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Bodhisattva ("buddha-to-be") with halo relief (Wiki) |
What is a
stupa? It is a Scythian burial mound found from the Ukraine down through Central Asia and throughout the subcontinent and Buddhist world. The mound contains the relics of the Buddha, and
buddhas of the distant past, and
chakravartin rulers or "world monarchs." They are stylized as pagodas and
mandalas representing the world system or cosmos. Inside, they contain gems, gold, ashes and relics or cremation remains (
shariras), jewelry, and other precious artifacts like time capsules -- coins, carvings, inscriptions, and the physical remains of great supremely enlightened teachers. There are tens of thousands in the world, but the eight greatest contain the primary relics of Shakyamuni, "Sage of the Scythians," as well as those in the largest unexcavated Buddhist monastic complex at
Mes Aynak,
Gandhara (now Afghanistan) and the largest excavated Buddhist temple pyramid at Borobudur, Java, Indonesia. These are the contents of the Bimaran
stupa, which contained the gold Bimaran casket or reliquary.
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