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Encyclopedia of Buddhism Volume One A -L Robert E. Buswell

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M ONASTIC<br />

A RCHITECTURE<br />

Almost every oasis had a Buddhist presence, although<br />

chronologies <strong>of</strong> the sites and their architecture<br />

are sketchy. It is similarly difficult to trace the movement<br />

<strong>of</strong> Buddhist sects from one to another. Datable<br />

materials suggest Buddhist monasteries propagated in<br />

Central Asia by the third century C.E. and survived until<br />

other religions, such as Islam, or invasions <strong>of</strong> peoples,<br />

such as the Mongols, destroyed them. Like most<br />

construction in Central Asia, monastery buildings were<br />

almost without exception mud brick. Some <strong>of</strong> the earliest<br />

Buddhist monasteries in Central Asia are in Miran<br />

on the southern SILK ROAD in eastern Xinjiang<br />

province. An inscription and paintings date <strong>Buddhism</strong><br />

in Miran to the second century C.E. Both freestanding<br />

temples and stupas survive.<br />

<strong>Buddhism</strong> was present in China by the first century<br />

C.E., and a growing number <strong>of</strong> sites such as the<br />

rock-carved elephant at Lianyun’gang in Jiangsu<br />

province attest to this fact. By the fourth century, Buddhist<br />

CAVE SANCTUARIES inspired by Indian models<br />

were carved in several regions <strong>of</strong> Xinjiang, in China<br />

proper, and at oases in China’s westernmost territory.<br />

Most famous among the cave monasteries are, from<br />

west to east, Kizil, Kumtura, and Bezeklik in Xinjiang;<br />

the Mogao and other cave-temple groups in the<br />

DUNHUANG region and Maijishan in Gansu province<br />

<strong>of</strong> Western China; and YUN’GANG, Tianlongshan,<br />

Xiangtangshan, LONGMEN, and Gongxian in the north<br />

central Chinese provinces <strong>of</strong> Shanxi, Hebei, and<br />

Henan. Additional cave sanctuaries have been studied<br />

in China in the last two decades <strong>of</strong> the twentieth<br />

century, in particular in Gansu, the Ningxia Hui<br />

Autonomous Region, and southeastern China, giving<br />

way to redating and refinement <strong>of</strong> chronologies. Still,<br />

it is not possible to suggest a clear path <strong>of</strong> transmission<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Buddhism</strong> and its monasteries. Rather, monastery<br />

remains suggest that, from the third or fourth<br />

centuries through the ninth or tenth centuries, monks<br />

traveled and dwelt in Buddhist sites from Afghanistan,<br />

Persia, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan in the<br />

West to Central China in the East, alongside practitioners<br />

<strong>of</strong> other faiths; their monasteries consisted<br />

<strong>of</strong> rock-cut caitya halls, freestanding temples, and<br />

stupas. The earliest monastery remains in China date<br />

to the fifth century. As far as can be determined, the<br />

dominant structures in early Chinese monasteries<br />

were a stupa and Buddhist worship hall, with the<br />

stupa <strong>of</strong>ten towering as a major monument in a town<br />

or city.<br />

Monastic architecture in China<br />

By this time, the stupa had become four-sided in plan,<br />

closer in appearance to multistory Chinese towers <strong>of</strong><br />

the late B.C.E. and early C.E. centuries than to circular<br />

stupas <strong>of</strong> India or Central Asia. The Northern Wei<br />

(386–534) capital at Luoyang in Henan province contained<br />

1,367 Buddhist structures or building complexes.<br />

Its two most important monasteries were<br />

Jimingsi, which had a seven-story pagoda, and Yongningsi,<br />

whose wooden pagoda rose 161 meters in nine<br />

stories. Each side <strong>of</strong> each story had three doors and six<br />

windows and was supported by ten pillars. The doors<br />

were vermilion lacquer, held in place with golden nails.<br />

Golden bells hung from each corner <strong>of</strong> each level. The<br />

great Buddha hall directly to its north was fashioned<br />

after the main hall <strong>of</strong> audience <strong>of</strong> the Luoyang palace.<br />

It contained a three-meter golden Buddha. Also following<br />

imperial architecture, Yongningsi was enclosed<br />

by a 212-by-301 meter mud-earth wall, 3.3 meters<br />

thick, with a gate on each side; its main gate, seven bays<br />

across the front, was sixty-six meters high and rose<br />

three stories. Yongning Monastery is said to have contained<br />

a thousand bays <strong>of</strong> rooms, among which were<br />

monks’ quarters, towers, pavilions, and the main Buddha<br />

hall and pagoda behind one another at the center.<br />

The oldest wooden architecture in China survives<br />

at four monasteries in Shanxi province <strong>of</strong> the late<br />

eighth and ninth centuries <strong>of</strong> the Tang dynasty (618–<br />

907). Still resembling palace architecture, Buddhist<br />

halls also became models for sarcophagi in the Tang<br />

period. The most important monasteries were commissioned<br />

by the emperor or empress, usually for national<br />

capitals or sacred Buddhist peaks.<br />

It was still common in the Tang dynasty for imperial<br />

residential architecture to be transformed into a<br />

Buddhist monastery. The residence <strong>of</strong> the Prince <strong>of</strong><br />

Wei, son <strong>of</strong> the second Tang emperor, was transformed<br />

in 658 into a monastery <strong>of</strong> more than four thousand<br />

bays <strong>of</strong> rooms with thirteen major Buddhist halls<br />

arranged around ten courtyards. <strong>One</strong> hall measured<br />

51.5 by 33 meters at the base. It was not the main hall,<br />

which was considerably larger. By the Tang dynasty, it<br />

is possible to associate building plans with Buddhist<br />

ceremonies. Halls used for ordination <strong>of</strong> Zhenyan<br />

(Shingon in Japan) monks were divided into front and<br />

back areas, the private back space for the initiation rite<br />

in which the Womb and Diamond World MAN D ALAS<br />

were removed from the wall and placed on a low central<br />

table or the floor. Other halls had a central inner<br />

space for the altar and images and an enclosing<br />

E NCYCLOPEDIA OF B UDDHISM<br />

551

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