The
historical Buddha lived around the sixth century BCE, but no Buddhist
artefacts are known from before the third century BCE. In the
scriptures, it is mentioned that the Buddha did occasionally use
images like the 'Wheel of Life' to illustrate the teachings. The
first archaeological evidence, mainly of ornamental stone carvings,
comes fromt the time of the Emperor Asoka (273
- 232 BCE), who converted to Buddhism and made it a popular religion
in India and beyond .
In
the second century BCE, people started to excavate Buddhist monasteries
in rock, creating a large amount of artwork to withstand the ages.
Probably the earliest typical Buddhist monument is the stupa,
which was often specially decorated. The first actual Buddha images
appeared around the first century BCE, so until then the artwork
was largely symbolic in nature.
With
the appearance of Buddhist Tantra around the 6th century, a wealth
of new artwork and symbolism appeared, as imagination and visualization
form a major technique in meditation practices. From this moment
on, a pantheon of deities and protectors appeared, together with
a vast collection of symbolic items, such as the vajra and bell,
mandalas etc. This tradition was mainly preserved in so-called
'Tibetan Buddhism', and partially in the Japanese Shingon tradition.
BUDDHIST
SYMBOLS
It
is said that the Buddha was reluctant to accept images of himself,
as he did not like to be venerated as a person. To symbolise the
Buddha in the very early art, one used mainly the Eight Spoked
Wheel and the Bodhi Tree, but also the Buddha's Footprints, an
Empty Throne, a Begging Bowl and a Lion are used to represent
him.The Eight-Spoked Dharma Wheel or 'Dharmachakra' (Sanskrit)
symbolises the Buddha's turning the Wheel of Truth or Law (dharma
= truth/law, chakra = wheel).
It
refers to the story that shortly after the Buddha achieved enlightenment,
Brahma came down from heaven and requested the Buddha to teach
by offering him a Dharmachakra. The Buddha is known as the Wheel-Turner:
he who sets a new cycle of teachings in motion and in consequence
changes the course of destiny.
The
Dharmachakra has eight spokes, symbolising the Eight-fold Noble
Path. The 3 swirling segments in centre represent the Buddha,
Dharma (the teachings) and Sangha (the spiritual community). The
wheel can also be divided into three parts, each representing
an aspect of Buddhist practice; the hub (discipline), the spokes
(wisdom), and the rim (concentration).
THE
BODHI TREE
The
Bodhi Tree refers to the tree under which the Buddha achieved
enlightenment (See image on the right.).Tree worship was already
part of the existing culture in India, so the development of the
bodhi tree and leaf as a devotional symbol was a natural one.
"After
wandering the countryside for about six years the Buddha finally
came to rest in a forest beside the Naranjara River, not far from
modern day Bodhgaya. Sitting under a Bodhi tree, ardently practising
meditation, he finally realised his true nature. The next seven
days were spent under the tree experiencing the bliss of freedom
and contemplating the extent of his new understanding. The story
then goes on to relate four other periods of seven days, each
spent under a different tree - the Banyan, the Mucalinda and the
Rajayatana tree and then once more back to the Banyan. Each of
these 'tree scenes' has its own well known story which space here
does not allow. The tree of enlightenment is called, in Latin,
ficus religiosa, or sacred tree. It is also known as the pipal
tree. For Buddhists it is generally called the Bodhi, or Bo tree.
Bodhi is the Pali and Sanskrit word for enlightenment. There is
a descendant of the original tree still growing at Bodhgaya and
Bodhi trees are commonly found in Buddhist centres all over the
world."
BUDDHA FOOT
PRINTS
"Footprints
of the Buddha traditionally symbolize the physical presence of
the Enlightened One. This image was reproduced from a rubbing
of an ancient stone imprint at Bodh Gaya, India, site of the Buddha's
enlightenment."
The
story goes that prior to his death the Buddha left an imprint
of his foot on a stone near Kusinara, a reminder of his presence
on earth.
These
footprints often show Dharma-wheels on them, one of the so-called
32 marks of a Buddha. Other auspicious marks, like swastikas and
lotuses etc. can sometimes be found, but they are not part of
these special marks.
THRONE
The
Throne is both a reference to Siddhattha Gotama's royal ancestory
and to the idea of spiritual kingship - enlightenment as ruler
of the spiritual world. The ancient stone carving on the right
depicts a person praying to the seat of the Buddha under the Bodhi
tree. Sometimes the base of the throne is decorated with other
symbols such as lions and deer, both associated with the Buddha's
teachings.
BEGGING
BOWL
The
Begging-bowl refers to the the story that shortly before the Buddha
reached enlightenment, a young woman named Sujata offered him
a bowl of milk-rice. At that moment, he was practicing austerity
by eating extremely little. But he realised at that moment that
he would need to have more strength for the final steps to enlightenment,
and further fasting would only reduce his energy. After he reached
enlightenment, he is said to have thrown away what little was
left in the bowl to signify his renunciation of all material possessions.
Finding the middle way between extreme austerity and complete
attachment to life is an important principle of Buddhism.
The bowl also points to the monk's way of life; going from the
monastery into the village each morning and living off what is
put into it by lay people.
LION
The
Lion is one of Buddhism's most potent symbols. Traditionally,
the lion is associated with regality, strength and power. It is
therefore an appropriate symbol for the Buddha who tradition has
it was a royal prince. The Buddha's teachings are sometimes referred
to as the 'Lion's Roar', again indicative of their strength and
power.
The
image on the left shows a capital from a pillar of Asoka: the
Lions of Sarnath. Sarnath is where the Buddha first preached,
and these lions echo his teachings to the four quarters of the
world, sometimes called 'the Lion's Roar'. The wheel symbolizes
Buddhist law and also Asoka's legitamacy as an enlightened ruler.
Especially
in Tibetan Buddhist art, lions are often depicted on the throne
the Buddha sits on, but these are Snowlions (mythical creatures),
and they actually represent the eight main Bodhisattvas (students
of the Buddha).
What
seems a much later development is the depiction of the Buddha's
eyes (especially on stupas), as is frequently seen in Nepal. They
look in all four directions, representing the omniscient mind
of a Buddha.
THE THREE PRECIOUS JEWELS or TRIPLE GEM
The image on the left shows a capital from a pillar of Asoka:
the Lions of Sarnath. Sarnath is where the Buddha first preached,
and these lions echo his teachings to the four quarters of the
world, sometimes called 'the Lion's Roar'. The wheel symbolizes
Buddhist law and also Asoka's legitamacy as an enlightened ruler.
Especially
in Tibetan Buddhist art, lions are often depicted on the throne
the Buddha sits on, but these are Snowlions (mythical creatures),
and they actually represent the eight main Bodhisattvas (students
of the Buddha).
What
seems a much later development is the depiction of the Buddha's
eyes (especially on stupas), as is frequently seen in Nepal. They
look in all four directions, representing the omniscient mind
of a Buddha.
DEER
Deer
are a direct reference to the Buddha's first teaching in the Deer
Park, Sarnath, also called Dharmachakra Parivartan. The suggestion
is that so wonderous was the Buddha's appearance and peaceful
his presence that even the animals came to listen. In the Tibetan
tradition, a monastery which holds the Kangyur and Tengyur collections
of texts would have this symbol of deer on both sides of the Dharma-wheel
on the roof.
STUPAS
Stupas
generally represent the enlightened mind of the Buddha. They were
constructed since the early days of Buddhism. One of the symbolic
meanings is that they represent the five elements: the square
base represents earth, the round dome is for water, the cone-shape
is fire, the canope is air and the volume of the stupa is space.
Stupas are often used to store relics from important teachers.
On
the subject of stupas, I can recommend a visit to the Stupa Page,
which not only contains lots of information, but even a free downloadable
book on stupas. Stupas come in many shapes and all sizes....
OFFERINGS
Making
offerings is a very common practice in the East. Every offering
has a specific meaning, for example offering light is to dispel
the darkness of one's ignorance, or offering incense to increase
one's ethical behaviour. Offering is considered a good training
against greed and attachment.
In
Tibet, many or all of the offerings are often replaced by little
bowls filled with water which symbolises the offering of water
for drinking and foot-washing, flowers, incense, light, perfume
and food. This relates to the ancient tradition of how a very
important guest should be received.
The
Eight Offerings:
Offering
water to cleanse
the mouth or face: It signifies auspiciousness or
all the positive causes and conditions which bring positive effects.
So, make an offering of water which is clean, fresh, cool, smooth,
light, delicious, comfortable to the throat and stomach - these
qualities are the qualities of auspiciousness.
Offering
water to wash the feet: This is clear water mixed with
incense or sandalwood which is made as an offering to all enlightened
beings' feet. The symbolic meaning is purification. By cleansing
the feet of the enlightened beings, we cleanse all our own negative
karma and obscurations. By making offerings to clean the enlightened
beings feet, we are really cleaning the "feet" of our
own mind.
Offering
flowers signifies the practice of generosity and opens
the heart.
Offering
incense symbolises moral ethics or discipline
Offering
light signifies the stability and clarity of patience,
the beauty which dispels all ignorance.
Offering
of perfume or the fragrance from saffron or sandalwood.
It signifies perseverance or joyous effort. Through that one quality,
one develops all the qualities of enlightenment.
Offering
of food which has a lot of different tastes signifies
samadhi, which is a nectar or ambrosia to feed the mind.
Offering
of musical instruments. There are different types of instruments
-- cymbals, bells, guitars, lutes - - all of these are offered.
Their nature is wisdom, which makes an offering to the ears of
the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas and all the enlightened beings. Sound
represents wisdom because wisdom is a special power of the mind
which penetrates phenomena. Compassion is achieved through great
wisdom; interdependence of all phenomena is realised through great
wisdom. of course all phenomena have the nature of interdependence,
causes and conditions, but sound is especially easy to understand.
The
Eight Lucky Articles or Eight Bringers of Good Fortune to support
the practitioner's efforts at reaching enlightenment. Each of
these also represents an aspect of the 8-fold Noble Path:
The
Mirror represents the Dharmakaya or Truth Body of the Buddha,
having the aspects of purity (a mirror is clear of pollution)
and wisdom (a mirror reflects all phenomena without distinction).
Represents Right Thought.
Curd
- just as this highly valued, pure white food is the result of
a long process, so the clear nature of mind is revealed with practice
over time as the defilements are dissolved. Represents Right Livelihood
(no animal is harmed in its production).
Durva Grass is very resilient and is a symbol of long life. This
is considered beneficial because one needs time to practice and
attain enlightenment. Represents Right Effort.
The
Wood Apple or Bilva Fruit is offered to remind the practitioner
of the emptiness and conditioned nature of all phenomena in terms
of dependent origination. Why the Bilva fruit was chosen to represent
this is unknown. Represents Right Action - which bears the right
fruit.
The Right-coiled Conch-shell represents the wish that the Buddhist
teachings will be spread in all directions like the sounds emitted
when the shell is used as a horn. Represents Right Speech.
Vermilion/Cinnabar
are each red powders consisting of mercuric sulphide. In tantric
Buddhist colour symbolism, red represents control. Thus, this
offering is concerned with having control over one's capacities
which are to be put to the effort of gaining enlightenment. Represents
Right Concentration
White
Mustard SeedsThis relates to the Buddha's response to a woman
who came to him distraught at the loss of her child. He instructed
her to collect a mustard seed (as common as salt or pepper at
the time) from every home that never had a bereavement. As she
returned empty-handed, the Buddha showied her that she was not
alone in her sorrow and that death is an inescapable part of life.
Represent Right Understanding. Mustard seeds are also used in
many rituals to expel demons. They therefore symbolise also wrathful
means at overcoming obstacles.
Precious
Medicine - ghi-wang, literally meaning "cow essence",
is a soothing and strengthening medicine obtained from gallstones
in cattle or elephants. The substance's ability to deal with physical
suffering symbolises to include suffering as part of the practice
of Dharma. It represents Right Mindfulness, which acts as an antidote
to the disease of ignorance and the suffering that it causes.
The
Five Qualities of Enjoyment are also used as offerings, as when
they come into contact with our senses, they give rise to the
negative consequences of attachment and craving:
The
Mirror is a symbol for visual form.
The Lute symbolises sound.
The Incense Burner represents smel.
The Fruit refers to for taste.
The Silk relates to touch.
In offering these qualities, one meditates on their nature and
the intention of abandoning craving.
THE SEVEN JEWELS OF ROYAL POWER
The
Seven Jewels of Royal Power are the accessories of the universal
monarch (Skt. chakravartin). They represent different abilities
or aids that a king must possess in order to stay in power and
can be symbolically offered to the Buddha. These seven jewels
can also be found in the long mandala offering ritual.
The
Precious Queen - who represents the feminine pole, where the chakravartin
is the masculine aspect. Those working to abandon negative mental
states regard her asmother or sister. Her beauty and love for
her husband are representative of the radiating, piercing joy
of the Buddha's enlightenment.
The
Precious General symbolises the wrathful power to overcome enemies.
The
Precious Horse is able to travel among the clouds and mirror the
Buddha's abandonment of, or "rising above", the cares
of worldly existence.
The
Precious Jewel which is sometimes depicted on the back of the
precious horse, deals with the themes of wealth and unfolding
(power and possibility). The jewel is said to aid the Chakravartin
(Wheel-turning or Buddhist King) in his ability to see all things
like a crystal ball. In the same way, a Buddha can perceive all
things; recognising the manifold connections between all events,
the relentless chain of cause and effect, and the nature of compounded
existence. The Jewel can also symbolise a Wish-granting Jewel,
a mythical gem which fulfills all wishes.
The
Precious Minister or Householder represent two different aspects
of the rule of the chakravartin which are closely related. The
minister aids the chakravartin in carrying out his commands expeditiously,
while the householder provides the very basic support. The wisdom
of the Buddha, like the minister, is always present to him who
has realised it, allowing him to cut through the bonds of ignorance.
While the householder represents the support of the lay community,
without which the monastic community could not continue.
The Precious Elephant is a symbol of the strength of the mind
in Buddhism. Exhibiting noble gentleness, the precious elephant
serves as a symbol of the calm majesty possessed by one who is
on the path. Specifically, it embodies the boundless powers of
the Buddha which are miraculous aspiration, effort, intention,
and analysis. The image at the left says it all: a stupa - symbolic
of the mind of a Buddha with a basis of strong elephants.
The Precious Wheel, sometimes depicted on the back of the precious
elephant, is the same as the Dharmachakra, or the Wheel of Truth
above.
THE EIGHT AUSPICIOUS SYMBOLS
The
Umbrella or parasol embodies notions of wealth or royalty,
for one had to be rich enough to possess such an item, and further,
to have someone carry it. It points to the "royal ease"
and power experienced in the Buddhist life of detachment. It also
symbolises the wholesome activities to keep beings from harm (sun)
like illness, harmful forces, obstacles and so forth, and the
enjoyment of the results under its cool shade.
The
Golden Fish; were originally symbolic of the rivers Ganges
and Yamuna, but came to represent good fortune in general. It
also symbolises that living beings who practice the dharma need
have no fear to drown in the ocean of suffering, and can freely
migrate (chose rebirth) like fish in the water.
The
Treasure Vase; is a sign of the inexhaustible riches available
in the Buddhist teachings, but also symbolises long life, wealth,
prosperity and all the benefits of this world.
The
Lotus is a very important symbol in India and of Buddhism.
It refers to the complete purification of body, speech and mind,
and the blossoming of wholesome deeds in liberation. The lotus
refers to many aspects of the path, as it grows from the mud (samsara),
up through clean water (purification), and arising from the deep
produces a beautiful flower (enlightenment). The white blossom
represents purity, the stem stands for the practice of Buddhist
teachings which raise the mind above the (mud of) worldly existence,
and gives rise to purity of mind.
An open blossom signifies full enlightenment; a closed blossom
signifies the potential for enlightenment.
The
Conch, which is also used as a horn, symbolises the deep,
far reaching and melodious sound of the teachings, which is suitable
for all disciples at it awakens them from the slumber of ignorance
to accomplish all beings' welfare.
The
Auspicious or Endless Knot is a grometric diagram which
symbolises the nature of reality where everything is interrelated
and only exists as part of a web of karma and its effect. Having
no beginning or end, it also represents the infinite wisdom of
the Buddha, and the union of compassion and wisdom. Also, it represents
the illusory character of time, and long life as it is endless.
The
Victory Banner; symbolises the victory of the Buddha's
teachings over death, ignorance, disharmony and all the negativities
of this world, and victory over. The roofs of Tibetan monasteries
are aften decorated with victory banners of different shapes and
sizes.
The
Dharma-Wheel (Dharmachakra); it is said that after Siddharta
Gautama achieved enlightenment, Brahma came to him, offered a
Dharma-Wheel and requested the Buddha to teach. It represents
the Buddhist teachings.
THE BUDDHIST FLAG
A
much more recent symbol is the Buddhist flag. It was in designed
in 1880 by Colonel Henry Steele Olcott an American journalist.
It was first hoisted in 1885 in Sri Lanka and is a symbol of faith
and peace, and is now used throughout the world to represent the
Buddhism.
The
six colours of the flag represent the colours of the aura that
emanated from the body of the Buddha when he attained Enlightenment.
| Loving
kindness, peace and universal compassion |
| The
Middle Path - avoiding extremes, emptiness |
| Blessings
of practice - achievement, wisdom, virtue, fortune and dignity
|
| Purity
of Dharma - it leads to liberation, outside of time or space
|
| The
Buddha's Teaching - wisdom |
THE
SWASTIKA
The
Swastika is a well-know good-luck symbol from India. Unfortunately,
it is too well known in the west, as the Nazis chose it as their
main symbol. In Sanskrit, swastika means "conducive to well-being".
In the Buddhist tradition, the swastika symbolizes the feet or
footprints of the Buddha and is often used to mark the beginning
of texts. Modern Tibetan Buddhism uses it as a clothing decoration.
With the spread of Buddhism, it has passed into the iconography
of China and Japan where it has been used to denote plurality,
abundance, prosperity and long life.
(In
India, Hindus use the swastika to mark the opening pages of account
books, thresholds, doors, and offerings, the right-hand swastika
is a solar symbol and the left-hand version represents Kali and
magic. Among the Jains it is the emblem of their seventh Tirthankara.
Other uses of the symbol: in ancient Mesopotamia it was a favorite
symbol on coinage, In Scandinavia it was the symbol for the god
Thor's hammer.. In early Christian art it was called the gammadion
cross because it was made of four gammas. It is also found in
Mayan and Navajo art.)
MOUNTAINS
There
are two key mountains in Buddhist symbolism. The first is Vulture
Peak in northern India where the Buddha is said to have delivered
a number of sermons. Vulture Peak has particular significance
in Mahayana Buddhism as one of its key texts, the Lotus Sutra,
is said to have developed out of the Buddha's teachings at Vulture
Peak [also the very important Heart Sutra was taught here]. The
second belongs to Buddhist cosmology and is known as Mount Meru,
mythologically the center of the Buddhist universe and the link
between the hells below the earth and the heavens above."
In
China, there are the so-called four sacred mountains (not to be
confused with the Taoist five sacred mountains). They are:
Pu
Tuo Shan, Buddhist mountain of the east, Zhejiang province, 284
meters. Sacred to Bodhisatva Kuan-Yin.
Wu Tai Shan, Buddhist mountain of the north, Shanxi province,
3061 meters. Sacred to Bodhisatva Manjushri.
Emei Shan, Buddhist mountain of the west, Sichuan province, 3099
meters. Sacred to Bodhisatva Samantabhadra.
Jiu Hua Shan, Buddhist mountain of the south, Anhui province,
1341 meters. Sacred to Bodhisatva Kshitigarbha.
See also this page from Sacred Sites.
In
Tibet, the 6,600 meter high Mount Kailash is often identified
as the mountain of the gods, and even Mount Meru (the axis of
the universe) with its pyramid shape.