A
n essential element of Buddhist sanctuaries is the stupa,
a grand circular mound modeled on earlier South Asian burial
mounds of a type familiar in many other ancient cultures (FIGS. 4-20
and 9-6). The stupa was not a tomb, however, but a monument hous-
ing relics of the Buddha. When the Buddha died, his cremated remains
were placed in eight reliquaries,or containers, similar in function to the
later reliquaries housed in medieval churches at pilgrimage sites
throughout the Christian world (see “Pilgrimages and the Cult of
Relics,” Chapter 17, page 432). But unlike their Western equivalents,
which were put on display, the Buddha’s relics were buried in solid
earthen mounds (stupas) that could not be entered. In the mid-third
century BCE, Ashoka opened the original eight stupas and spread the
Buddha’s relics among thousands of stupas in all corners of his realm.
Buddhists venerated the Buddha’s remains by circumambulation,walk-
ing around the stupa in a clockwise direction. The circular movement,
echoing the movement of the earth and the sun, brought the devotee
into harmony with the cosmos. Stupas come in many sizes, from tiny
handheld objects to huge structures, such as the Great Stupa at Sanchi
(FIG. 6-7), constructed originally by Ashoka and later enlarged.
The monumental stupas are three-dimensional mandalas,or
sacred diagrams of the universe. The domed stupa itself represents
the world mountain, with the cardinal points marked by toranas,or
gateways. The harmika,positioned atop the stupa dome, is a stone
fence or railing that encloses a square area symbolizing the sacred
domain of the gods. At the harmika’s center, a yasti,or pole, corre-
sponds to the axis of the universe, a motif already present in
Ashoka’s pillars. Three chatras,or stone disks, assigned various
meanings, crown the yasti. The yasti rises from the mountain-dome
and passes through the harmika, thus uniting this world with the
heavenly paradise. A stone fence often encloses the entire structure,
clearly separating the sacred space containing the Buddha’s relics
from the profane world outside.
The Stupa
ARCHITECTURAL BASICS
0 10 20 30 40 50 feet
0 105 1 5 meters
Yasti
Stupa dome
Harmika
Stone fence
Double
stairway
South
torana
Upper-level
walkway
Chatras
West
torana toEarastna
6-7Diagram (top) and view from the south (bottom) of the Great Stupa, Sanchi, India, third century bceto first century ce.
The sanchi stupa is an earthen mound containing relics of the Buddha. Buddhists walk around stupas in a clockwise direction. They believe that the
circular movement brings the devotee into harmony with the cosmos.
India and Pakistan 163