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Why a Sixteen-foot Buddha? Rethinking the Main Icon of Hwangnyong Temple and Its Materiality

  • 간행물
    Acta Koreana KCI 등재 SCOPUS A&amp HCI 바로가기
  • 권호(발행년)
    VOLUME 23 NUMBER 2 (2020.12) 바로가기
  • 페이지
    pp.1-22
  • 저자
    HAEWON KIM
  • 언어
    영어(ENG)
  • URL
    https://www.earticle.net/Article/A386426

원문정보

초록

영어
Completed in 574, the main icon of Hwangnyong Temple (皇龍寺) in Kyŏngju 慶州 is an Aśoka image, one of the most popular types of auspicious image in medieval China. The legend of the Hwangnyong Temple statue, however, differs from Aśoka images found in Chinese texts. King Aśoka’s only contribution was the materials for the image, which was then completed by Silla 新羅 artisans in the form of a changyuk 丈六, or sixteen-foot image. Focusing on the significance of creating a sixteen-foot statue, this article explores the circumstances surrounding the choice of this image by contextualizing the decision within the tradition of sixteen-foot images as reconstructed from Chinese sources. It demonstrates that scale and materials were key factors in selecting this type of icon and that its creation was closely related to the political aspirations of King Chinhŭng (眞興王, r. 540-576) to protect the nation and consolidate his power.

목차

Abstract
I. Introduction
II. Shifting the Focus from Aśoka Image to the Sixteen-foot Image Tradition
III. Contextualizing the Hwangnyong Temple Statue within the Sixteen-foot Image Tradition
1. Textual Sources on Sixteen-foot Buddhas
2. Sixteen-foot Buddhas, Bronze, and Emperors
IV. Conclusion
References

저자

  • HAEWON KIM [ A curator at the Kyŏngju National Museum. ]

참고문헌

자료제공 : 네이버학술정보

    간행물 정보

    • 간행물
      Acta Koreana
    • 간기
      반년간
    • pISSN
      1520-7412
    • 수록기간
      1998~2025
    • 등재여부
      KCI 등재,SCOPUS,A&,HCI
    • 십진분류
      KDC 912 DDC 951