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Difference between revisions of "Double vajra"

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[[Image:FSB01-crossed_vajra_from_Buddha_tangka.JPG|300px|thumb|Double vajra on throne brocade from a tangka of [[Buddha Shakyamuni]]) ]]
 
[[Image:FSB01-crossed_vajra_from_Buddha_tangka.JPG|300px|thumb|Double vajra on throne brocade from a tangka of [[Buddha Shakyamuni]]) ]]
  
The '''[[double vajra]]''' (Skt. ''[[vishva-vajra]]''; Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[རྡོ་རྗེ་རྒྱ་གྲམ།]]}}, Wyl. ''[[rdo rje rgya gram]]'') or crossed [[vajra]] is formed from four lotus-mounted vajra-heads that [[emanate]] from a central hub towards the four [[cardinal directions]], and [[symboli]zes]] the [[principle]] of [[absolute]] stability.  
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The '''[[double vajra]]''' (Skt. ''[[vishva-vajra]]''; Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[རྡོ་རྗེ་རྒྱ་གྲམ།]]}}, Wyl. ''[[rdo rje rgya gram]]'') or crossed [[vajra]] is formed from four lotus-mounted vajra-heads that [[emanate]] from a central hub towards the four [[cardinal directions]], and [[symbolizes]] the [[principle]] of [[absolute]] stability.  
  
 
In the cosmographic description of [[Mount Meru]] a vast crossed [[vajra]] supports and underlies the entire [[physical]] [[universe]]. Similarly in the [[representation]] of the [[mandala]], a vast crossed [[vajra]] serves as the immoveable support or foundation of the [[mandala]] palace and here the central hub of the [[vajra]] is considered to be dark blue in {{Wiki|colour}} with the four heads coloured to represent the four directions-white ([[East]]), yellow ([[South]]), red ([[West]]) and green ([[North]]). These also correspond to the [[five elements]] and the [[buddhas of the five families]] with blue [[Akshobhya]] in the centre.
 
In the cosmographic description of [[Mount Meru]] a vast crossed [[vajra]] supports and underlies the entire [[physical]] [[universe]]. Similarly in the [[representation]] of the [[mandala]], a vast crossed [[vajra]] serves as the immoveable support or foundation of the [[mandala]] palace and here the central hub of the [[vajra]] is considered to be dark blue in {{Wiki|colour}} with the four heads coloured to represent the four directions-white ([[East]]), yellow ([[South]]), red ([[West]]) and green ([[North]]). These also correspond to the [[five elements]] and the [[buddhas of the five families]] with blue [[Akshobhya]] in the centre.
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The raised [[throne]] upon which [[masters]] are seated when [[teaching]] is [[traditionally]] decorated on the front by a hanging square of brocade displaying the image of a crossed [[vajra]] in the centre, often with four small [[swastika]]s in the corners. This emblem represents the unshakeable ground or [[reality]] of the [[Buddha’s]] [[enlightenment]].<ref>*Robert Beer, ''The Handbook of [[Tibetan Buddhist]] Symbols'' </ref>
 
The raised [[throne]] upon which [[masters]] are seated when [[teaching]] is [[traditionally]] decorated on the front by a hanging square of brocade displaying the image of a crossed [[vajra]] in the centre, often with four small [[swastika]]s in the corners. This emblem represents the unshakeable ground or [[reality]] of the [[Buddha’s]] [[enlightenment]].<ref>*Robert Beer, ''The Handbook of [[Tibetan Buddhist]] Symbols'' </ref>
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===Read more:===
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* [[Visvavajra]]
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* [[Category:Vajra]]
  
 
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Revision as of 13:57, 25 April 2018

Double vajra on throne brocade from a tangka of Buddha Shakyamuni)

The double vajra (Skt. vishva-vajra; Tib. རྡོ་རྗེ་རྒྱ་གྲམ།, Wyl. rdo rje rgya gram) or crossed vajra is formed from four lotus-mounted vajra-heads that emanate from a central hub towards the four cardinal directions, and symbolizes the principle of absolute stability.

In the cosmographic description of Mount Meru a vast crossed vajra supports and underlies the entire physical universe. Similarly in the representation of the mandala, a vast crossed vajra serves as the immoveable support or foundation of the mandala palace and here the central hub of the vajra is considered to be dark blue in colour with the four heads coloured to represent the four directions-white (East), yellow (South), red (West) and green (North). These also correspond to the five elements and the buddhas of the five families with blue Akshobhya in the centre.

It’s also an emblem of the green buddha of the north, Amoghasiddhi, and represents his all-accomplishing wisdom as lord of the karma family of activity.

The raised throne upon which masters are seated when teaching is traditionally decorated on the front by a hanging square of brocade displaying the image of a crossed vajra in the centre, often with four small swastikas in the corners. This emblem represents the unshakeable ground or reality of the Buddha’s enlightenment.[1]

Read more:

Footnotes

  1. *Robert Beer, The Handbook of Tibetan Buddhist Symbols

Source

RigpaWiki:Double vajra