Pushpin Map: | India#India Madhya Pradesh | ||||||||||
Pushpin Relief: | 1 | ||||||||||
Pushpin Map Caption: | Stupa II at Sanchi | ||||||||||
Coordinates: | 23.48°N 77.73°W | ||||||||||
Building Type: | Stupa | ||||||||||
Location: | Sanchi Town, Madhya Pradesh, India | ||||||||||
Architectural Style: | Buddhist | ||||||||||
Start Date: | 2nd century BCE | ||||||||||
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The Stupa No. 2 at Sanchi, also called Sanchi II, is one of the oldest existing Buddhist stupas in India, and part of the Buddhist complex of Sanchi in Madhya Pradesh. It is of particular interest since it has the earliest known important displays of decorative reliefs in India, probably anterior to the reliefs at the Mahabodhi Temple in Bodh Gaya, or the reliefs of Bharhut.[1] It displays what has been called "the oldest extensive stupa decoration in existence".[2] Stupa II at Sanchi is therefore considered as the birthplace of Jataka illustrations.[1]
Stupa No. 2 is located in the Buddhist complex of Sanchi. It was probably founded later than the Great Stupa (Stupa number 1) at Sanchi, but it contained reliquaries dated to the Mauryan Empire period (323-185 BCE), and it was the earliest to receive decorative reliefs, about a century earlier than Stupa Nb 1.[1]
One of the key indicators to date Sanchi Stupa No.2 has been the similarity of its architectural motifs with those of Heliodorus pillar, which is datable to circa 113 BCE due to its establishment during the rule of Indo-Greek Antialcidas, as well as similarities of the paleography of the inscriptions.[3]
The Stupa is located outside of the main complex of Sanchi, about 300 meters to the west, on the slope of Sanchi hill.[4] It is located in a lower position than Stupa 1 because the relics it contained, are those of church dignitaries from the time of Ashoka, who were considered as worthy of a lower position than the Buddha himself in Stupa number 1, or his disciples in Stupa number 3.[4]
The Stupa contained a relic box with four small caskets of steatite inside, containing human bones. An inscription in early Brahmi was found on the relic box, mentioning that it contained "the relics of all teachers, including Kasapagota and Vachi-Suvijayita".[4] Besides, ten saints were mentioned on the caskets, who either participated to the Third Buddhist Council held under Ashoka, or were sent as emissaries to the Himalayas to preach the Buddhist doctrine. Among them is a "Mogaliputa", who may be Mogaliputa Tissa, who presided the Third Buddhist Council, but this is disputed.[4]
Typically, the earliest medallions at Sanchi are dated to 115 BC, while the more extensive pillar carvings are dated to around 80 BC,[5] or almost a century later than the first ones, around 15 BCE.[4]
These reliefs from the early period of Sanchi II (circa 115 BCE) are the earliest known examples of Indian stone reliefs.[1] [5] [6]
These first attempts at narrative art are aniconic, as they do not represent the Buddha directly, but only his appearance in previous lives, or his symbols.[1]
These are altogether 455 medallions and half-medallions, or which 293 consist in lotus flowers, and 126 in a lotus with another motif. Only 36 of the medallions have another subject.[1] For the first time, clearly Buddhist themes are represented, particularly the four events in the life of the Buddha that are: the Nativity, the Enlightenment, the First Sermon and the Decease.[7] Some authors consider these reliefs as the prelude (the "prolegomenon") of the iconography of the reliefs in Bharhut (100-80 BCE) and of the later and much more evolved depictions on the toranas of the Great Stupa in Sanchi (1st century BCE/CE).[1]
It is thought that the earliest reliefs from the last quarter of the 2nd century BCE were produced by craftsmen from the area of Gandhara in northwestern Indian, a central Indo-Greek region, because they left mason's marks in Kharoshthi (a script used around the area of Gandhara), as opposed to the local Brahmi script. This seems to imply that these foreign workers were responsible for some of the earliest and sometimes quite foreign motifs and figures that can be found on the railings of the stupa.[8]
Around the time of the first reliefs at Stupa II, in 115 BCE, the embassy of Heliodorus from the Indo-Greek king of Taxila named Antialkidas, visited the court of the Sungas king Bhagabhadra in Vidisha, about 6 km away from Sanchi. In Vidisha, Heliodorus established the Heliodorus pillar in a dedication to Vāsudeva. This would indicate that relations between the Indo-Greeks and the Sungas had improved by that time, that people traveled between the two realms, and also that the Indo-Greeks readily followed Indian religions.[9]
align=center colspan=2 style="background:#D3D3D3; font-size: 100%;" | Early reliefs at Sanchi, Stupa No2 (circa 115 BC) | ||||||||||||
align=center colspan=2 | Foreigner on a horse. The medallions are dated circa 115 BC.File:Lakshmi Sanchi Stupa 2.jpg | Lakshmi with lotus and two child attendants, probably derived from similar images of Venus[10] Flying griffin Sanchi Stupa 2.jpg | Griffin.Sanchi 2 anguipede.jpg | Anguipede, a Greek mythological figure.Female riding a Centaur Sanchi Stupa 2.jpg | Female riding a Centaur. Centaurs are generally considered as Western borrowings.[11] File:Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3676.jpg | Hero fighting against lions, a motif of West-Asian origin, such as this one or this one.[12] Lion with calf Stupa II Sanchi.jpg | Lion with calf.Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3628.jpg | Bactrian camel.Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3635.jpg | Man on a centaur.Sanchi 2 winged lions.jpg | Symmetrical leaping winged lions among floral motifs.Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3603.jpg | Winged griffin. |
The vast majority of the oldest medallions and half-medallions (293 out of 455) simply consist of a lotus motif. A further 126 additional medallions and half medallions represent a lotus with another motif. Some motifs take on Hellenistic decorative forms.
Floral designs, Sanchi Stupa No2 (circa 115 BCE) | ||||||||
Floral designs.Elephant and riders Stupa No2 Sanchi.jpg | Elephant.Flower medallion Stupa II Sanchi.jpg | Flower medallion.Sanchi 2 medallion.jpg | Medallion.File:Lotus within beads and reels motif Stupa No2 Sanchi.jpg | Lotus with Hellenistic Beads and reels motif.Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3626.jpg | Lotus and guirland. |
Among the medallions, purely Buddhist symbols are quite rare. However, motifs of triratnas and palmettes (already visible in the Pataliputra capital, 3rd century BCE) appear in places, amidst multiple lotus motifs.
Buddhist symbols, Sanchi Stupa No2 (circa 115 BCE) | ||||||
Palmette design, often present in early Buddhist decorations.File:Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3642.jpg | Triratna with decorative scrolls.File:Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3658 Medallion 2.jpg | Motif based on triratnas.Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3658 Flame palmette.jpg | Palmette design. |
About a century later, some more descriptive reliefs were added, and often superimposed on the earlier ones, which clearly show the evolution of Buddhist art during the intervening period.[4] This time, the reliefs are much more Buddhist in character, and are contemporary with the reliefs on the torana gateways of the Great Stupa at Sanchi.[1]
state = align=center colspan=2 style="background:#D3D3D3; font-size: 100%;" | Later reliefs at Sanchi, Stupa No2 (circa 15 BC) | |||||||||||||||
Floral frieze.File:Sanchi 8-17.jpg | Decorative pillar.File:Sanchi 8-18.JPG | Decorative pillar.File:Sanchi Stupa 2 elephants and Dharmachakra.jpg | Pillar with elephants and Dharmachakra.File:Sanchi Stupa 2 Northern Gate ballustrade decoration.jpg | The full pillar.File:Decorative elements from Stupa No 2 at Sanchi.jpg | Various decorative elements of Stupa No.2, Sanchi.Sanchi Stupa Sculpture 15.jpg | Floral designs.Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3655 Lakshmi.jpg | Lakshmi.Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3652.jpg | Devotional scene.Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3667 Wheel and Triratna.jpg | Dharmachakra and Triratna.Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3671 Tree in railing.jpg | Bodhi tree.Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3672.jpg | Apsaras.File:Ashoka supported by his two wives at Stupa 2 Sanchi with reconstituted pillar detail.jpg | Ashoka supported by his two wives, with reconstituted pillar detail. Also seen in a contemporary relief on the Southern Gateway of Stupa 1.File:Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3640.jpg | Man in costume from the northwest, fighting against lions.[13] File:Sanchi Stupa number 2 KSP 3659 Saluting man.jpg | Man in costume from the northwest, possibly an Indo-Scythian.[14] |
There are also numerous dedicatory inscriptions on the railings of Stupa II in the Brahmi script, in a style similar to the Bharhut Stupa. The similarity in paleography suggests that Sanchi Stupa No. 2 and Bharhut were roughly coeval.[15]