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The Mahabodhi Temple (literally: "Great Awakening Temple") or the Mahābodhi Mahāvihāra, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is an ancient, but rebuilt and restored Buddhism, Buddhist temple in Bodh Gaya, Bihar, India, marking the location where the Gautama Buddha, Buddha is said to have attained Enlightenment (Buddhism), enlightenment. Bodh Gaya is 15 km from Gaya, India, Gaya and is about from Patna. The site contains a descendant of the Bodhi Tree#Bodh Gaya, Bodhi Tree under which Buddha gained Enlightenment (spiritual), enlightenment, and has been a major pilgrimage destination of Buddhists for well over two thousand years, and some elements date to the period of Ashoka (died c. 232 BCE). What is now visible on the ground essentially dates from the 5th century CE, or possibly earlier, as well as several major restorations since the 19th century. But the structure now may well incorporate large parts of earlier work, possibly from the 2nd or 3rd century CE.Harle, 201; Michell, 228–229 Archaeological finds from the site however, indicate that the place was a site of veneration for Buddhists since at least the Mauryan period. In particular, the Vajrasana, Bodh Gaya, Vajrasana, which is located within the temple itself has been dated to the third century BCE. Many of the oldest sculptural elements have been moved to the museum beside the temple, and some, such as the carved stone railing wall around the main structure, have been replaced by replicas. The main temple's survival is especially impressive, as it was mostly made of brick covered with stucco, materials that are much less durable than stone. However, it is understood that very little of the original Sculpture, sculptural decoration has survived. The temple complex includes two large straight-sided shikhara towers, the largest over 55 metres (180 feet) high. This is a stylistic feature that has continued in Jain and Hindu temples to the present day, and influenced Buddhist architecture in other countries, in forms like the pagoda.


The Buddha

Traditional accounts say that, around 589 BCE, Siddhartha Gautama, a young prince who Four sights, saw the suffering of the world and wanted to end it, reached the forested banks of the Phalgu river, near the city of Gaya, India, Gaya, India. There he sat in meditation under a peepul tree (''Ficus religiosa'' or Sacred Fig) which later became known as the Bodhi tree. According to Buddhist scriptures, after three days and three nights, Siddharta attained bodhi, enlightenment and the answers that he had sought. In that location, Maha Bodhi Society, Mahabodhi Temple was built by Emperor Ashoka in around 260 BCE. The Buddha then spent the succeeding seven weeks at seven different spots in the vicinity meditating and considering his experience. Several specific places at the current Mahabodhi Temple relate to the traditions surrounding these seven weeks: * The first week was spent under the Enlightenment in Buddhism, Bodhi tree. * During the second week, the Buddha remained standing and stared, uninterrupted, at the Bodhi tree. This spot is marked by the Animeshlocha Stupa, that is, the unblinking stupa or shrine, to the north-east of the Maha Bodhi Society, Mahabodhi Temple complex. There stands a statue of Buddha with his eyes fixed towards the Bodhi tree. * The Buddha is said to have walked back and forth between the location of the Animeshlocha Stupa and the Bodhi tree. According to legend, lotus flowers sprung up along this route; it is now called Ratnachakrama or the jewel walk. * He spent the fourth week near Ratnagar Chaitya, to the north-east side. * He spent the sixth week next to the Lotus pond. * He spent the seventh week under the ''Rajyatna'' tree.


Mahabodhi Tree

The Bodhi tree at Bodh Gaya, Bodhgaya is directly connected to the life of the historical Buddha, Gautama Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama, who attained enlightenment or perfect insight when he was meditating under it. The temple was built directly to the east of the Bodhi tree, supposedly a direct descendant of the original Bodhi Tree. According to Buddhist mythology, if no Bodhi tree grows at the site, the ground around the Bodhi tree is devoid of all plants for a distance of one royal karīsa. Through the ground around the Bodhi tree no being, not even an elephant, can travel. According to the Jatakas, the navel of the earth lies at this spot, and no other place can support the weight of the Buddha's attainment. Another Buddhist tradition claims that when the world is destroyed at the end of a kalpa (aeon), kalpa, the Bodhimanda is the last spot to disappear, and will be the first to appear when the world emerges into existence again. Tradition also claims that a lotus will bloom there, and if a Buddha is born during the new kalpa, the lotus flowers in accordance with the number of Buddhas expected to arise. According to legend, in the case of Gautama Buddha, a Bodhi tree sprang up on the day he was born.


Temple construction


Mauryan establishment

In approximately 250 BCE, about 200 years after the Buddha attained Enlightenment, Emperor Asoka, Ashoka of the Mauryan Empire visited Bodh Gaya in order to establish a monastery and shrine on the holy site, which have today disappeared. There remains however the Diamond throne, which he had established at the foot of the Bodhi tree.Buddhist Architecture, Huu Phuoc Le, Grafikol, 201
p. 240
/ref> The Diamond throne, or ''Vajrasana, Bodh Gaya, Vajrasana'', is thought to have been built by Emperor Ashoka of the Maurya Empire between 250 and 233 BCE,.Buddhist Architecture, Huu Phuoc L
p. 240
/ref> at the location where the Buddha reached enlightenment.A Global History of Architecture, Francis D. K. Ching, Mark M. Jarzombek, Vikramaditya Prakash, John Wiley & Sons, 201
pp. 570ff
/ref> It is worshiped today, and is the center of many festivities at the temple. Representations of the early temple structure meant to protect the Bodhi tree are found at Sanchi, on the toraṇas of Stupa, Stūpa I, dating from around 25 BCE, and on a relief carving from the stupa railing at Bharhut, Bhārhut, from the early Shunga Empire, Shunga period (c. 185–c. 73 BCE).


Sunga structures


Columns with pot-shaped bases

Additional structures were brought in by the Sungas. In particular, columns with pot-shaped bases were found around the Diamond throne. These columns are thought to date to the 1st century BCE, towards the end of the Sungas. These columns, which were found through archaeological research at the Buddha's Walk in the Maha Bodhi Society, Mahabodhi Temple, quite precisely match the columns described on the reliefs found on the gateway pillars.


Railings

The railing also around the Maha Bodhi Society, Mahabodhi Temple at Bodh Gaya are quite ancient. These are old sandstone posts dating about 150 BCE, during the Sunga period. There are carved panels as well as medallions, with many scenes similar to those of the contemporary Shunga Empire, Sunga railings at Bharhut (150 BCE) and Sanchi (115 BCE), although the reliefs at Sanchi Stupa No.2 are often considered as the oldest of all.Didactic Narration: Jataka Iconography in Dunhuang with a Catalogue of Jataka Representations in China, Alexander Peter Bell, LIT Verlag Münster, 200
pp. 15ff
/ref> The railing was extended during the following century, down to the end of Gupta Empire, Gupta period (7th century), with coarse granite decorated with elaborate foliate ornaments and small figures as well as stupas. Many parts of the initial railing have been dismantled and are now in museums, such as the Indian Museum in Kolkota, Kolkata, and have been replaced by plaster copies.


Current pyramidal temple

While Asoka is considered the Mahabodhi temple's founder, the current pyramidal structure dates from the Gupta Empire, in the 5th–6th century CE. It's identical to the architectural styles of Hindu temples still being constructed in India. However this may represent a restoration of earlier work of the 2nd or 3rd century: a plaque from Kumrahar dated 150–200 CE, based on its dated Kharoshthi inscriptions and combined finds of Huvishka coins, already shows the Mahabodhi Temple in its current shape with a stepped truncated pyramid and a small hemispherical stupa with finals on top. This is confirmed by archaeological excavations in Bodh Gaya. It is thought that the temple in the shape of a truncated pyramid was derived from the design of the stepped stupas which had developed in Gandhara. The Mahabodhi Temple adapted the Gandharan design of a succession of steps with niches containing Buddha images, alternating with Greco-Roman world, Greco-Roman pillars, and top by a stupa, as seen in the stupas of Jaulian.Le Huu Phuoc, Buddhist Architecture, pp. 238–248 The structure is crowned by the shape of a hemispherical stupa topped by finials, forming a logical elongation of the stepped Gandharan stupas. This truncated pyramid design also marked the evolution from the aniconic stupa dedicated to the cult of relics, to the Cultural icon, iconic temple with multiple images of the Buddha and Bodhisattvas. This design was very influential in the development of later Hindu temples. The "shikhara" tower with an amalaka near the top is today considered more characteristic of Hindu temples. The Temple was restored by the British and India post independence.


Decline

Buddhism declined when the dynasties patronizing it declined, following Huna people, Huna invasions and the early Arab Islamic invasions of India, Islamic invasions such as that of Muhammad bin Qasim. A strong revival occurred under the Pala Empire in the northeast of the subcontinent (where the temple is situated). Mahayana Buddhism flourished under the Palas between the 8th and the 12th century. However, after the defeat of the Palas by the Sena dynasty, Buddhism's position again began to erode and became nearly decline of Buddhism in India, extinct in India. During the 12th century CE, Bodh Gaya and the nearby regions were invaded by Muslim Turkic peoples, Turk armies, led by Delhi Sultanate's Qutb al-Din Aibak and Bakhtiyar Khilji. During this period, the Mahabodhi Temple fell into disrepair and was largely abandoned. The last abbot of the Mahabodhi temple was Śāriputra (15th-century), Sariputra, who left India and travelled to Nepal in the 15th century. Over the following centuries, the monastery's abbot or mahant position became occupied by the area's primary landholder, who claimed ownership of the Mahabodhi Temple grounds. In the 13th century, Burmese alphabet, Burmese Buddhists built Mahabodhi Temple, Bagan, a temple with the same name and modelled on the original Mahabodhi Temple.


Mucalinda Lake

It is said that six weeks after the Buddha began meditating under the Bodhi Tree, the heavens darkened for seven days, and a prodigious rain descended. However, the mighty king of serpents, Mucalinda, came from beneath the earth and protected with his hood the one who is the source of all protection. When the great storm had cleared, the serpent king assumed his human form, bowed before the Buddha, and returned in joy to his palace. The subject of Naga Prok attitude, Buddha meditating under the protection of Mucalinda is very common in Iconography of Gautama Buddha in Laos and Thailand. One modern rendition is present in Bunleua Sulilat's sculpture park Sala Keoku.


Restoration

During the 13th century and again the 19th century, Burmese rulers undertook restoration of the temple complex and surrounding wall. In the 1880s, the then-British colonial government of India began to restore Mahabodhi Temple under the direction of Sir Alexander Cunningham and Joseph David Beglar. In 1884, a large Buddha image of the Pāla period, likely removed at an earlier stage to the Mahant's residence from the temple sanctum, was reinstated. The plith of the image was reconstructed at the time and parts of the dedicatory inscription inserted in their current position. The inscription records the rededication of the image by Pithipatis of Bodh Gaya, Pīṭhīpati Jayasena in the 13th century. In 1886, Sir Edwin Arnold visited the site and under guidance from Ven. Weligama Sri Sumangala published several articles drawing the attention of the Buddhists to the deplorable conditions of Buddhagaya. The sculpture has since been repaired, painted and gilded and is under active worship in the sanctum.


Architectural style

Mahabodhi Temple is constructed of brick and is one of the oldest brick structures to have survived in eastern India. It is considered to be a fine example of Indian brickwork, and was highly influential in the development of later architectural traditions. According to UNESCO, "the present temple is one of the earliest and most imposing structures built entirely in brick from Gupta Empire, Gupta period" (300–600 CE). Mahabodhi Temple's central tower rises , and were heavily renovated in the 19th century. The central tower is surrounded by four smaller towers, constructed in the same style. The Mahabodhi Temple is surrounded on all four sides by stone railings, about two metres high. The railings reveal two distinct types, both in style as well as the materials used. The older ones, made of sandstone, date to about 150 BCE, and the others, constructed from unpolished coarse granite, are believed to be of the Gupta period. The older railings have scenes such as Lakshmi, the Hinduism, Hindu/Buddhist goddess of wealth, being bathed by elephants; and Surya, the Hindu sun god, riding a chariot drawn by four horses. The newer railings have figures of stupas (reliquary shrines) and garudas (eagles). Images of lotus flowers also appear commonly. Images of the site include Avalokiteśvara (Padmapani, Khasarpana), Vajrapani, Tara (Buddhism), Tara, Marici (Buddhism), Marichi, Yamantaka, Jambhala and Vajravārāhī.


Control of the site

For centuries before its re-"discovery" by Europeans, the temple was an active place of worship by Shaivite and Vaishnavas who also considered Buddha as an incarnation of Vishnu. In 1891, a campaign was initiated, seeking the return of control of the temple to Buddhists, over the objections of the Hindu mahant. Sir Edwin Arnold, author of ''The Light of Asia'', started advocating for the renovation of the site and its return to Buddhist care. Arnold was directed towards this endeavour by Weligama Sri Sumangala Thera. In 1891, Anagarika Dharmapala was on a pilgrimage to the recently restored Mahabodhi Temple. Here he experienced a shock to find the temple in the hands of a Saivite priest, the Buddha image transformed into a Hindu icon and Buddhists barred from worship. As a result, he began an agitation movement. The Maha Bodhi Society at Colombo was founded in 1891 but its offices were soon moved to Calcutta the following year in 1892. One of its primary aims was the restoration to Buddhist control of the Mahabodhi Temple at Bodh Gaya, the chief of the four ancient Buddhist holy sites.Wright, Arnold (1999) Twentieth Century Impressions of Ceylon: its history, people, commerce, industries, and resources, "Angarika Dharmapala", Asian Educational Services. p. 119. Bleeker, C. J. and Widengren, G. (1971) Historia Religionum, Volume 2 Religions of the Present: Handbook for the History of Religions, Brill Academic Publishers. p. 453. To accomplish this, Dharmapala initiated a lawsuit against the Brahmin priests who had held control of the site for centuries. After a protracted struggle, this was successful only after Indian independence (1947) and sixteen years after Dharmapala's own death (1933), with the partial restoration of the site to the management of the Maha Bodhi Society in 1949. It was then the temple management of Bodh Gaya was entrusted to a committee comprised in equal numbers of Hindus and Buddhists. The campaign was partially successful in 1949, when control passed from the Hindu mahant to the state government of Bihar, which established a Bodh Gaya Temple Management Committee (BTMC) under the Bodh Gaya Temple Act of 1949.Amendment allows non-Hindu to head Bodh Gaya temple committee
, The Hindu, August 1, 2013
The committee has nine members, a majority of whom, including the chairman, must by law be Hindus. Mahabodhi's first head monk under the management committee was Anagarika Munindra, a Bengali man who had been an active member of the Maha Bodhi Society. In 2013, the Bihar government amended the Bodh Gaya Temple Act of 1949, allowing for a non-Hindu to head the temple committee. Also in 2013, one thousand Indian Buddhists protested at the Mahabodhi Temple site to demand that control over it be given to Buddhists. These Buddhists included such leaders as Bhante Anand (president of the Akhil Bharatiya Bhikkhu Mahasangh, an influential body of monks), as well as the president of the Bodh Gaya Mukti Andolan Samiti. Additionally, Japanese-born Surai Sasai emerged as an important Buddhist leader in India as both he and Bhante Anand became two of the most well-known leaders of this campaign to free the temple from Hindu control.


Current status and management

The Government of Bihar, Bihar state government assumed responsibility for the protection, management, and monitoring of the temple and its properties when India gained its independence. Pursuant to the Bodh Gaya Temple Act of 1949, such responsibilities are shared with the Bodhgaya Temple Management Committee, and an advisory board. The committee, which serves for a three-year term, must by law consist of four Buddhist and four Hindu representatives, including the head of Sankaracharya Math monastery as an ex-officio Hindu member.Buddhists seek control over Mahabodhi temple management
IANS. March 28, 2008. Retrieved March 29, 2008.
A 2013 Amendment to the Bodhgaya Temple Management Act allows the Gaya District Magistrate to be the Chairman of the committee, even if he is not Hindu. The Advisory Board consists of the governor of Bihar and twenty to twenty-five other members, half of them from foreign Buddhist countries. In June 2002, the Mahabodhi Temple became a UNESCO World Heritage Site. All finds of religious artifacts in the area are legally protected under the Treasure Trove Act of 1878. The temple's head monk, Bhikkhu Bodhipala, resigned in 2007 after he was charged with cutting the branches of Bodhi tree, Holy Bodhi Tree on a regular basis and selling them to foreigners for significant amounts of money. A newspaper alleged that wealthy Thai buyers bought a branch with the cooperation of senior members of the temple's management committee.Scandal gnaws at Buddha's holy tree in India
. Denyer, Simon. Reuters News Service. February 3, 2008. Retrieved March 27, 2008.
While the temple's spokesman stated that botanists had pruned the tree, the Bihar home secretary ordered the tree examined.No damage to Bodhi tree: Govt
. Singh, Sanjay. July 21, 2006. Retrieved March 27, 2008.
A criminal charge was filed against Bodhipala. If convicted, Bodhipala would be subject to at least 10 years' imprisonment. Following the expiration of the committee's term in September 2007, Bihar's government delayed appointing a new Committee and the district magistrate administered the temple pending such appointment. Eventually, on May 16, 2008 the government announced the appointment of a new Temple Management Committee. , the Temple's head monk was Bhikkhu Chalinda.


Recent events

In 2013, the upper portion of the temple was covered with 289 kg of gold. The gold was a gift from the King of Thailand and devotees from Thailand, and installed with the approval of the Archaeological Survey of India.


2013 attack

On 7 July 2013, ten low-intensity bombs exploded in the temple complex, injuring 5 people. One bomb was near the statue of Buddha and another was near the Mahabodhi tree. Three unexploded bombs were also found and defused. The blasts took place between 5.30 a.m. and 6.00 a.m. The main temple was undamaged. The Intelligence Bureau of India may have alerted state officials of possible threats around 15 days prior to the bombing. On 4 November 2013, the National Investigation Agency announced that the Islamic terrorist group Indian Mujahideen was responsible for the bombings.


Mahabodhi Temple replicas

Mahabodhi Temple is one of the most replicated Buddhist structures, both as temples and miniature replicas. *Zhenjue Temple, Beijing, China *Mahabodhi Temple, Bagan, Myanmar *Wat Chet Yot, Chiang Mai, Thailand *Thatta Thattaha Maha Bawdi Pagoda, Myanmar *Bodh Gaya Chedi Replica (Chedi Phutthakhaya Chamlong) in Wat Yansangwararam, Chonburi Province, Thailand


Notes


References

*Harle J.C., ''The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent'', 1994, Yale University Press Pelican History of Art, *Michell, George, ''The Penguin Guide to the Monuments of India, Volume 1: Buddhist, Jain, Hindu'', 1989, Penguin Books,


Further reading

* Isaline Blew Horner, Horner, I.B. (trans.) (1975; reprinted 2000). ''The Minor Anthologies of the Pali Canon (Part III): 'Chronicle of Buddhas' (Buddhavamsa) and 'Basket of Conduct' (Cariyapitaka)''. Oxford: Pali Text Society. . * * Kinnard, Jacob N. (1998)
When Is The Buddha Not the Buddha? The Hindu/Buddhist Battle over Bodhgayā and Its Buddha Image
Journal of the American Academy of Religion 66 (4), 817–839 * Knopf, Rainer (2000)
Bodh-Gaya: Ein internationales Zentrum des Buddhismus in nicht-buddhistischer Umgebung
International Quarterly for Asian Studies, Internationales Asienforum 31 (3–4), 289–314 * *von Schroeder, Ulrich (2001). ''Buddhist Sculptures in Tibet''. Vol. One: ''India & Nepal''; Vol. Two: ''Tibet & China''. Hong Kong: Visual Dharma Publications, Ltd. . Mahãbodhi temple, known to the Tibetans as rDo rje gdan («dorje den») (Skt.: Vajrāsana), pp. 103, 212, 216, 219, 246, 320–351, 356, 360, 369, 395–396, 677, 707–708, 870, 1242; Fig. IV–1. Replicas of the Mahābodhi temple in Tibet, pp. 321–351; Figs. IV–2–5; Pls. 111, 112, 113A–C, 113D–F, 114A–C, 114D–F, 115A–C, 115D–F.


External links


Land Enlightenment of the Buddha

Mahabodhi Temple and attraction around it

Bodhgaya NewsUNESCO World Heritage
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