|
||||||
@ | ||||||
seishuku@―h | ||||||
KEY WORD :@ art history / iconography | ||||||
@ | ||||||
Also read shoshuku; also shukuyou hj. Meaning constellation, this term refers in Buddhist iconography to planets, stars, constellations and other heavenly bodies that have been deified and incorporated into Buddhism. They include the nine planets, kuyou γj or kushitsu γ· ; the sun, moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Rago ² (Sk: Rahu), and Keito vs (Sk: Ketu), the twelve houses of the zodiac, juniku or juunikyuu \ρ{, the twenty-eight lunar mansions *nijuuhasshuku ρ\ͺh, and *Myouken © (deification of the Polestar or Big Dipper). In addition, Nitten ϊV (sun) and Gatten V (moon) and perhaps *NikkouEGakkou ϊυ₯υ might also be broadly included in this category. The twelve houses and twenty-eight lunar mansions are depicted in the Gekongoubu-in Oΰ@ of the Matrix Mandara *Taizoukai mandara Ω EΦδΆ , and there are a number of other mandalas *mandara ΦδΆ , generically known as *hoshi mandara ―ΦδΆ , dedicated to these entities *hokuto mandara klΦδΆ . The term sidereal division, seishukubu ―h is sometimes used as a collective designation for this category of Buddhist deities. | ||||||
@ | ||||||
@ | ||||||
@ |
||||||
REFERENCES: | ||||||
@ | ||||||
EXTERNAL LINKS: | ||||||
@@ | ||||||
NOTES: | ||||||
@ | ||||||
(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System.@No reproduction or republication without written permission. fΪΜeLXgEΚ^ECXgΘΗASΔΜRecΜ³f‘»E]ΪπΦΆά·B |
||||||
@ |