Buddhist Kingship and Symbolic Architecture in Silla Korea

被引:1
作者
McBride, Richard D., II [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Brigham Young Univ, Korean & East Asian Buddhism, Provo, UT 84602 USA
[2] Brigham Young Univ, Asian & Near Eastern Languages Dept, Provo, UT 84602 USA
关键词
Silla history; Buddhist kingship; state-protection Buddhism; Hwangnyong Monastery; Sachonwang Monastery;
D O I
10.16893/IJBTC.2021.06.30.1.181
中图分类号
B9 [宗教];
学科分类号
010107 ;
摘要
The evolution of kingship in the early Korean state of Silla (ca 300-935) was closely linked with the accommodation of various Buddhist practices that conferred symbolic legitimacy and promoted royal authority. During the sixth and seventh centuries, Silla sovereigns assimilated several overlapping approaches to statecraft and kingship drawing on Sinitic and imagined Indian models mediated through such Buddhist literature as the Sutra for Humane Kings and the Sutra of Golden Light, resonant with policies followed in the Northern and Southern Dynasties in China. Buddhist monarchs in Silla adopted several overlapping and increasingly sophisticated approaches to symbolically consolidate and project political authority. Silla merged native East Asian cosmological symbolism with Buddhist architecture to establish royal legitimacy. Hwangnyong Monastery combines Sinitic symbolism with Buddhist-inspired propaganda, which both assert Silla regional dominion. The significance of the yellow dragon was astrological, signifying Silla's ascendancy among the Korean states. Hwangnyong Monastery was the locus for state-protection rituals centered on the Sutra for Humane Kings beginning in the sixth century, but early monasteries built with a single golden hall and two pagodas may have some connection to the Sutra of Golden Light. Sachonwang Monastery was the most important twin pagoda monastery in seventh-century Silla, with yongmyo Monastery and Kamun Monastery also performing a magico-religious function as loci for ritual centered on divine protection by the four heavenly kings, the eight classes of divine beings, spirit generals, and wholesome deities from the unseen world
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页码:181 / 215
页数:35
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