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In
Buddhist India the bodies of kings,
chiefs, or saints were cremated and the ashes buried under
earthen mounds. When the Buddha died his ashes were divided into eight portions
and buried under mounds raised in his home town and at
seven other locations. An umbrella, the symbol of royalty,
was placed on the top of each mound.These first stupas
were seen as symbols of the Buddha's presence and soon
came to be objects of devotion. Legend says that King
Asoka opened these stupas, further broke the ashes into
84,000 parts and built a stupa over each part. Although
84,000 parts is an obvious exaggeration, archaeologists
have confirmed that many of India's numerous stupas were
first constructed during the Asokan period. From the early
prototype the stupa soon developed, the mound into a solid
dome and the umbrella into a spire and in later ages were
enlarged, sometimes to enormous dimensions, and decorated
with sculptures and paintings.
There
are four types of stupas, those built over relics of the
Buddha or a saint, those containing an object used by
the Buddha or a saint, those commemorating an important
event in religious history and those built as an act of
devotion. Today, along with the Buddha
statues and Bodhi trees stupas are the primary objects of popular
devotion and at least one can be found in every Buddhist
temple.
P.
Harvey, " The Symbolism of the early Stupa"
in Journal of the International Association of Buddhist
Studies, 7, 1984;
A.
Snodgrass, The Symbolism of the Stupa, New York,
1985; S. Paranavitana, The Stupa in Ceylon, Colombo,
1947.
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