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tanjoubutsu@’aΆ•§
KEY WORD :@art history / iconography
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Lit. Buddha at birth. A sculptural representation of the historical Buddha *Shaka Žί‰ή immediately after his birth. According to legend, his mother Mahamaya gave birth to him from her right side. The infant then took 7 steps and, pointing to the heavens with his right hand and to the earth with his left hand, proclaimed, Tenjou tenga yuiga dokuson “Vγ“V‰Ί—B‰δ“Ζ‘Έ (I alone am the honoured one in the heavens and on earth). The tanjoubutsu show the infant Shaka in this pose, usually wearing a loincloth. Shaka's birth is counted among 8 major events in his life (see *Shaka hassou Žί‰ή”ͺ‘Š), but statuary representations of this type are rare outside of Korea and Japan. Elsewhere the infant Shaka is generally depicted in reliefs and murals with both arms hanging at his side or with the right hand raised in the mudaor bestowing fearlessness *semui-in Ž{–³ˆΨˆσ. In Japan images in bronze (and occasionally in wood) between 5-20 cm in height are very common because they have becomes a requisite for the *kanbutsu-e ŠΑ•§‰ο or rite for sprinkling (an image of) the Buddha. The rite is performed annually on April 8th in celebration of Shaka's birthday, when a tanjoubutsu statuette is placed in a shallow bowl, kanbutsuban ŠΑ•§”Υ inside a small shrine decorated with flowers, hanamidou ‰ΤŒδ“° and is sprinkled by worshippers usually with sweet hydrangea tea, amacha ŠΓ’ƒ in imitation of the 2 dragon-kings who are said to have poured perfumed water on Shaka when he was born. This rite, which may be traced back to the 7c., is today more commonly known as hanamatsuri ‰ΤΥ‚θ (flower festival). Tanjoubutsu date from as early as the Asuka period, but the most renowned is at Toudaiji “Œ‘εŽ› (Nara; national treasure). Other representative examples include those at Goshinji Œε^Ž› (Hakuhou period) Nara, Zensuiji ‘P…Ž› (Nara period) Shiga prefecture, and Daihouonji ‘ε•ρ‰ΆŽ› (Kamakura period) Kyoto.
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