佛教的肖像学:描绘老白人的传统

IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Baazr A. Bicheev
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引用次数: 0

摘要

老白种人是俄罗斯佛教徒崇拜的当地神灵。他的形象,基于文本传统和佛教图像,促成了这个名字-老白人,现在被广泛接受。在书面资料中,他也被称为“大地和水的[主宰灵魂]的征服者和征服者”。蒙古的早期图像是受中国传统的Tú Dì(与地方有关的古代神灵)图像的影响而出现的,而后来则是受传统的Shòuxing(长寿之神)图像的影响。在肖像传统的早期阶段,老白人被描绘成牧师或高级官员;他的功能是通过他的同伴,山神(sabdaks)的性格来呈现的,这些人或动物具有人或动物的特征,如一对鹿,被锁住的豹(狼),以及仪式物品,包括雕刻的手杖或龙头手杖。在后来的阶段,可能会有与长寿和生育的给予者相关的符号(秃顶的生殖器,洞穴和桃子)。《老白人经》的文字描述了他的外貌(一个白胡子、光头、穿着白袍的老人)、属性(一根龙头杖)和一座山和果树的寓言景观。早期和最近的蒙古和布里亚特的照片都不完全符合描述。与此更接近的是卡尔梅克人的肖像传统。老白人对卡尔梅克游牧民族的形象可以追溯到古代神话中神是家畜饲养者的观念。由于宗教领域的转变,家畜的饲养者变成了老白人,成为所有生物和所有地球空间的主人。传统上,他被呈现为一个站着的老人,光头,他长长的白发聚集在一起形成一个三叉戟的形式。他穿着束带长袍,另一件摇摆的长袍扔在上面。他右手拿着一根刻有龙头的手杖,左手拿着一串念珠。没有同伴或动物。象征性的风景使那位老人的宏伟形象更加突出。服装和景观的细节反映了以前中国的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Iconography of Buddhism: The Tradition of Depicting the Old White Man
The Old White Man is a local deity revered by Buddhists in Russia. His image, based on textual traditions and Buddhist iconography, prompted the name — the Old White Man, now widely accepted. In the written sources he is also known as the “Conqueror and subduer of the [master spirits] of earth and water”. The early images appeared in Mongolia under the influence of the Chinese traditional pictures of Tú Dì, ancient deities associated with localities, while later they were influenced by traditional images of Shòuxing, the deity of longevity. At an early stage of the iconographic tradition, the Old White Man is depicted as a priest or a high official; his functions are rendered via the characters of his companions, the host spirits of mountains (sabdaks) that have the features of man and animal or animals, such as a pair of deer, chained leopard (wolf), as well as ritual objects, including a carved staff or a dragon head staff. At a later stage, there may be symbols associated with the giver of longevity and fertility (bald phallic head, cave, and peach). The text of the “Sutra of the Old White Man” includes the description of his appearance (a white-bearded, bare-headed old man in a white robe), attributes (a dragon head staff) and an allegorical landscape of a mountain and fruit trees. Neither early nor recent Mongolian and Buryat pictures fully correspond to the description. Much closer to it is the Kalmyk iconographic tradition. The Old White Man’s image of the Kalmyk nomads goes back to the ancient mythological idea of the deity as the keeper of domestic animals. Due to transformations in the religious sphere, the keeper of domestic animals becomes the Old White Man, the lord of all living beings and all earthly space. Traditionally, he is presented as a standing old man, bare-headed and his long gray hair gathered in the form of a triratna. He is dressed in a belted robe, with another swinging robe thrown on it. In his right hand, he holds a staff with a dragon’s head and a rosary in his left. There are no companions or animals. The symbolic landscape serves to enhance the grandiose figure of the old man. The details of the attire and the landscape refer to the former Chinese influence.
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