Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Stupa in India and Sri Lanka-A Study

                                                         Sumanapal Bhikkhu

The stupa is an indispensable feature of almost every Buddhist monastery in Buddhist countries like Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand and Cambodia. Stupas were generally built in sites with considerable natural beauty. All Stupas including those built in modern times, are supposed to enshrine a particle, and in most cases a minute one, of the corporal remains of the Buddha, his disciples and holy persons from which they derive their sacred character. The devout Buddhist while worshipping a stupa containing a relic of the Buddha feels as if he is worshipping the Buddha himself.
A stupa used as such for religious worship by the people of the country is extremely rare today in India, the land from which the Buddhist religion and the stupa were adopted by the countries of eastern and southern Asia. But in those days when the Buddha was still honored as a prophet in India and when large number of people in India guided their lines according to the teachings of the Buddha, the stupas must have been a familiar feature of the landscape in many parts of India proper as it is today in Sri Lanka and Myanmar.
The stupa was adopted by the early Buddhists of India as a means of honoring the founder of their faith. As it is generally admitted now, the image of the Buddha was unknown in the early period of the history of Buddhism, and the Lord was worshipped by paying homage to various religious symbols representing him, the objects with which he was associated while he was alive and above all his corporal remains which were deposited in stupas. The worship of the bodily relies of the Buddha has occupied a great place in popular Buddhism from the earliest times and it seems indeed paradoxical that the early Buddhists, who were never weary of emphasizing the evil and impermanent nature of the human body, were get so enthusiastic in worshipping the bodily remains of their master and of the early features of the church stupas were built in later times not only to enshrine corporal relies of the Buddha or of saints, but also to mark the sacred spots at which some important event connected with the religion had taken place, for example, the spot at which the Buddha delivered his first sermon, stupas of then class may conveniently be referred to as memorials.

A stupa (from Sanskrit, stūpa, Pāli, "thūpa", literally meaning "heap") is a mound-like structure containing Buddhist relics, typically the ashes of deceased, used by Buddhists as a place of meditation. Stupas originated as pre-Buddhist earthen burial mounds, in which ascetics were buried in a seated position, called chaitya  . 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. Little is known about these early stupas, particularly since it has not been possible to identify the original ten monuments. However, some later stupas, such as at Sarnath and Sanchi, seem to be embellishments of earlier mounds.
In the third century B.C., after embracing the Buddhism, the emperor Ashoka had the original stupas opened and the remains distributed among the several thousand stupas he had built. Nevertheless, the stupas at the eight places associated with the life of the Buddha continued to be of particular importance. Accordingly, the importance of a stupa changed from being a funerary monument to being an object of veneration. According to Brahmi, Kharoshti, Pali and Sanskrit edicts Ashoka had constructed 84,000 stupas all over the south Asia. With the spread of Buddhism, due particularly to the missionary activities in the reign of Asoka, the cult of relies and with it the idea of the stupa were carried to various regions outside India proper and become an important feature of the religions practices of those countries. The stupa in course of time, underwent many important changes in its out word form in India itself; while on those lands outside India, it developed on lines peculiar to each country, being influenced by the changes in the doctrine, the artistic traditions of the people and various other factors, so that certain stupas which we find in further India and Malay Archipelago can hardly be recognized as evolved from the ancient Indian model. The evolution of the stupa in India and other Asiatic countries is a very fascinating and instruction study and a study of the stupa in Sri Lanka will show that it has deviated less from the ancient Indian type.
The stupa was elaborated as the chorten of Tibet and the pagoda in East Asia. The pagoda has various forms that also include bell-shaped and pyramidal styles. In the Western context, there is no clear distinction between the stupa and the pagoda. In general, however, stupa is used for a Buddhist structure of India or south-east Asia, while pagoda refers to a building in East Asia which can be entered and which may be secular in purpose.

Stupas were built in Sri Lanka soon after King Devanampiyatissa converted to Buddhism; the first stupa to be built was the Thuparamaya. Later on Sri Lanka went on to build many stupas over the years, some like the Jetavanarama in Anuradhapura being one of the tallest ancient structures in the world.  Sri Lanka also boasts construction of stupas, which have used most advanced engineering techniques and knowledge, for example the use of 'lightning conductors' and 'special shelters vatadage', which is the reason they have been standing undamaged for thousands of years.
According to the sacred tradition, the corporeal relies which remained after the body of the Great Teacher had been cremated at Kushinara, were divided into eight shares among the representatives of eight famous cities who were present at the obsequies. According to a later tradition, certain special relies like the collar bone and the four canine teeth were not included in these eight shares. The recipients of the eight shares of the main body of relics took them to their own cities and built stupas over them. The Indian conception of the stupa spread throughout the Buddhist world and evolved into such different-looking monuments as the bell-shaped dagoba (“heart of garbha”) of Ceylon (Sri Lanka), the terraced temple of Borobudur in Java, and the multistoried pagodas of China, Korea, and Japan. The basic symbolism, in which the central relic is identified with the sacred person or concept commemorated and also with the building itself, is retained. Worship of a stupa consists in walking around the monument in the clockwise direction. Even when the stupa is sheltered by a building, it is always a freestanding monument
According to the unanimous tradition of the Sinhalese, Buddhism was accepted as the state religion of the island during the time of Asoka, the great who sent religious mission to Sri Lanka. At that time the ruler of the island was Devanampiya Tissa and the mission to Sri Lanka was considered so important that it was entrusted to Asoka’s son (according to the northern tradition his brother) Mahendra (Mahindra)who had taken holy Orders. The king of Sri Lanka welcomes the missionaries and the king along with many of his countries embraced Buddhism. A monastery was founded at the capital Anuradhapura and a branch of the sacred Bodhi-tree of Buddha Gaya was brought and planted amidst great rejoicings. Devanampiya Tissa also built the stupa in Sri Lanka which according to tradition enshrines the collar bone of the Buddha. The stupa, known as the Thuparama is of great sincerity in the estimation of the Buddhists of Sri Lanka and is still one of the principal places of pilgrimage at Anuradhapura. It has undergone repair on many occasions in the course of its history of over two thousand years, and is therefore, not preserved today in the form which it had in the third century B.C.
In the reign of Uttiya who was the younger brother and successor of Devanampiya tissa, Mahinda died and the relics of the saint were entombed in a number of stupas one of these, built near the summit of the sacred hill of Mihintale (eight miles to the east of Anuradhapura) where according to tradition, the first meeting of the apostle and the king took place. This is still an object of devotion to the millions of Buddhists in the Island. This stupa, known as the Amkasthala, has many architectural features in common with the Thuparama and, like the latter, has been subject to repeated restoration. In comparison with some of the later stupas of Sri Lanka, the Thuparama and the Amkasthala are of modest dimension, the diameter of the former being 59ft, and that of the latter only 29ft.
Only a few decades after the introduction of Buddhism in Sri Lanka the Tamils invaded the island and sovereignty of Anuradhapura passed into the hands of these invaders. They were adherents of Brahmanism and as a result no stupas were built in Anuradhapura or the neighboring districts during the period of Tamil domination. Sinhalese princes of the Buddhist faith however ruled at Mahagama (now Tissamaharama) in the south west and at Kalyani (modern Kalaniya, near Colombo) in the west of the island, and they built stupas at their seats of Government while the northern part of the island was under foreign rule. The stupa at Kalaniya is supposed to commemorate the visit of the Buddha to the spot at the invitation of a Naga King; and its proximity to the modern capital of Sri Lanka has now made it one of the most frequented shrines in the Island.
The reign of Vattagamini Abhaya (C. 44-17 B.C.) is a memorable one for the development of stupa building in Sri Lanka. He built the Abhaygiri vihara now erroneously called the Jetavana.
In the evolution of the stupa in Sri Lanka, it is the super structure i.e. the portion above the dome, which underwent considerable development. The terraces and the dome remained, during a period of a millennium and a half, substantially the same; and the shrines, even today show very little change so far as these parts of the structure are concerned. But it is otherwise with the superstructure. In such stupas if ancient Sri Lanka as have still a considerable part of their superstructure preserved, the features are quite different for those of the oldest extant stupas in India.

As the Stupa with Buddhism was introduced from Northern India, it is reasonable to assume that the oldest relic shrines of Sri Lanka were similar to those of the early Buddhist period in India. And fortunately among the latter a few are sufficiently well preserved to admit of their reconstruction. Moreover, the sculptures decorating the gateways and railings of the monuments at Sanchi and Bharhut include a number of bass reliefs representing stupas as they existed in the second or first century B.C. and the sculptures of Amaravati and Nagarjunikonda help us to understand what the stupa was like in southern India at a somewhat later date. With the help of these and the actual remains, archeologists have been able to reconstruct the architectural features of the ancient Indian stupas in some detail. The chronicles of Sri Lanka contain numerous incidental stupas in this Island; and a study of these comparing them with the actual remain and the has reliefs of India, Tends to confirm the prior assumption date the Singhalese stupas, in their most ancient form, did not differ from their Indian prototypes.
The earliest among the Indian stupas found in a relatively good state of preservation in the magnificent example of Sanchi which was restored by Sir John Marshall. According to the story of Mahavamsa, Mahinda probably started his journey to Sri Lanka from the Vihara of Sanchi. It is therefore, reasonable to assume  that the type of the stupa which was prevalent in that area was copied by the earliest builders of stupas in Sri Lanka, or at bust that it had a good deal of  influence on the early monuments of the Island.
From Fa Hian’s account of the famous Jetavana monastery at Sravasti we find that if arigmally had seven storeys. The Storey’s were of wooden construction. Fi -Hien tells us that the monastery contained a central shrine in which was an ancient sandal wood image of the Buddha which was the first ever made image and all subsequent ages followed this model. Again there is Xuan Zang description of the Ti-lo-shi-ka monastery in the ancient kingdom of Magadha. He says that the road facing the middle gate there were three whereas, above each of which was a (metal) chhatravali, from which bells were suspended, below the constructed storey above storey, from the bottom to the stop. The storey’s were surrounded by railings, and the doors, windows, pillars, beams  and stair-cases were all carved (and covered) with gilt copper in relief, the intervals being highly decorated.



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