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Kangiten@½μV | ||||||
KEY WORD :@art history / iconography | ||||||
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Also
read Kankiten. Also Shouten/Shouden ΉV. Abbreviation of Daishou kangiten εΉ½μV. The elephant-headed Indian deity Ganesa, who is also sometimes called
Nandikesvara, Ganapat or Vinayaka. A son of Siva still worshipped as a deity
who foils obstacles to ones actions and grants good fortune to new beginnings.
He appears in the *Ryoukai
mandara ΌEΦδΆ
as an elephant-headed deity called Binayakaten ωίιήV.
In China and Japan he came to be revered under the the name of Kangiten.
Although in texts, two, four and six-armed forms are mentioned, in Japan
Kangiten is usually shown as a pair of two-armed, elephant-headed deities
in embrace. Images of Kangiten are rare and many are kept as secret images
in temples and shrines. Many are small, and made of metal because his ritual
involves pouring oil over the images. The ritual associated with Kangiten was secret and was part of other ritual observances, such as the goshichinichi
no mishuhou γ΅ϊΜδC@. In popular worship he signifies conjugal harmony
and long life. There is an iconographic drawing of Kangiten in Touji ,
Kyoto, by Chinkai ΏC (1091-1152). |
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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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