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Myouken@–­Œ©
KEY WORD :@art history / iconography
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Sk: Sudrsti, also Sonshouou ‘Έ―‰€ or Hokushin bosatsu –k’C•μŽF. Originally a deification of the Polestar, hokushin –k’C but later also regarded as a deification of the Big Dipper, hokuto –k“l because of confusion between the two. Although popularly regarded as a bodhisattva *bosatsu •μŽF, and usually referred to as Myouken bosatsu –­Œ©•μŽF, properly speaking she belongs to the category of divinities *ten “V, and in the jimon Ž›–ε branch of the Tendai “V‘δ sect she is equated with *Kichijouten ‹gΛ“V. She is invoked in particular for apotropaic purposes and also for the healing of eye diseases. In Japan she appears to have been widely revered as early as the Heian period, and in medieval times she came to be worshipped especially among powerful provincial clans as a tutelary deity of the warrior class, evolving into the partially Shintoized deity Myoukenjin –­Œ©_. At the same time she was also adopted by the *Nichiren “ϊ˜@ sect and remains the object of a popular cult today. Artistic representations of Myouken exhibit considerable diversity, and there is a set of twenty-six paintings, all different, at Daigoji ‘ηŒνŽ› Kyoto, but generally speaking she is depicted with either two or four arms and either seated on a cloud or standing on the back of a dragon. Myoukenjin has a halo showing the seven stars of the Big Dipper and holds a sword in one hand. There is also a mandala *mandara ™ΦδΆ—… centred on her, Myouken mandara –­Œ©™ΦδΆ—….
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NOTES
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(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System.@No reproduction or republication without written permission.
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