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Hakusan mandara@RΦδΆ | ||||||
KEY WORD :@art history / iconography | ||||||
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Devotional
paintings of the cult of Hakusan R (white mountains), a group of mountains
that border Gifu, Fukui, Ishikawa, and Toyama prefectures. It is considered one
of the principal mountain sites of Japan, and having a permanent cap of snow it
is visible from far away. The site of Hakusan was regarded as sacred from very
early times. Hakusan is celebrated in the MAN'YOUSHUU tW which was compiled
in the 8c, and the first oracle from the deity was said to have been received
in 719 by Taichou Χ, the founder of the cult kaizan JR. The cult of asceticism
mountain developed in the Heian period and the mountain's religion was a form
of Shinto/ Buddhist syncretism. From the 12c Hakusan was ruled over by Enryakuji
ο on Mt. Hiei δb Kyoto, the head Tendai Vδ temple. For this reason the pattern
of the Sannou R€ shrines, with upper, middle, and lower groups of seven shrines
adding up to 21 shrines, was copied in Hakusan (see *Sannou mandara R€ΦδΆ
). The
main deity, Shirayamahime Rδ, has her own Shrine known as Hakusan Honguu R{{,
or Hakusanji R which contains three deities although none of them is called
after her. The main group of seven deities, including that of Honnguu was called
the Hakusan Shichi Gongen R΅ ». The Hakusan Sansho Gongen RO » may be the deities
of the mountains (Bessan ΚR, Gozenpou δOτ, and Oonanjimine επτ) whose Buddhist
counterparts *honjibutsu {n§
may be identified as *Shoukannon
ΉΟΉ, *Juuichimen Kannon
\κΚΟΉ and *Amida ’νΙ, although
they are sometimes vary. There are two famous paintings of the cult of Hakusan. In one of these the central figure is Shirayamahime RP called Myouri Daibosatsu
εμF who was the main deity of Hakusan. Below her and to either side are another
female and a male deity of the main group placed before screens. Above are the
bonji (Siddham letters used as sound symbols of the deities) *Dainichi
εϊ (for the male), Juuichimen Kannon (for Myouri Daibosatsu) and *Senju
Kanon ηθΟΉ. In the other painting the three peaks of Hakusan are shown
above clouds while the Hakusan Shichi Gongen and several deities of minor shrines
are shown below them. At the bottom of the painting Taichou sits on a rock at
the foot of a waterfall. |
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(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System.@No reproduction or republication without written permission. fΪΜeLXgEΚ^ECXgΘΗASΔΜRecΜ³f‘»E]ΪπΦΆά·B |
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