircase nbsp Swayambhunath stupa area nbsp Close up of Swayambhunath stupa nbsp Base of the stupa nbsp Monk at Swayambhunath nbsp Chaityas Courtyard nbsp Ajima Temple nbsp Shikhar style temple by Pratap Malla nbsp Buddhist gompa nbsp Temple MonkeysSee also EditNewar Buddhism Dharma Man Tuladhar Buddhist pilgrimage sites in Nepal List of Mahaviharas of Newar Buddhism List of monasteries in Nepal List of Stupas in Nepal Natural History Museum of Nepal Pashupatinath Temple ShamarpaFootnotes Edit Allione Tsultrim 1986 Women of Wisdom London Arkana xxxiii ISBN 1 85063 044 5 Allione Tsultrim 1986 Women of Wisdom London Arkana xiv ISBN 1 85063 044 5 a b Shaha Rishikesh Ancient and Medieval Nepal 1992 p 122 Manohar Publications New Delhi ISBN 81 85425 69 8 Lonely Planet Nepal 2005 Swayambhu Gutschow Niels 1997 The Nepalese Caitya 1500 Years of Buddhist Votive Architecture in the Kathmandu Valley Edition Axel Menges p 92 ISBN 9783930698752 Retrieved 8 April 2014 Shakya Hem Raj 2002 Sri Svayambhu Mahacaitya Kathmandu Svayambhu Vikash Mandala ISBN 99933 864 0 5 Utpal Parashar 14 June 2010 Oldest Buddhist monument gets a makeover in Nepal Hindustan Times Archived from the original on 17 June 2010 Retrieved 19 March 2018 Lightning damages Pratapur Temple of Kathmandu Valley World Heritage site Nepal UNESCO 16 February 2011 Nepal earthquake damages Swayambhunath temple complex BBCNews 25 April 2015 Retrieved 26 April 2015 Map of Swoyambhu Stupa retrieved 27 June 2022 Harati Ajima Temple retrieved 27 June 2022Additional references EditSwoyambu Historical Pictorial Edited by Richard Josephon 1985 Satya Ho Kathmandu Psycho cosmic Symbolism of the Buddhist Stupa Lama Anagarika Govinda 1976 Dharma Books Berkeley California ISBN 0 913546 35 6 ISBN 0 913546 36 4 pbk Further reading EditEhrhard Franz Karl 1989 A Renovation of Svayambhunath Stupa in the 18th Century and its History according to Tibetan sources Ancient Nepal Journal of the Department of Archaeology Number 114 October November 1989 pp 1 8 von Schroeder Ulrich 2019 Nepalese Stone Sculptures Volume One Hindu Volume Two Buddhist Visual Dharma Publications ISBN 978 3 033 06381 5 SD card with 15 000 digital photographs of Nepalese sculptures and other subjects as public domain nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Swayambhunath Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Swayambhunath amp oldid 1153945079, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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