Handbuch der Orientalistik

Couverture
BRILL, 2004 - 335 pages
Gandhara, with its wide variety of architectural remains and sculptures, has for many decades perplexed students of South and Central Asia. Kurt Behrendt in this volume for the first time and convincingly offers a description of the development of 2nd century B.C.E. to 8th century C.E. Buddhist sacred centers in ancient Gandhara, today northwest Pakistan. Regional variations in architecture and sculpture in the Peshawar basin, Swat, and Taxila are discussed. At last a chronological framework is given for the architecture and the sculpture of Gandhara, but also light is being shed on how relic structures were utilized through time, as devotional imagery became increasingly significant to Buddhist religious practice. With an important comparative overview of architectural remains, it is indispensable for all those interested in the development of the early Buddhist tradition of south and central Asia and the roots of Buddhism elsewhere in Asia.
 

Table des matières

Overview of Greater Gandhāra
12
The Development of Relic Shrines
61
The Phase II Sacred Area
77
65
97
Sacred Area
100
of the Sacred Area in Taxila the Peshawar
107
Phase III Architecture and Sculpture
135
Mountain Vihāras
136
37
185
47
192
Phase III Sculpture in the Peshawar
211
Dating Gandhāran Sculpture
268
B3 Dating Monumental Schist Devotional Icons
281
Reuse of Images and Its Bearing on
288
Numeric Count of Sculpture Types from
296
Glossary
305

2
145
Phase III and IV Architecture in
175
30
179
Index
323
Droits d'auteur

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À propos de l'auteur (2004)

Kurt A. Behrendt, Ph.D. (1997) in South Asian Art History, University of California, Los Angeles, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Art History and Archaeology at Temple University, Pennsylvania. He has published on early Buddhist art of South Asia.

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