Kanishka stupa

Kanishka stupa

The Kanishka stupa was a monumental stupa established by the Kushan king Kanishka during the 2nd century CE in today's Shah-ji-Dheri on the outskirts of Peshawar, Pakistan.

The stupa was described by Chinese pilgrims in the 7th century as the tallest stupa in all India. Archaeologists have examined the remains of the structure and determined that it had a diameter of 286 feet. Ancient Chinese manuscripts tell of Buddhist pilgrims reporting that the stupa had a height of 591-689 feet (The measurements they stated were in Chinese units, which were 600-700. This height was equal to about 180-210 meters or 591-689 feet.

Three Chinese reports are known (by Faxian, who travelled between 399-412 CE, Sung Yun who arrived in India in 518 CE, Xuanzang who went to India in 630 CE). Sung Yun describes the stupa in the following terms: :"The king proceeded to widen the foundation of the Great Tower 300 paces and more. To crown all, he placed a roof-pole upright and even. Throughout the building he used ornamental wood, he constructed stairs to lead to the top....there was an iron-pillar, 3-feet high with thirteen gilded circlets. Altogether the height from the ground was 700 feet.”

The stupa was discovered and excavated in 1908-1909 by a British archælogical mission, and led to the discovery in its base of the Kanishka casket, a six-sided rock crystal reliquary containing three small fragments of bone, [Spooner, D. B. (1908-9): "Excavations at Shāh-ji-Dherī." "Archaeological Survey of India", p. 49.] relics of the Buddha (which were transferred to Mandalay, Burma for safekeeping, where they still remain), and a dedication in Kharoshthi involving Kanishka. [Marshall, John H. (1909): "Archælogical Exploration in India, 1908-9." (Section on: "The stūpa of Kanishka and relics of the Buddha"). "Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society", 1909, pp. 1056-1061.]

According to Buddhist the building of the stupa was foretold by the Buddha::"The Buddha, pointing to a small boy making a mud tope…. [said] that on that spot Kanishka would erect a tope by his name." Vinaya sutra [Quoted in Kumar 91]

The same story is repeated in a Khotanese scroll found at Dunhuang, which first described how Kanishka would arrive 400 years after the death of the Buddha. The account also describes how Kanishka came to raise his stupa: :"A desire thus arose in [Kanishka to build a vast stupa] ….at that time the four world-regents learnt the mind of the king. So for his sake they took the form of young boys…. [and] began a stupa of mud....the boys said to [Kanishka] ‘We are making the Kanishka-stupa.’….At that time the boys changed their form.... [and] said to him, ‘Great king, by you according to the Buddha’s prophecy is a Sangharama to be built wholly (?) with a large stupa and hither relics must be invited which the meritorious good beings...will bring." [Quoted in Kumar 89]

References

Further reading

* D’Ancona, Mirella Levi. (1949): "Is the Kaniṣka Reliquary a work from Mathurā?" "Art Bulletin", Vol. 31, No. 4 (Dec., 1949), pp. 321-323.
* Dobbins, K. Walton. (1971): "The Stūpa and Vihāra of Kanishka I." The Asiatic Society of Bengal Monograph Series, Vol. XVIII. Calcutta.
* Dobbins, K. Walton (1968): "Two Gandhāran Reliquaries." "East and West", 18, 1968, pp. 151-165.
* Hargreaves, H. (1910-11): "Excavations at Shāh-jī-kī Ḍhērī." "Archaeological Survey of India", pp. 25-32.
* Spooner, D. B. (1908-9): "Excavations at Shāh-ji-Dherī." "Archaeological Survey of India", pp. 38-59.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Kanishka-Stupa — Reste der Kanishka Stupa Die Kanishka Dose Der Kanishka Stupa ist ein historischer Stupa bei Peschawar, den der Kushana Herrscher …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Kanishka — Infobox Monarch name =Kanishka I title =Kushan king caption =Gold coin of Kanishka I (late issue, c.150 AD). Kanishka standing, clad in heavy Kushan coat and long boots, flames emanating from shoulders, holding standard in his left hand, and… …   Wikipedia

  • Kanishka casket — The Kanishka casket or Kanishka reliquary , is a Buddhist reliquary made in gilted copper, and dated to the first year of the reign of the Kushan emperor Kanishka, in 127 CE.It was discovered in a deposit chamber under the monumental Kanishka… …   Wikipedia

  • Kanishka — Goldmünze des Kanishka Abbildung des Königs Kanishka (ca. 127) Kanishka I. (graeco baktrisch …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Kanishka I. — Goldmünze des Kanishka Abbildung des Königs Kanishka (ca. 127) Kanishka I. (graeco baktrisch …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Stupa — The Great Stupa at Sanchi, India,established by Ashoka the great (4th–1st century BC) …   Wikipedia

  • Kanischka-Stupa — Reste der Kanischka Stupa Die Kanischka Dose Der Kani …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Peshawar — Urdu: پشاور Pashto: پېښور Hindko: پِشور   City District   …   Wikipedia

  • History of Peshawar — The known history of Peshawar, a region of modern day Pakistan, covers thousands of years. The region was dominated by various tribal groups of Indo Iranian origin and a variety of other groups, possibly of Elamo Dravidian origin, maybe prior to… …   Wikipedia

  • Kanischka — Goldmünze des Kanishka Abbildung des Königs Kanishka (ca. 127) …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”