ETHAS 042201

Chine gd rouleau impérial kesi Buddha assis

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042201
Śākyamuni Buddha
Shijia Rulai 釋迦如來
China
1762
kesi 緙絲 tapestry commissioned by the emperor,
after a painting by Zheng Zhong 鄭重 (Ming dyn.)
Gift of Fiora Cigarini in 1983

Pièce exceptionnelle.

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Registres d'inventaires historiques

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Inventaire original MEG. Registres tapuscrits, volumes 19 à 59
Registres_tapuscrits/42201.pdf

 

Chinese Buddhist iconography

During the first three centuries, Buddhism had no texts by or images of the Buddha. At the beginning of the Christian era, his sermons were written down, in Sanskrit on the Indian continent and in Pāli in the island of Sri Lanka. The Pāli texts became the norm for Theravāda Buddhism in South and Southeast Asia. The Sanskrit texts were translated into Chinese from the 1st century, when the first images of the Buddha and the numerous gods of the pantheon of the Great Vehicle (Mahāyāna) also appeared. The Mahāyāna spread throughout the rest of Asia. It asserts the universality of the Buddha among all beings, and explains that the bodhisattvas, who are already well on the way to enlightenment, can intervene in this world.


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