STUPA EN SCHISTE GRIS
STUPA EN SCHISTE GRIS

REGION DU GANDHARA, IIEME-IIIEME SIECLE

Details
STUPA EN SCHISTE GRIS
REGION DU GANDHARA, IIEME-IIIEME SIECLE
La base quadrangulaire ornée de fleurs, supportant deux anneaux circulaires à décor de fleurs et balustrade, le dôme sculpté de pétales de lotus, le parasol composé de sept plaques circulaires
Hauteur: 59 cm. (23¼ in.)
Provenance
Acquired by the previous private collector in the late 1970's.
Further details
A GREY SCHIST STUPA
GANDHARA REGION, 2ND/3RD CENTURY

Brought to you by

Mathilde Courteault
Mathilde Courteault

Lot Essay

The stupa is probably the most popular monument in early Buddhism and takes its origin from the burial mound. The earliest examples were constructed to store Buddha's ashes and relics. In due course they were built to store the remains of Buddha's famous disciples or holy manuscripts.
The building represents an architectural diagram of the cosmic world.
Although the presented object is a reliquary, it was created with all elements of a regular architectural stupa. The first examples were made with a circular base that later became square like the one under discussion. The umbrellas are a symbol of royalty and thus most appropriate for the crown of such a stupa. The empty cavity once contained smaller metal reliquaries or boxes that held the reliques.

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