Bodh Gaya: Difference between revisions

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*Bodh Gaya — [[rdo rje gdan]], Skt. [[vajrasana]], [[vajra seat]]. The place in [[Bihar]], India where all the buddhas of this aeon are to attain enlightenment. [AJP] from The Great Image ISBN 1-59030-069-6  
Bodh Gaya is the holiest of Buddhist destinations and a World Heritage Site. It was here, under a pipal, or [[Bodhi Tree]], that [[Shakyamuni Buddha]] (Siddhartha Gotama) attained enlightenment and became the Buddha. A simple shrine was built by the emperor [[Ashoka]] (3rd century BCE) to mark the spot, later enclosed by a stone railing (1st century BCE), part of which still remains. The uprights have representations of the Vedic gods [[Indra]] and Surya, and the railing medallions include carvings of imaginary beasts. This shrine was replaced in the Kushan period (2nd cent. CE) by the present Mahabodhi Temple, which was refurbished in the Pala-Sena period (750-1200), heavily restored by Sir Alexander Cunningham in the second half of the 19th century, and finally restored by Myanmar (Burmese) Buddhists in 1882. The [[bodhi tree]] behind the temple is believed to be a descendant of the original.
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*Bodh Gaya — [[rdo rje gdan]], Skt. [[vajrasana]], [[Vajra Seat]]. The place in [[Bihar]], India where all the buddhas of this [[aeon]] are to attain enlightenment. [AJP] from The Great Image ISBN 1-59030-069-6  


[[Category:  Sacred Sites]]
[[Category:  Sacred Sites]]

Latest revision as of 17:06, 2 October 2009

Bodh Gaya is the holiest of Buddhist destinations and a World Heritage Site. It was here, under a pipal, or Bodhi Tree, that Shakyamuni Buddha (Siddhartha Gotama) attained enlightenment and became the Buddha. A simple shrine was built by the emperor Ashoka (3rd century BCE) to mark the spot, later enclosed by a stone railing (1st century BCE), part of which still remains. The uprights have representations of the Vedic gods Indra and Surya, and the railing medallions include carvings of imaginary beasts. This shrine was replaced in the Kushan period (2nd cent. CE) by the present Mahabodhi Temple, which was refurbished in the Pala-Sena period (750-1200), heavily restored by Sir Alexander Cunningham in the second half of the 19th century, and finally restored by Myanmar (Burmese) Buddhists in 1882. The bodhi tree behind the temple is believed to be a descendant of the original.